THEATRE PREVIEW
PATTÉ AWARDS
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine February
2001
Y2K -- the millennial year in theater, a time of
stability and change. Staying-power was applauded, but at the same time, the
theater scene was crowded with entrances and exits.
The venerable Old Globe turned 65, and Lamb's
Players Theatre celebrated 28 years as our only true resident repertory
company. The San Diego Rep had a silver anniversary, Moonlight Amphitheatre had
a double-decade jubilee and Sledgehammer Theatre wrapped up 15 wild and wooly
years of provocative productions. San Diego Playgoers celebrated its 25th
with a name change -- to Broadway San Diego, a more apt representation of what
it does, bringing roadshows our way from the Great White Way.
Theater companies and theatermakers came and went.
Asian American Repertory Theatre and San Diego Black Ensemble Theatre lost
their homes. But, thanks to the generosity of Marianne McDonald, they gained a
new one: the Hiroshi McDonald Mori Performing Arts Center. We're still waiting,
sadly but hopefully, for good news from the also-recently-homeless,
much-lamented Fritz Theater.
In the executive offices, both the Globe and the
Playhouse racked up losses and gains. Influential managing director Tom Hall
left the Globe after 20+ years… and was replaced by Douglas C. Evans, who
proved to be a high-energy go-getter, right from the get-go. Up at the La Jolla
Playhouse, artistic director Anne Hamburger made a surprise departure at the
end of her very first season, off to join that Goofy mega-machine, Disney. To
much county-wide applause, former artistic director (recently turned filmmaker)
Des McAnuff stepped in to assume the mantle of 'interim artistic director,'
and, to everyone's relief, to plan the 2001 season.
So, with all this backstage celebration and
transformation, was anything happening on the stage? You bet. It may not
have been the best theater year ever, but it certainly was an active one. Three
San Diego productions have or will have made their way to Broadway: The Full Monty (a smash-hit from the Old
Globe), and two from the La Jolla
Playhouse: Jane Eyre (which opened in
December) and Thoroughly Modern Millie
(set to open this fall). Millie and Monty thrilled local audiences last
year, bringing good, old-fashioned fun (and dancing!) back to musical theater.
And our Grinch far outshone all the
others (the monstrous movie, and the doomed Broadway musical, Seussical). San Diego was definitely
high-profile on the national theater map.
Since the Patté Awards only honor local
theatermakers, a few noteworthy productions and performers get lost in the
community festivities. Especially significant this year were some magnificent,
Broadway-bound designers and performers. But we did get the first glimpse of a
new, musical theater discovery -- Sutton Foster, the understudy who stepped
brilliantly into the star role of Millie
at the Playhouse. Watch for that face (and its multi-million-dollar smile) in
the future.
There was no shortage of outstanding local theater
to admire and extol, in the 100 plays I saw last year. So, herewith is my own
personal Pat on the back, the 2000 KPBS Patté Awards for Theater Excellence ('because you ain't chopped liver!')
presented at a dinner/entertainment gala on January 22, in the Shiley Studio at
KPBS. Both the gorgeous, newly designed Patté Awards and the scrumptious,
festive evening were made possible by a generous grant from Donald and Darlene
Shiley, the ultimate Theater Angels.
This year, I presented a new award, for a new kind
of performance. Two dance groups have smashed the boundaries between art forms,
and refashioned them as Dance Theatre.
For outstanding Dance Theater, a KPBS Patté Award
to:
Eveoke Dance Theatre Company for "Soul of a
Young Girl" and
Malashock Dance & Company, for "Blessings
and Curses."
Two other special awards, initiated last year, are
the 'Shiley Award for Lifetime Achievement,' presented to long-time local (and
national) Latino theater-wizard William Virchis and the 'Theater Angel Award,'
bestowed on the very generous theater writer, director, adapter, teacher and
philanthropist, Marianne McDonald
The rest of the 2000 KPBS Patté Awards, in no
particular order (except, like the Oscars and the Tonys, the Outstanding
Performances, Directors and Productions come last), are as follows:
Outstanding Ensemble
Moon
Over Buffalo- North Coast Repertory Theatre
Orson's
Shadow - Old Globe
Old
Wicked Songs - Old Globe
Outstanding Scenic Design
Giulio Cesare Perrone, Mummified Deer, A Christmas Carol - San Diego Repertory Theatre
Mark Wendland, The
Cosmonaut's Last Message.. - La Jolla Playhouse
Annie Smart, Going
to St. Ives - La Jolla Playhouse
Outstanding Lighting Design
David Lee Cuthbert, Ghost Sonata - Sledgehammer Theatre
Chris
Parry, Love's Labours Lost - Old
Globe
Outstanding Costume Design
Maren Lyman, Lysistrata
- SDSU
Valerie Ohawa St. Pierre, The Skriker - SDSU
Outstanding Sound Design
Deborah
Gilmour Smyth (sound and original score) - Dracula
- Lamb's Players Theatre
Spencer
Hill, Ghost Sonata - Sledgehammer
Theatre
Outstanding Performance
Ron
Campbell, R. Buckminster Fuller: The
History (and Mystery) of the Universe - San Diego Repertory Theatre
K.B.
Merrill, The Glass Menagerie - North Coast Repertory Theatre
Tom
Stephenson, Dracula - Lamb's Players
Theatre
Jason
Schauer, Me and My Girl - Christian
Community Theatre
Erin
K. Granahan, Born Yesterday -
Moonlight Amphitheatre
Outstanding Direction
Kirsten Brandt, Furious Blood - Sledgehammer Theatre
Luis Valdez, Mummified
Deer - San Diego Repertory Theatre
Neel Keller, The
Cosmonaut's Last Message… - La Jolla Playhouse
Outstanding Production
The
Full Monty - Old Globe Theatre
The
Cosmonaut's Last Message - La Jolla Playhouse
Thoroughly
Modern Millie - La Jolla Playhouse
A
Christmas Carol - San Diego Repertory Theatre
Our plays spanned 3000 years (from Lysistrata to The Full Monty), and our productions traveled 3000 miles. Is San
Diego theater hot, or what?
©2001 Patté Productions Inc.