Premiere OC Fall/Winter 2018

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YOUR GUIDE TO THE PERFORMING AND VISUAL ARTS IN ORANGE COUNTY FALL/WINTER 2018-19

MUSIC | THEATER | ART | DANCE | 173 ARTS VENUES & ORGANIZATIONS FROM THE PUBLISHERS OF




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FEATURES

32

Stephanie Bachiero’s porcelain sculpture, “Gyration,” is on view at Peter Blake Gallery.

YOUR GUIDE TO THE PERFORMING AND VISUAL ARTS IN ORANGE COUNTY FALL/WINTER 2018-19

Senator Kennedy’s return home to Barnstable Municipal Airport, Hyannis, Massachusetts, July 1960

42

12 22

Dance writer Laura Bleiberg covers Alexei Ratmansky’s “The Nutcracker.” Photo by Gene Schiavone

HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL O.C. campuses amp up their performing arts offerings. A TRIUMPHANT ‘CREATION’ Pacific Chorale takes on one of Haydn’s greatest hits.

4 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

32 42

MUSIC | THEATER | ART | DANCE | 173 ARTS VENUES & ORGANIZATIONS

STUDY IN SUSTAINABILITY Four galleries show us what success looks like. RATMANSKY’S WAY “The Nutcracker” was never more delightful.

FROM THE PUBLISHERS OF

52 58

ON THE COVER In Thom Mayne’s design for the new Orange County Museum of Art, the light-filled atrium will give visitors a view of bridges leading to an educational space on one level and mezzanine galleries on another. Rendering by Morphosis Architects For more, see p. 58

INVITING ILLUMINATION Elizabeth Turk lights up Laguna Beach during Art & Nature. OCMA 2021 On their new home and what to see in the interim


18–19 Season Sponsor

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CONTENTS

Jessica Lang Dance performs the choreographer’s vibrant work, “glow.” Photo by Christopher Jones

THEATER

MUSIC

VISUAL ART

16 A POINTED

26 TENPINTS

36 46 HOW TO LEAVE A PLACE FOR

TALE Sondheim’s “Sweeney Todd” comes to SCR.

18 EDITOR’S

PICKS Don’t-miss theater events

PRESENTS Soka University puts its black box theater to good use.

18 EDITOR’S

PICKS Don’t-miss music events

6 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

A CULTURAL LEGACY ArtsOC honors Hilbert Museum founders.

38 EDITOR’S

PICKS Don’t-miss visual art exhibitions and events

DANCE

DANCE The Irvine Barclay Theatre continues its own tradition.

48 EDITOR’S

PICKS Don’t-miss dance events

MULTIMEDIA

54 BRAD

WILLIAMS STANDS UP A Fullerton comedian returns home for the holidays.

56 EDITOR’S

PICKS Don’t-miss events across genres

63

Arts Organizations and Venues

68

Selected O.C. Galleries

71

Youth Datebook

72

Arts Datebook

76

Encore



PUBLISHER’S LETTER

A NEW SEASON

I

am proud to share the new issue of Premiere OC, your guide to the performing and visual arts in our community. Inside, we showcase more than 200 arts organizations, performances, and events throughout Orange County.

It promises to be an exciting season, indeed. Editor Lara Wilson and her team of writers give us a great preview of new and unique performances and shows, as well as new interpretations of the classics. O.C. continues to welcome world-class ballet and contemporary dance companies—Martha Graham, American Ballet Theatre, and more—as well as performances from O.C.-based Anaheim Ballet and Festival Ballet Theatre, among others. We are lucky to have all of them in our community. The same is true in the theater, where we can see everything from award-winning plays at South Coast Repertory and the Segerstrom Center to future stars at elite high schools in our community. See inside for more of our editor’s picks. This issue also showcases the visual arts, including interviews with gallery owners who have survived, evolved, and thrived for a decade or more—an inspiration to us all. We also are proud to share a look at the highly-anticipated new Orange County Museum of Art, which will join our county’s impressive portfolio of fine arts institutions in 2021. Finally, my thanks to all of the arts organizations who advertise in this issue—it is their support that allows us to create Premiere OC for you. Buy a ticket, fill a seat, and tell them that you read about them in Premiere OC. As always, I welcome your feedback and comments. Until next time, you can follow the arts in every issue of Orange Coast magazine and online at orangecoast.com.

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER Christopher O. Schulz cschulz@orangecoast.com EDITOR Lara Wilson larawlsn@gmail.com CREATIVE DIRECTOR Andrew Hart • ahart@orangecoast.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Liz Goldner, Anastacia Grenda, Tim Grenda, Cristofer Gross, Melody Nolan EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Linda Wallis Goldstein • lgoldstein@orangecoast.com ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Edward Estrada • eestrada@orangecoast.com Pam Potts • ppotts@orangecoast.com Richard Lockhart • rlockhart@orangecoast.com Randy Bilsley • rbilsley@orangecoast.com MARKETING AND EVENTS DIRECTOR Traci Takeda • ttakeda@orangecoast.com DIGITAL MEDIA DIRECTOR Ping Tsai • ptsai@orangecoast.com PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Sue Branica • sbranica@orangecoast.com ADVERTISING ART DIRECTOR Anet Meyer • ameyer@orangecoast.com SALES AND MARKETING COORDINATOR Brandi Yates • byates@orangecoast.com NATIONAL SALES OFFICES NEW YORK Ben Ekstrom • bekstrom@hourmediagroup.com Nancy Forde • nforde@hourmediagroup.com WEST COAST Shana Wong, 808-386-0872 • shanawong@me.com MIDWEST & TEXAS Cheryl Schuldt, 847-251-3483 fax: 847-589-8491 HOUR MEDIA CEO Stefan Wanczyk PRESIDENT John Balardo

Sincerely,

FROM THE PUBLISHERS OF

Christopher O. Schulz President and Publisher

8 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

1124 Main St., Suite A Irvine, CA 92614 949-862-1133 • f: 949-862-0133 ORANGECOAST.COM


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Fortune is fickle, romance – fleeting, But sisters are everything.

by Jane Austen adapted by Jessica Swale directed by Casey Stangl

Sept 1–29

The Dashwood sisters—practical Elinor and impulsive Marianne—chase their dreams from Devonshire to London and back in this charming romantic classic. Age 12 and above.

Honorary Producer: SANDY SEGERSTROM DANIELS Corporate Honorary Producer: U.S. BANK Media Partners: KPCC & ORANGE COAST MAGAZINE

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When their movie-star sister comes to visit, Vanya and Sonia’s lives get hilariously upended in this Tony Award-winning comedy. Age 14 and above. Adult language and situations.

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THEATER

High school programs add a new dimension to O.C.’s theater scene. Here, students from OCSA’s Integrated Arts department put on “James and the Giant Peach.” Photo by Marcos Lazano FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 11


THEATER

HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL Theater is blossoming on O.C. campuses, thanks to prestigious prep programs.

