THEATRE PREVIEW
DON AND BONNIE WARD
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine January
2001
It takes some pretty fancy footwork to sustain a
longtime partnership. But Don and Bonnie Ward have waltzed and tapped their way
through Moonlight and Starlight and around the Globe.
They first met in 1942, in dancing school; she was
6 and he was 8. They noticed each other then, even though he was studying tap
and she was into ballet. They both came from performing families (and they
passed that onto their kids, who are third generation entertainers and San
Diegans).
Don made his debut at the Old Globe, in the annual
season opener, "Caught in the Act." Soon they were both appearing at
Starlight Musical Theatre. "We were cast in the same shows," says
Don. "After awhile, we started to notice each other for other
reasons."
They began dating when Bonnie was 15, and married
three years later. Since then, they've done almost 200 shows together -- either
acting, dancing, singing, directing or choreographing.
For a couple of years, they left San Diego to go
on the road with their own nightclub musical comedy act. They sang, tapped and
did exhibition ballroom dancing. " We opened for Mae West, Red Skelton and
Sammy Davis, Jr." Don says proudly. "Nightclubs always had that kind
of act. But we'd abandoned the musical theater, which we both loved." So
they returned home to settle down; Bonnie was pregnant, and they thought they'd
pull back and raise a family.
"We quit the business four times over the
years," Bonnie reminisces. But they always came back. During the Korean
War, they started a girls' chorus line, sort of like the Rockettes, and mounted
USO shows around the country. Don began directing musicals for Civic Arts for
Youth, and Bonnie headed the dance program for the City of San Diego. They made
their musical theater duo-directing debut on a big scale, in the Ford (later
Starlight) Bowl in Balboa Park. "We cut our teeth directing for a 4200
seat theater," Don chuckles.
Then Don became artistic director of San Diego
Junior Theatre, a post he held for 15 years. He added a dance program, which
Bonnie directed. They loved kids, but didn't like working away from their own
three children, so they brought them into the family business. They started a
kids' group, "The Bright Side," which was "the biggest local
convention singing act" that toured nationally. "Our first
show," beamed Bonnie, "was the inaugural party for Ronald Reagan,
when he became governor. Jack Benny introduced us."
In that first group of 28 kid performers was young
Brian Stokes Mitchell, the San Diego powerhouse who starred in Ragtime and the Broadway revival of Kiss Me, Kate. He was 15 at the time,
and he wrote the group's theme song, "Look on the Bright Side."
"We gave him his first dance lessons," said Bonnie. "And he sent
us the neatest letter after he won the Tony [Award]."
All the Wards were in the
original group; Laurie was 10 at the time; Kirby was 11 and Kelly was 14. All three
later attended USC, and continued their involvement in musical theater. And Don
and Bonnie remained in the spotlight -- and the Starlight. From 1981-1993, they
served as artistic directors/choreographers for Starlight Musical Theatre. Then
there was a falling-out that no one wants to discuss. "We have no
animosity," says Don, "but our last years there were not a happy
experience."
They've been much happier since they moved out of
the Starlight and into the Moonlight…. Moonlight Amphitheatre, that is.
"We've had nothing but happy times at
Moonlight," says Don. "It reminds us of how Starlight was back in the
good old days in the '50s: the attitudes, the camaraderie, the support and
respect for actors." And, adds Bonnie, "we get to take that same
delight in watching kids bloom that we got back at Junior Theatre."
They're starting off the new year at Moonlight's
indoor venue, the Avo Playhouse, directing/choreographing Romance, Romance, a sophisticated little duet of one-act musicals.
The Tony Award-winner by Barry Harman and Keith Herman spans a century of
amorous adventures. The first act is set in 1890's Vienna, with two
philandering lovers and two "chorus/dancers." In the second act, at
the Hamptons in the 1990s, the couples change but the infidelities remain.
"It's charming," says Don. "In the
first act, you get the Victorian costumes and wigs, waltz, polka and ragtime.
And then there's the harder driving, more contemporary music in the second act.
It's a really fun piece."
The stars are two Moonlight favorites who are now
guest Equity artists: Bets Malone and John Bisom. She was the first of the four
"Annies" Don has directed over the years. He was the upwardly mobile
employee to Don's bigwig boss in the Moonlight's recent production of How to Succeed in Business Without Really
Trying.
"We keep saying we've got to slow down,"
says Bonnie. "But we want to have a good time as long as we can,"
adds Don. "We adore working together," says Bonnie. And, adds Don,
"We've never gotten tired of that."
Romance,
Romance plays at Moonlight's Avo Playhouse (303 Main
Street, Vista) from Jan. 25-Feb. 18. Call Vis Tix at 760-724-2110.
©2001 Patté Productions Inc.