O

by ANASTACIA GRENDA

range County is rich in professional theater with its institutions, like South Coast Repertory, and vibrant local stages, such as Chance Theater. Touring Broadway productions visit Segerstrom Center regularly. But there’s another thriving theater culture here with which audiences should familiarize themselves— local high schools. Not only are most shows open to the public at low prices, they also afford viewers a look at theater’s bright future. ●

12 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019


Opposite page: St. Margaret’s Episcopal School presents “The Drowsy Chaperone.” This page: OCSA’s Musical Theatre students perform “Jasper in Deadland.” Photo by Cheryl Walsh FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 13


THEATER

An “Addams Family” portrait care of OCSA’s Musical Theatre program; photo by Marcos Lazano

ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOL OF THE ARTS There are several reasons why this is one of the most soughtafter prep schools, not just in O.C., but in America—famous alumni, a rigorous curriculum, and plenty of master classes, showcases, and other valuable pre-professional opportunities. Separate conservatory programs focus on acting, musical theater, and production design. Reserve tickets to a show or hire one of the school’s performing groups to come to you for a special event. ocsarts.net

ST MARGARET’S EPISCOPAL SCHOOL This preschool-throughgrade-12 school places a premium on performing arts education. Musicals, plays, workshops, and showcases offer performance opportunities for first-graders and up. Performing arts classes are part of the curriculum beginning in fourth grade, and high school students can participate in three annual shows, either on stage or behind the scenes. They are mounted in the two theaters housed in the school’s remarkable, 45,000-square-foot performing arts center. smes.org

14 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

HUNTINGTON BEACH ACADEMY FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS The academy—which recently marked its 25th anniversary— stages a wide variety of productions. They have everything from one-act play festivals to dinner theater shows to comedy nights, and their eclectic offerings range from “Inherit the Wind” to “Young Frankenstein.” The Actor’s Rep even presented an immersive comedy last year where the audience was part of the show. hbapa.org

SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOL OF THE ARTS Creative opportunities abound in acting and stagecraft for the theater students in this Dana Hills High School program. You can catch one of the productions of theater classics, such as “Cats” or “Arsenic and Old Lace,” but keep an eye out for the shows the students create. Last season, it was “Musicalc, a Calculus Musical.” socsarts.org


OCT 9–14, 2018 Segerstrom Hall

OCTOBER 13, 2018 at 2pm

BERNADETTE PETERS JAN 26, 2019

Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

NOV 13–25, 2018 Segerstrom Hall

NOVEMBER 24, 2018 at 2pm

(714) 556-2787 SCFTA.org

Group Services (714) 755-0236 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa

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THEATER

I

A POINTED TALE South Coast Repertory mounts Sondheim’s landmark ‘Sweeney Todd.’

n 1979, Stephen Sondheim’s “Sweeney Todd: the Demon Barber of Fleet Street” gave Broadway an epic transfusion. Its intricate lyrics and interweaving melodies animated a gallery of complex characters. The operatic tale sought vengeance for power abused and justice denied. It also earned eight Tony Awards, securing Sondheim’s place among the greatest minds in theater history. In Orange County, the show’s 40thanniversary year begins with a new production at South Coast Repertory 16 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

by CRISTOFER GROSS

David Emmes/Martin Benson Theatre Center; photo courtesy of South Coast Repertory

(Jan. 19 through Feb. 19). Director Kent Nicholson, whose SCR credits include both musicals (“Once” and “The Light in the Piazza”) and plays (“Amadeus”), is thrilled to be staging his favorite Sondheim musical. “Musicals have a greater array of storytelling devices,” he said. “But you have to approach them with greater simplicity than a play. Because music is a purely emotional form, it does a lot of the emotional heavy lifting for you.” To further tell the story, the production design will borrow 19th-


“It should feel like you’re stepping back to the time of the actual storytelling.” —Kent Nicholson

ALSO PLAYING 2018-19 SCR season highlights “SENSE AND SENSIBILITY” Sept. 1 through 29 Jessica Swale’s adaptation of Jane Austen’s romantic novel

“KINGS” century stage techniques “to get that Penny Dreadful, Grand Guignol feeling.” Musical director David O will conduct the nine-piece band through a score adapted by original orchestrator Jonathan Tunick. “Sondheim musicals are so smart,” said Associate Artistic Director John Glore. “‘Sweeney Todd’ is a musical masterpiece, but it also addresses class structures and what it’s like to live in a society where the poor are oppressed. It’s something worth dealing with now.” ● Jan. 19 through Feb. 19, scr.org

David Emmes/Martin Benson Theatre Center’s Segerstrom Stage; photo courtesy of South Coast Repertory

​ ct. 13 through Nov. 10 O Vogue calls S ​ arah Burgess’ look at money in politics “absorbing and very funny.”

“A CHRISTMAS CAROL”

Nov. 24 through Dec. 24 The Dickens classic is an O.C. holiday tradition with Hal Landon Jr. at its center.

“CULTURE CLASH (STILL) IN AMERICCA” Dec. 30 through Jan. 20 Comedy and commentary from Richard Montoya, Ric Salinas, and Herbert Siguenza

FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 17


THEATER EDITOR’S PICKS

9.21 through 10.21

The O.C. premiere of Sharr White’s award-winning “The Other Place” will bring you into the fragmented mind and family of a neurologist who believes her solace to be a cottage on Cape Cod. Chance Theater

10.9 through 14

“Beautiful—The Carole King Musical” weaves together No. 1 hits you never knew were written by King with a narrative of her life—and eventual solo career—that is packed with emotion. Segerstrom Hall

11.10

Observe the Veteran’s Day centenary with “If All the Sky Were Paper” by Andrew Carroll, founding director of Chapman’s Center for American War Letters (CAWL). The play incorporates real letters sent during times of conflict plus an original orchestral score by Peter Boyer. Musco Center for the Arts

11.24 through 12.24

No O.C. holiday feels complete without taking in “A Christmas Carol,” still starring Hal Landon Jr. and directed by John-David Keller after 39 impressive years. South Coast Repertory

1.1 through 13

The winner of six Tony Awards, “Dear Evan Hansen” is an intimate look at a community-wide tragedy—a teen’s suicide—and one socially anxious boy who falsely casts himself in a central role. Expect a well-balanced production that calls forth heartbreak as readily as joy. Segerstrom Hall

1.9 through 27

Over 30 years after winning the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Alfred Uhry’s “Driving Miss Daisy” returns to O.C. Michael Learned and Lance Nichols star in this regional production as Daisy Werthan and Hoke Coleburn, respectively, of Jim Crow’s Atlanta. Laguna Playhouse The cast of “Beautiful—The Carole King Musical” does “The Loco-Motion.” Photo courtesy of Segerstrom Center

10.10

Storyteller Khanisha Foster will use her Fox Foundation Fellowship to lead a code-switching workshop series, among other programs. See her untitled new work during this staged reading. Chance Theater

10.13 through 11.10

“Kings,” which premiered at New York’s Public Theater in early 2018, is a political comedy that pits an idealistic new congresswoman and shrewd lobbyist against a powerful senator. South Coast Repertory 18 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

2.5 through 17

“Come from Away” tells a true story from the wake of 9/11 when 38 planes and 7,000 travelers rerouted from the U.S. to Newfoundland—and were welcomed wholeheartedly. Segerstrom Hall

3.2 through 24

Named for an X-ray diffraction image taken in 1952, Anna Ziegler’s play, “Photograph 51,” focuses on scientist Rosalind Franklin, who often goes uncredited for helping to discover DNA’s double helix structure. South Coast Repertory


SAY

HELLO TO

BROADWAY’S BEST! Some of Broadway’s best leading ladies are front and center, in both smash-hit musicals and solo performances, at Segerstrom Center for the Arts.

Beautiful – The Carole King Musical is first to arrive, in a one-week engagement October 9–14. This inspiring true story follows King’s rise from teenage songwriter to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and features her amazing catalog of songs—including “I Feel The Earth Move,” “One Fine Day,” “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman,” and “You’ve Got A Friend.” Back by popular demand, this Tony® and Grammy Award®-winning musical is some kind of wonderful! Making its Center debut, Waitress is playing November 13–25. Inspired by Adrienne Shelly’s beloved film, this irresistible new hit was brought to life by an all-female creative team, led by the 6-time Grammy nominee Sara Bareilles. Called “a little slice of heaven” by Entertainment Weekly, this uplifting musical celebrates friendship, motherhood, and the magic of a well-made pie. The star power will be turned up to high when three-time Tony Awardwinning actress Bernadette Peters comes to the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall for one night only, January 26. Fresh from her most recent critically acclaimed performance in Hello, Dolly!, Bernadette will simply be playing her sparking, captivating self! Sit back and enjoy a night of glorious show tunes as only this theater legend can deliver. These are just three highlights of a remarkable 18/19 Season. For a complete calendar of all the great live entertainment, visit SCFTA.org. Pictured, from top: Beautiful - The Carole King Musical, Sarah Bockel (“Carole King”), photo by Matthew Murphy; Charity Angel Dawson, Desi Oakley and Lenne Klingaman in the National Tour of Waitress, photo by Joan Marcus.

600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa

(714) 556-2787 • SCFTA.org

Group Services (714) 755-0236


Feel the Thrill of Live Music! Enjoy Unforgettable Evenings In the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

Olga Kern

CLASSICAL Great artists and stirring masterpieces! Rach 3 & Boléro • Sept. 27-29 • 8 p.m. | Sept. 30 • 3 p.m. Bernstein @ 100 • Oct. 25-27 • 8 p.m. Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto • Nov. 15-17 • 8 p.m. POPS Big stars & electrifying performances! Vanessa Williams • Oct. 12-13 • 8 p.m. The Wonderful Music of Oz • Nov. 9-10 • 8 p.m. Christmas with Jackie Evancho • Dec. 14-15 • 8 p.m.

C

M

Y

CM

Carl St.Clair

MY

CY

Jackie Evancho

MY

K

Vanessa Williams

40th Anniversary Season

Leonard Bernstein

Philippe Quint

PACIFIC SYMPHONY PROUDLY PERFORMS AT:

600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa FOR ADDITIONAL PERFORMANCE INFORMATION: SCFTA.org

Call (714) 755-5799 PacificSymphony.org


MUSIC

The 5 Browns arrive at Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Dec. 20. Photo courtesy of Carnegie Hall FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 21


MUSIC

A TRIUMPHANT ‘CREATION’ by TIM GRENDA

22 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019


Pacific Chorale and Pacific Symphony will perform Haydn’s “The Creation” on Nov. 4. Photo courtesy of Pacific Chorale FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 23


MUSIC

WINTER HIGHLIGHTS At the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall, except where noted

PACIFIC SYMPHONY

“The Wonderful Music of Oz” Nov. 9 and 10 “Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto” Nov. 15 through 17 “Nutcracker Fantasy” Dec. 6 through 8 “Handel’s Glorious Messiah” Dec. 9 “Chopin’s Piano Concerto” Jan. 10 through 12

PHILHARMONIC SOCIETY Czech Philharmonic Nov. 7 and 8

Itzhak Perlman: “In the Fiddler’s House” Jan. 17

PACIFIC CHORALE “The Creation” Nov. 4

C

lassical music fans looking to stay warm this winter will find plenty of creative heat coming from local symphonies, ensembles, and vocal groups. The Pacific Symphony’s 2018-19 calendar is anchored by Tchaikovsky and Chopin concertos for violin and piano, respectively, but also sets aside time for fun highlights, including “The Wonderful Music of Oz” (Nov. 9 and 10) and “Nutcracker Fantasy” (Dec. 6 through 8). Meanwhile, the Philharmonic Society of Orange County will host the Czech Philharmonic featuring conductor Semyon Bychkov with cellist Alisa Weilerstein and pianist Kirill Gerstein (Nov. 7 and 8, respectively). And in the new year, legendary violinist Itzhak Perlman will perform from his seminal klezmer album, “In the Fiddler’s House.” (Jan. 17). But for many, the upcoming concert season will be highlighted by the 24 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

“Carols by Candlelight” Dec. 1, Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church “Tis the Season!” Dec. 22 and 23

Pacific Chorale promises to deliver a heartwarming winter season.

Pacific Chorale’s performance of Haydn’s “The Creation,” representing the first time in 45 years that the venerable vocal group has presented the masterpiece during its season. “‘The Creation’ has been called the Sistine Chapel of music, not only for its subject matter, but for its sheer artistic perfection,” said Pacific Chorale Artistic Director Rob Istad. “The music is breathtaking in its creativity, variety, technical command, and power to inspire and uplift. It was hailed as Haydn’s greatest triumph when it premiered in 1799 and has remained at the pinnacle of the oratorio repertoire ever since.” The chorale’s performances with the Pacific Symphony will feature soprano Elissa Johnston, tenor Derek Chester, and bass Paul Max Tipton. They will be accompanied by visual multimedia projections which Istad promises will add a whole new dimension to the experience. ● Nov. 4, pacificchorale.org


Find Your Favorite Artists @SOKA this Fall

10/7 A Moving Sound–Music & Dance of Taiwan

10/26 Tom Harrell Quartet– Moving Picture Tour

10/28 Dalí Quartet with Olga Kern–Classical Roots, Latin Soul Program: Shostakovich, Mendelssohn & Juan Crisóstomo de Arriaga

11/16 Graeme James + Joshua Hyslop–Indie Folk

11/18 Meet Pacific Symphony’s New Concertmaster Program: Haydn & Mozart

1 University Dr., Aliso Viejo, CA 92656 | 949.480.4278 | tickets@soka.edu | www.performingarts.soka.edu 10061i_PremOC_ArtsOC_FP_Sept9-28.indd 1

8/28/18 2:49 PM


MUSIC

TENPINTS PRESENTS Head to Soka University’s black box theater for a spirited season featuring violinist-looper Joe Kye.

K

by TIM GRENDA

orean-born, Seattle-raised violinist-looper Joe Kye will perform as part of the TenPints New Music Series at Soka University come March. Kye, critically acclaimed for his eclectic musical style, blends indie-rock, jazz, classical, covers of pop songs, and world folk music, using looping effects to create a rich, layered sound. Kye will perform selections from his January 2018 release, “Migrants,” and other music reflecting the multicultural and multilocational upbringing he experienced as a child of immigrants. “I think the difficulty in classifying [my musical sound] is rooted in the fact that I’m an immigrant and moved around a lot,” said Kye, who as a child attended seven different elementary schools. “I’ve had a lot of musical experiences and [accessed] many different cultures. Through these experiences—especially when you are looking for an identity to root yourself in—I really fell in love with a lot of different sounds.” The Soka Performing Arts Center, in conjunction with TenPints Entertainment, presents local and touring up-andcomers to encourage the creation and discovery of contemporary music in genres like rock, folk, hip hop, and pop. The intimate, club-like space of the black box theater provides a more strippeddown setting to take in a show. The innovative live series kicks off its fourth season on Nov. 16 with a performance of Celtic folk music by New Zealand-based artist Graeme James. ● soka.edu/pac

HEAR IT HERE “GRAEME JAMES—CELTIC FOLK” Nov. 16

“VIOLINIST-LOOPER JOE KYE—INDIE POP”

March 1

Save these dates for additional TenPints shows: Jan. 25, April 19. 26 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019


Violinist Joe Kye at play; photo by Jason Sinn FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 27


MUSIC EDITOR’S PICKS

10.2

11.29

10.6

12.19●

Trumpeter Wynton Marsalis headlines and directs the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra in the tradition of Duke Ellington’s jazz. Irvine Barclay Theatre South Africa’s Soweto Gospel Choir, one of the first to perform in 46,664 AIDS benefit concerts honoring Nelson Mandela in the early aughts, has embarked on a new tour in memory of the anti-apartheid leader. It’s called “Songs of the Free.” Irvine Barclay Theatre

Oakland’s Redwood Tango Ensemble is a six-piece contemporary tango outfit that writes and performs its own genre-expanding and -edifying music. Casa Romantica Ring in the holidays with the brassy, big-band stylings of Los Angeles’ Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra. The criteria for joining their ensemble, founded by two brothers and a friend? “Love of the band-family.” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

12.20●

The 5 Browns are siblings known for the combined power of their 50 fingers on interlocking Steinways. Throughout their career, they’ve dazzled media outlets and critics from Oprah to The New York Times. Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

2.2

Grammy-winning singer-songwriter and author Rosanne Cash will appear alongside her husband, musician John Leventhal, in an evening of sound that’s as true to the American South as Cash’s father, Johnny, was. Musco Center

2.6 through 10

See the Redwood Tango Ensemble at Casa Romantica this fall.

10.30●

Just two years after making its U.S. debut in Costa Mesa, the Taiwan Philharmonic returns. Guest Stephen Hough’s mastery of the piano will illuminate compositions by Liszt and Debussy. Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

11.4

Pacific Chorale will sing Haydn’s masterpiece, “The Creation,” a work O.C. audiences have not heard in 45 years. Orchestral accompaniment will be provided by Pacific Symphony. Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall For more, see p. 22.

Piano virtuoso Joyce Yang will be the guest artistic director of the 17th annual Laguna Beach Music Festival. Look for free community events, opportunities to meet Yang and her collaborating artists, and ticketed concerts. Laguna Playhouse

2.21

Setting the bar for seamless ensemble playing since 1946, the Juilliard String Quartet has been the recipient of five Grammy Awards, including one for Lifetime Achievement. Musco Center

3.15 and 16

Leslie Odom Jr., whose credits include the original Broadway cast of “Hamilton” and NBC’s “Smash,” will sing Nat King Cole and Jerome Kern with the power of the Pacific Symphony behind him. Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall ● Presented by the Philharmonic Society of O.C.

28 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019


Musco Center, in Association with LA Opera, Presents

DON CARLO IN CONCERT STARRING

PLÁCIDO DOMINGO MON, OCT 1, 7:30PM James Conlon conducts a 60-member chorus, 72-member orchestra, and all the principals from the Los Angeles production. Chinese Warriors of Peking

with Chapman University Big Band

October 5, 2018

A Provost Series Lecture

Direct from China

Sharyl Attkisson

LUCIA MICARELLI CHINESE

The Smear

Electric Violin and Band

October 2, 2018

October 4, 2018

WARRIORS OF PEKING

October 5, 2018

Mariinsky/Atkins Recital

AND

A Provost Series Lecture

Jonathan Haidt

AN EVENING WITH

Valery Gergiev

PILOBOLUS

November 14, 2018

October 7, 2018 Chapman CoPA Theatre and Musco Center Present

NATHAN AND JULIE GUNN

Talk

THE CODDLING OF THE AMERICAN MIND

October 18, 2018

Stan Kenton Legacy Orchestra

October 20, 2018

Sarah Chang

November 18, 2018

View the full 2018–19 season calendar and get tickets: This performance also features a Musco Master Class for Students & Members

October 28, 2018

Michael Feinstein Holiday Show December 14, 2018

muscocenter.org

November 10, 2018

A Southern California

CHRISTMAS

December 16, 2018

844-OC-MUSCO

415 N. Glassell Street, Orange, CA 92866 Artists, dates, and programs subject to change.


EXCLUSIVE NEW EXHIBITION OCTOBER 27, 2018 – APRIL 27, 2019 Opening Reception: Saturday, October 27, 5 to 8 P.M.

BAY AREA SCENE PAINTING

The diverse and beautiful cityscapes and landscapes of San Francisco and the surrounding Bay Area take center stage in this stunning showcase of more than 60 paintings by renowned California artists, including Jade Fon Woo, Ralph Hulett, George Post, Jack Laycox, Sun Ying, Ken Potter, Lee Blair, Suong Yangchareon and many more.

FREE ADMISSION AND PARKING. TUESDAY-SATURDAY, 11 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

HILBERTMUSEUM.ORG 167 NORTH ATCHISON STREET, ORANGE, CA 92866 (714) 516-5880 (ACROSS FROM RUBY’S DINER AND ORANGE TRAIN STATION)

Programs and dates subject to change.


VISUAL A RTS

Jan Maarten Voskuil, “Improved Dynamic Monochrome Grey,” 2015, automotive lacquer on linen, 59 by 47 by 7 inches; image courtesy of Peter Blake Gallery FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 31


VISUAL ARTS

F

STUDY IN SUSTAINABILITY Four privately-owned galleries show us how they’ve reached— and surpassed—impressive milestones.

rom creating it to appreciating it to archiving it in history, art takes time. Few in Orange County understand this as intimately as the veteran owners of the local galleries listed here, all of which have been in

32 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

by LARA WILSON Stephanie Bachiero, “Gyration,” 2016, porcelain, 7.5 by 10 by 8 inches; image courtesy of Peter Blake Gallery

business for a decade or more. With a few to visit in arts-centric Laguna Beach and one representing downtown Santa Ana, the following compilation will make a handy itinerary for O.C. gallery-hopping, not to mention a lesson in longevity.


25 YEARS | PETER BLAKE GALLERY World-Class Taste Matters Blake was walking home from the restaurant where he’d been promoted to general manager when a space for lease caught his eye in 1993. “I looked inside my first location and thought, ‘I want to open a gallery.’” The early days meant juggling the two jobs and a relatively minimal startup investment. But hanging on has required finesse— and some luck. “Fortunately for me, the [contemporary] art world took a dramatic turn after the Great Recession, and business mostly was diverted to art fairs and online. Sitting in a booth [at an art fair], it dawned on me that the location of my gallery was irrelevant. I was surrounded by London, Paris, New York, Singapore,

Clockwise from left: Henri Matisse, “Nu Bleu Femme Assise No. 2,” color lithograph derived from the cut-paper original maquette, 14 by 10.25 by 35.56 inches, image courtesy of Dawson Cole Fine Art; Hunt Slonem, “Untitled,” oil on board, 20 by 16 inches, image courtesy of Dawson Cole Fine Art; Lita Albuquerque, “Auric Field (Teluric Explosion),” 2017, 24-karat gold leaf on resin, pigment on panel, 42 by 42 inches; image courtesy of Peter Blake Gallery

and Hong Kong.” Blake’s gallery focuses on California minimalism, the light and space movement, and soon will add a program of collectible design, or home furnishings. Between the brickand-mortar location, attending five to seven high-end international fairs per year, and maintaining a strong online presence across social media and websites like Artsy and Artnet, it has struck success. However, that formula is superficial to more basic, yet not easilyachievable, tenets: “It comes down to having an eye,” Blake said, and “being able to service affluent clients who are accustomed to second-to-none service.” peterblakegallery.com

FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 33


VISUAL ARTS

20+ YEARS | DAWSON COLE FINE ART Balance Legacy and Looking Ahead With their Laguna Beach location established in ’97 alongside another in Carmel (’93) and, later, Palm Desert (’13), this family operation is known for its lifelike sculptures by founder, father, and pre-eminent figurative sculptor Richard MacDonald. Although MacDonald’s work is imbued with the ideal of preserving a moment in time, the gallery itself embraces both past and future, starting with its multigenerational structure: it was renamed after MacDonald’s grandson, Dawson Cole, in 2003. Owners Rich and Ariane MacDonald, MacDonald’s son and daughter-in-law, have curated an impressively broad selection of works by Californian, American, and European masters, including Chuck Close, Wayne Thiebaud, Henri 34 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

Greg Miller, “Good & Plenty,” acrylic, collage, and resin on panel, 60 by 108 inches; image courtesy of JoAnne Artman Gallery

Matisse, Pablo Picasso, and the recent addition of Hunt Slonem. They have also begun to diversify by partnering with high-end resorts to display art. dawsoncolefineart.com 10 YEARS | JOANNE ARTMAN GALLERY Walk the Walk Unlike Blake, JoAnne Artman had a property in mind for her gallery for years—a former location of Blake’s! “When it finally became available, I thought, be careful what you wish for.” But her move from Santa Ana was auspicious. Artman relates to her clients personally, showing works by award-winning artists that she believes in enough to collect herself. Her staff also adds value; Managerial Director Tayler Murphy became certified in appraisal services. This approach— “great art, great staff, and location, location, location”—has proven itself.


“I love living in Laguna Beach. Orange County has never been a good market for the gallery, it just happens to be where I

The Laguna gallery celebrates its 10th anniversary in 2018 and since has opened a second location in New York City. joanneartmangallery.com 35+ YEARS | ORANGE COUNTY CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY ART Use Your Community The “affiliate-run, uncensored, community gallery” in downtown Santa Ana has cast a wide net since its 1980 founding by five original members. Although its official membership structure is limited to only 40 people, the space has hosted over 1,000 invited guest artists and as many as 6,000 participants through its various solo, group, and juried shows. For the latter, the gallery invites artists to submit variations on themes that don’t stray from political or controversial realms. In 2018, it curated a show called “It’s Time,” prompting a “look at the Time’s Up and #MeToo movements.” occca.org ●

Portrait of Peter Blake by Eric Minh Swenson

live and where I want to work. So I accepted the fact that there would always be a visible ceiling above my career by staying… I decided that the quality of life was more important to me than actually being in New York, San Francisco, or Chicago.” — Peter Blake FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 35


VISUAL ARTS

I

HOW TO LEAVE A CULTURAL LEGACY Hilbert Museum founders receive prestigious Arts Orange County Award.

n 2014, developer Mark Hilbert left a voicemail for Dr. Sheryl Bourgeois, the executive vice president at Chapman University. “Every great university needs an art museum,” he said. He later suggested that he and his wife and art-collecting partner, Jan Hilbert, donate many of their mid-20th century California scene paintings, worth $7 million, and $3 million in funds for a museum to be built on the university’s City of Orange campus. The Chapman board ultimately agreed to this generous proposal, and Mark Hilbert, who is managing partner of Hilbert Property Management of Newport Beach, and Jan Hilbert, a retired professor of business at Santa Ana College, became museum cofounders. The Hilbert Museum of California Art opened in February 2016 with the exhibition “Narrative Visions: 20th Century California Art.” The inaugural show featured 106 oil and watercolor paintings of mid-century California scenes by Emil Kosa Jr., Mary Blair,

36 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

by LIZ GOLDNER

Eyvind Earle, “Detail: Concept Art for Walt Disney’s ‘Sleeping Beauty’ (1959),” probably 1956-57, casein on board; image courtesy of The Hilbert Collection

Millard Sheets, Phil Dike, Fletcher Martin, Rex Brandt, Phil Paradise, and several other artists. Subsequent shows have included displays of Disney production art, classic Westways magazine covers, paintings by Norman Rockwell protégés, and works by artists who migrated to California. In spite of the Hilbert Museum’s immediate success, the couple was “shocked,” said Mark Hilbert, when they were informed that they would receive ArtsOC’s Helena Modjeska Cultural Legacy Award for their philanthropy, particularly for the creation of their museum. But their shock soon gave way to delight. One of the couple’s greatest joys is giving back to their community by way of a free-to-the-public art venue for people of all ages and backgrounds to enjoy. As Mark Hilbert said, “If we knew how great it feels to provide this museum to the public, we would have done it sooner.” ● Oct. 16, artsoc.org


Top: Eyvind Earle, “Three Noble Horses,” 1993, oil on board, 60 by 60 inches, gift of the Eyvind Earle Trust to the Hilbert Museum of California Art Middle: Robert Bailey, “Star Gazers,” 2015, graphite pencil on Japanese paper, 15 by 22 inches, The Hilbert Collection Bottom right: Alson Clark, “La Jolla Cove,” 1928, oil on canvas, 25.5 by 25.5 inches, collection of the Automobile Club of Southern California Bottom left: M. DeNeale Morgan, “Cypresses, Coast of Monterey,” 1929, oil on canvas, 22 by 28 inches, collection of the Automobile Club of Southern California All works pictured are on view through Oct. 13. Images courtesy of The Hilbert Museum

FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 37


VISUAL ARTS EDITOR’S PICKS

Through 11.17

Inclusive of over 60 artists, “Living with Clay: California Ceramics Collections” depicts the lifestyles of several collectors by arranging homelike interiors as settings for their various works of pottery and clay art. Begovich Gallery at California State University, Fullerton

Through 1.7

A presentation of the SoCal collective California Fibers, the exhibition “A Matter of Time” will focus on such durational practices—and resulting works—as coiling, crocheting, dyeing, embroidery, felting, knotting, netting, paper making, quilting, and weaving. Founders Hall at Soka University

9.29 through 1.5

Works comprising the vast collection gifted by the late Newport Beach developer, Gerald Buck, will be unveiled during “First Glimpse: Introducing The Buck Collection.” The exhibition predates a museum that will be built on campus. UC Irvine

10.4

Attend a gallery tour of “Liberation/ Incarceration,” on view through Oct. 14. Confronting the nation’s disproportionately high incarceration rate, the group show reflects the cultural center’s ongoing in-prison programming, and it includes photographs and inmate-created artwork. Muckenthaler Cultural Center

10.20 and 21

The Southern California Plein Air Painters Association (SOCALPAPA) has partnered with the Newport Bay Conservancy and O.C. Parks to present a juried show and sale featuring locally-made plein air paintings in Newport’s pristine Back Bay. Peter and Mary Muth Interpretive Center

11.9 through 3.10

The Irvine Museum Collection, which ultimately will be housed alongside The Buck Collection at UC Irvine, will travel first to San Clemente during “The Idle Hour.” The figurative impressionist works on display will be curated by Casa Executive Director Berenika Schmitz. Casa Romantica

11.10 through 1.19

Evoke Whovillian holiday spirit when original animation cels and historical documentation from Chuck Jones’ 1966 TV adaptation of “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” are hung with care. Hilbert Museum of California Art Lee Mullican, “Oblique of Agawam,” 1950, oil on canvas, 50.5 by 40 inches, The Buck Collection at the UC Irvine Institute and Museum for California Art

Through 1.13

With the museum’s year-long centennial celebration in full swing, “Art Colony: The Laguna Beach Art Association, 1918-1935” showcases the group of artists responsible for the promotion of Southern California art, and the establishment of Laguna Beach as an art colony, in the early 20th century. Laguna Art Museum 38 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

3.19 through 4.28

Known for his photorealistic paintings, Arizona-based artist Rock Newcomb depicts Native American artifacts and still life arrangements in an ongoing study of the American Southwest. Casa Romantica


Art patrons and art lovers know the collection as “the best collection of California art that no one has ever seen.”

First Glimpse: Introducing The Buck Collection September 29, 2018 – January 5, 2019 University of California, Irvine Claire Trevor School of the Arts University Art Gallery and Contemporary Arts Center Gallery 712 Arts Plaza, Irvine, CA 92697 Visit imca.uci.edu/firstglimpse to sign up for exhibition updates and special events. Image: Peter Alexander, Thrasher, 1992, Oil on canvas, 48 x 84 inches. The Buck Collection at the UCI Institute and Museum for California Art.


ORANGE COUNTY’S FESTIVAL BALLET THEATRE

2018-2019 SEASON

DECEMBER 8-24, 2018 OVATION OCT 13 -14, 2018

2018-2019 SEASON at the Barclay

SLEEPING BEAUTY MAR 23-24, 2019

tickets: festivalballet.org | 949.854.4646


DANCE

Xin Ying and Lloyd Knight in Pontus Lidberg’s “Woodland”; photo by Hibbard Nash Photography FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 41


DANCE

RATMANSKY’S WAY One of the country’s finest “Nutcrackers” has found a home in O.C. by LAURA BLEIBERG

The corps de ballet performs the Waltz of the Snowflakes. Photo by Gene Schiavone 42 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019


T

he Nutcracker” ballet is more than a tradition, it’s a beloved rite of passage. Audiences cherish its winsome Christmastime story and make a pilgrimage to experience it. And local children often have their first performing experience in this 126-year-old Russian-born, Americanadopted classic. In 2015, a mini-temblor hit when a new “Nutcracker” joined the more than a dozen already in Orange County: American Ballet Theatre artist-in-residence Alexei Ratmansky’s lively production settled in to the Segerstrom Center for the Arts. It was timed with the opening of the center’s ABT William J. Gillespie School, which provides enough well-trained students for the large cast of children. By committing for five years to an annual “Nutcracker” from a single company—a first for the center—it further cemented the relationship between ABT and the arts complex. Ratmansky, a former principal dancer with the Royal Danish Ballet FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 43


DANCE

WINTER HIGHLIGHTS

and onetime director of the Bolshoi Ballet, created a traditional ballet that respects the narrative clues within Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s score. The stage is awash with action and ministory threads that become clearer with repeated viewings. And befitting a family story, Ratmansky’s way with dance is playful, even silly. The ballerinas in the Waltz of the Flowers have male partners who are dressed as bumblebees (Richard Hudson did the charming scenic and costume designs). The ballet begins in the Stahlbaum family kitchen and Ratmansky introduces the humansized, rambunctious mice with whom Clara will do battle later. He gives the overture a whole new spunkiness. But it’s the double love story that’s most poignant. Ratmansky turns the lead ballerina and her cavalier into a grown-up version of Clara and the Nutcracker Prince. The adults have a side-by-side duet with the child Clara and the boy Prince that is filled with optimism and promise, and which just might make you tear up. Now that’s a “Nutcracker” that delivers for children and their parents, too. ● Dec. 7 through 17, scfta.org 44 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

Bumblebee costumes complement the original Waltz of the Flowers concept. Photo by Gene Schiavone

LAND OF THE SWEETS FESTIVAL BALLET THEATRE Dec. 9 through 24 30th-anniversary production Irvine Barclay Theatre

ANAHEIM BALLET

Dec. 16 “A Southern California Christmas” Musco Center for the Arts Dec. 22 and 23 “The Nutcracker” City National Grove of Anaheim

MAPLE CONSERVATORY Dec. 14 through 16 “The Ultimate Nutcracker” Irvine Valley College

ORANGE COUNTY BALLET THEATRE Dec. 6 and 7 Casa Romantica

NOUVEAU CHAMBER BALLET Dec. 15 and 16 Fullerton College Campus Theater

RICHTER BALLET

Dec. 21 and 22 Anaheim Center for the Performing Arts at Servite


NOV 9

NOV 29

DEC 6 & 7

MAR 22

APR 26

JUN 6 & 7

JUN 20

Nov 9: The Idle Hour: The Irvine Museum Collection at the University of California, Irvine Nov 29: Redwood Tango Ensemble Dec 6 & 7: The Nutcracker Ballet Mar 22: An Evening with Jane Monheit: Ella Fitzgerald Tribute Apr 26: Culture Shock LA Hip Hop Jun 6 & 7: The Odd-Essy Theater Jun 20: Levi Ponce, muralist Visit CasaRomantica.org/Calendar for more events in the 2018-19 season!

“A cultural smorgasbord” — ORANGE COAST MAGAZINE

415 Avenida Granada San Clemente, CA 92672 (949) 498-2139 Casa Romantica Cultural Center and Gardens is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization


DANCE

A PLACE FOR DANCE

A

fter 26 years, the Contemporary Dance Series at the Irvine Barclay Theatre has its own legacy to live up to. Former President Douglas Rankin’s enduring relationships and thoughtful programming once were regarded as interchangeable with the Barclay. His 2015 resignation and the appointment of current President Jerry Mandel, who previously helmed the Segerstrom Center, signaled a new act. One way that’s playing out: a roster of companies that runs the gamut from the field’s

46 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

by LARA WILSON

“Horses in the Sky,” by Kibbutz Contemporary Dance’s artistic director, Rami Be’er, arrives from Israel in October. Photo by Eyal Hirsch

pioneers to its most pioneering. Local audiences will recognize and revere names like the Martha Graham and Kibbutz Contemporary dance companies. The latter, founded in 1970 in Israel, fulfills Mandel’s vision of international programming along with Malpaso Dance Company from Cuba. “We are in one of the most ethnically diverse communities in the world,” he said. But Kibbutz, far-flung as it is, also holds a local tie. Dancer Megan Doheny, from Irvine, is a former Chapman University student and OCSA graduate. Jessica Lang Dance, appreciated for


DANCE EDITOR’S PICKS

9.28

Jessica Lang Dance, the NYC company helmed by Bessie Award-winning artistic director and choreographer Lang, brings “This Thing Called Love,” set to a score of Tony Bennett standards. Irvine Barclay Theatre For more, see p. 46.

10.4 through 7

The 14th annual Laguna Dance Festival presents two stellar programs: “Stardust,” a tribute to David Bowie by Complexions Contemporary Ballet, and “Stars of Dance,” featuring duet and ensemble performances by dancers and dancemakers at the height of their careers. Laguna Playhouse

11.1

Witness “The Art of Performance in Irvine: Simone Forti and Friends,” a retrospective of films and a live performance by the revolutionary postmodern dancer, artist, and writer who informed the work of Yvonne Rainer and others over the past six decades. xMPL Theater, Contemporary Arts Center, UC Irvine

11.9 through 11

Principal Ivan Vasiliev stars as the iconic Don Quixote in this center premiere from St. Petersburg’s Mikhailovsky Ballet and Orchestra. Original Petipa choreography, inspired by the novel by Miguel de Cervantes, dates back to the 19th century. Segerstrom Hall

11.14

Pilobolus, a company of “athlete-illusionists,” is known for its signature blend of puppetry, gymnastics, acrobatics, theatrics, and production effects. While in residence at Chapman, members will lead classes and teach choreographic techniques to dance majors. Musco Center for the Arts

1.17 through 20

Simone Forti performs her monumental work, “Sleep Walkers/ZooMantras.” Photo by Jason Underhill

10.13 and 14

Led by Artistic Director Salwa Rizkalla, Festival Ballet Theatre’s “Ovation” will deliver a program of three original contemporary works, including one by choreographer-on-the-rise Andrea Schermoly. Irvine Barclay Theatre

10.24

The arrival of Israel’s Kibbutz Contemporary Dance Company also will be a homecoming for O.C.-born and -bred dancer Megan Doheny. See her in the cast of Rami Be’er’s 2016 “Horses in the Sky,” a dynamic portrait of a dystopian future. Irvine Barclay Theatre For more, see p. 46.

10.25

Contemporary hip-hop outfit Sankofa Danzafro of Colombia will perform courtesy of Laguna Dance Festival’s year-round programming. Neighborhood Congregational Church 48 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

In addition to “The Nutcracker,” American Ballet Theatre choreographer-inresidence Alexei Ratmansky has reimagined the quirky classic, “Harlequinade,” in the Italian genre of “commedia dell’arte,” or “comedy of the profession.” This is its West Coast premiere. Segerstrom Hall

1.24

One of America’s pre-eminent contemporary ensembles, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago performs mixed repertory by homegrown and internationally-renowned choreographers. Musco Center for the Arts

2.27

Martha Graham Dance Company’s “The Eve Project” honors the centennial of women’s suffrage through Graham’s work as well as by commissioning female choreographers over a two-year period. Irvine Barclay Theatre For more, see p. 46.


SAVE THE DATE its elegance and attention to design details since its founding in New York City in 2011, will open the season with a West Coast premiere set to Tony Bennett music, a draw Mandel hopes will attract crossover audiences. Outreach—like off-site engagements between Kibbutz and Irvine’s Jewish Community Center—is another strategy for building audiences. Aside from those efforts, the quality of the series should confirm to loyal returners and newcomers alike that the Barclay is a place for dance. ● thebarclay.org

Jessica Lang’s “glow” demonstrates the choreographer’s visual approach. Photo by Christopher Jones

JESSICA LANG DANCE “This Thing Called Love” Sept. 28

KIBBUTZ CONTEMPORARY DANCE COMPANY “Horses in the Sky” Oct. 24

MARTHA GRAHAM DANCE COMPANY “The Eve Project” Feb. 27

MALPASO DANCE COMPANY March 20

FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 47


GOODWILL_Premier OC_6.5X10_Dance.indd 1

8/29/18 4:34 PM



MULTIMED IA

Contemporary circus company, The 7 Fingers, turns our world upside down in “Reversible.” Photo courtesy of Irvine Barclay Theatre FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 51


MULTIMEDIA

INVITING ILLUMINATION Elizabeth Turk’s oceanic art lights up Laguna Beach.

O

by MELODY NOLAN

n the evening of November 3rd, the Laguna Beach coastline will glow with the light of 1,000 LED-lit umbrellas. A new creation by acclaimed artist and California native Elizabeth Turk, Shoreline Project will bring 1,000 participants together in an innovative performance during Laguna Art Museum’s annual Art & Nature festival. After a sunset dance performance choreographed by Lara Wilson, who directs the O.C.-based company The Assembly, participants will gather to carry, spin, and maneuver the LED-lit umbrellas along Main Beach. Inspired by the connective capacity of nature, Turk’s intricately designed objects feature printed mandalas created from X-ray images of seashells. From concept to creation, they represent and exemplify a mobile form of shelter. Participants will keep their umbrellas as “art-ifacts” of the event, their cost covered by fundraising. Shoreline Project’s creators aim to spark connections between members of the O.C. community both during and after this common artistic experience. “We’re trying to bring empathy back and break down any barriers that exist in our society right now. The idea is to make change with creative experiences,” says Laura Siapin, project manager of Shoreline Project. A post-event film will depict a bird’s-eye perspective of the performance, illustrating the significance of each individual’s contribution to the whole. Siapin explained that the event relies upon the presence of the participants; knowingly or not, each person will imbue the performance with their own spontaneous movements and directional patterns. ET Studios, Elizabeth Turk’s nonprofit organization, envisions recreating this performance in cities around the Pacific Rim as a celebration of connection across perceived divides. “There is no barrier to entry,” Siapin says. “It’s about bringing everybody up—a happy moment, a beautiful moment, a shared memory.” To find out more and to register as a participant, visit the website below. ● Nov. 3, shoreline-project.com Note to readers: Lara Wilson, the choreographer mentioned in the story, also edits this publication.

52 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019


Laguna Art Museum’s Art & Nature festival commissions Elizabeth Turk to create 1,000 LED-lit umbrellas. Photo by Eric Stoner FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 53


MULTIMEDIA

BRAD WILLIAMS STANDS UP

S

The OC-born comic returns to Irvine Improv in December.

tanding up for himself led Brad Williams to stand-up comedy. Fifteen Father’s Days ago, Williams took his dad to see Carlos Mencia at Brea Improv. When the audience around them chilled at a dwarf joke, Mencia asked, “Is one here?” “I raised my hand and he called me up on stage,” Williams recalled. “I wasn’t trying to be funny, but my answers got laughs. That moment, I knew I was going to be a comic.” Growing up in Fullerton, he’d been prepped. While fathers and sons tossed balls, he and his tossed taunts. “He knew I’d be made fun of,” Williams said. “So our thing was to make fun of each other. He’d make fun of me, then say, ‘Now hit me back. It’s 54 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

by CRISTOFER GROSS

Brad Williams, comedian; photos courtesy of the artist

going to happen in school, so have the more vicious joke and they’ll shut the heck up.’” Quick comebacks nurtured an even quicker wit, and a unique comic voice emerged. Mencia invited him to open for his national tour. His “Fun Size” was Showtime’s toprated comedy special of 2015, and of 2016’s “Daddy Issues,” The New York Times wrote, “no one is doing it more hilariously.” In December, Williams will give a five-performance stand at Irvine Improv. “You may run into my family there,” he warned. “If you see a woman faint after an explicit joke, that’s probably my mother. And the guy laughing the loudest? Probably my dad.” ● Dec. 28 through 30, irvine.improv.com


FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 55


MULTIMEDIA EDITOR’S PICKS

Ongoing

Each month, art professor Jacqueline Hahn goes Beyond the Canvas, discussing important artists and art movements. This season’s “Great Masters” series will cover Da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, Caravaggio, and more. Newport Beach Public Library

9.22 through 1.13

Museo Stibbert in Florence, Italy, will lend their collection of “Knights in Armor,” including fullbody iron suits, helmets, corselets, and weaponry dating back to Medieval times. Bowers Museum

11.1 through 4

Situated overlooking the Pacific, the museum is uniquely vested in the relationship between Art & Nature. Their festival will consist of a Charles Darwin-themed keynote, films, a commissioned outdoor artwork, and family-friendly events. Laguna Art Museum For more, see p. 52

11.20 through 1.20

In what has become an annual holiday tradition, Muzeo Express exhibits model trains and, through additional displays and hands-on activities, draws upon the history of railways in Southern California. Muzeo

R. Luke DuBois crosspollinates music with unexpected information sources and art forms. Photo courtesy of UC Irvine

9.29 through 2.2

“Music into Data::Data into Music” is a chronological series of visual and auditory works by composer, artist, and NYU professor R. Luke DuBois. DuBois frames musical scores as data sets, performing them not only with musical instruments but with digital programs and images. Beall Center for Art and Technology

10.6 through 1.13

During his 2017 residency, David Politzer created Text Neck, a series of video works focused on the debilitating and isolating effects of smartphones. Grand Central Art Center

10.28

A broadcast of National Theatre Live’s staging of “Frankenstein,” directed by Danny Boyle and starring Benedict Cumberbatch, will return to the silver screen in anticipation of All Hallow’s Eve. Irvine Barclay Theatre

56 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

1.10 and 2.7

Attend one or both modules of Laura Miller’s poetry workshop to discover contemporary styles and write your own personal piece. Casa Romantica

2.1 and 2

Synonymous with top-tier contemporary circus, The 7 Fingers will transport you into their show “Reversible,” an otherworld filled with risk, beauty, and a captivating musical score. Irvine Barclay Theatre

3.17

Renowned organist Dennis James will join Pacific Symphony to accompany the 1925 silent film, “The Phantom of the Opera,” on the 4,322-pipe William J. Gillespie concert organ. Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall


Provides the public an oasis of inspiration, education and appreciation of regional history, horticulture and the arts www.slgardens.org Open Daily 10:30 am to 4:00 pm / 949-673-2261 2647 Pacific Coast Highway, Corona del Mar, CA 92625


ORANGE COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART

A rendering by Morphosis Architects shows how a grand outdoor staircase will join the future Orange County Museum of Art to Argyros Plaza. 58 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019


OCMA 2021

S

by LARA WILSON

ince 2008, a plot of land on Avenue of the Arts has awaited the arrival of the Orange County Museum of Art. A gift from the Segerstrom family, the expanse of fenced-off grass leads in one direction to Segerstrom Hall and the Julianne Argyros Plaza’s iconic Richard Serra sculpture; in another rises the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall and the Samueli Theater tucked behind it. With their former Newport Beach location officially sold in May 2018, the O.C. institution has solidified—and publicly announced—its plans to occupy a new building designed by architect Thom Mayne of Morphosis Architects in 2021.

“[O]ur mandate is to continue to ask questions about what art is and where it’s going. We see [Mayne’s] architecture as doing the same thing, asking what is architecture and where is it going.” —Todd Smith Southern California-based Mayne was selected as part of an international search in 2008, winning the confidence of the museum’s administration and board through work that was innovative, urban, and gaining recognition. CEO Todd Smith joined OCMA in 2014, having previously overseen the building of the Tampa Art Museum in Florida. As a contemporary art museum, he explained, “our mandate is to continue to ask questions about what art is and where it’s going. We see [Mayne’s] architecture as doing the same thing, asking what is FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 59


ORANGE COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART

architecture and where is it going.” The new edifice will house 25,000 square feet of exhibition space. 10,000 will be reserved for the types of traveling exhibitions the museum has always shown. The remaining 15,000 square feet will be dedicated to a permanent collection the museum has been accumulating and exporting to other museums since 1968. It has not had room to display it until now. The building will be “the final piece of the puzzle at the center,” Smith said. As such, there are specific criteria to fill. The building’s exterior must fit into the landscape, yet remain singular; the museum will be the lone visual arts institution on campus. In his design, Mayne has referenced attributes from other structures, carrying over the wave from the facade of the concert hall and incorporating a curved line into the grand public staircase as a nod to the Serra. All of its four sides will be visible to traffic of some kind, whether vehicular or pedestrian, so the exterior is intended to be experienced “in the round.” The interior, meanwhile, must reflect the 60 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

The roof terrace will be a home for multimedia art and performance possibilities. Rendering by Morphosis Architects of video installation, “A Step On The Sun,” by Janet Biggs

artworks it will showcase; the space will be “uplifting and inspirational.” Its flexibility to accommodate various types of exhibitions is of paramount importance. A 10,000-square-foot rooftop terrace will be capable, in the future, of converting into additional gallery space. “We wanted to make sure we weren’t just building for today, that there was an acknowledgement that museums grow over time,” Smith explained. Expansion will be possible “without redesigning or rebuilding.” A puzzle is an apt way to think about the center, since once it’s put together it will be about the synergistic relationships from organization to organization—and what that means for guests—rather than only about the final interlocking piece. The museum looks forward to being more centrally and conveniently located. Plans are in place for it to remain open into the evenings until curtain time at the nearby performance venues. Guests can duck into an exhibition while they wait for their show to begin, consolidating the travel time and parking expenses that engaging with


institutional art can entail. “Each of our independent disciplines have become more interdisciplinary,” said Smith. “You saw SCR’s performance of the play ‘Red’ about Mark Rothko, you see dance incorporating video elements, you see visual artists working with performance, so it’s almost like all three have come together already. I think it’s going to be wonderfully exciting to see how all of us can challenge each other to think about ways to cross over … I hope our colleagues at the center see our exhibition space as an opportunity [for them] to be part of what we’re doing as well. If we don’t do it right, shame on us for not taking advantage of this really unique and rare opportunity.” While you wait for 2021 (and the construction that surely will feel interminable in the meantime), you can continue to engage with the museum. Beginning in October, they’ll occupy a temporary, 30,000-square-foot space just a block away from their new home. With “galleries” already built in, the former furniture store will inadvertently serve as a truly

Argyros Plaza, featuring Richard Serra’s sculpture, “Connector,” will lead to OCMA’s main entrance. Rendering by Morphosis Architects

unique holding area for OCMA’s works and processes. Offering even more exhibition space than its previous home, the temporary location will provide opportunities for the museum to engage with artists in a more experimental way and curate larger works. Five years ago, the museum pivoted towards a concentration on artists from the Pacific Rim, which includes 42 countries along the west coast of the United States and Latin America, Southeast Asia, Australia, and New Zealand. They’ve presented artists from 23 of those countries. “We see that as our niche going forward curatorially,” Smith said of the museum’s role in identifying international artists to introduce to the US, “given how connected O.C. and all of Southern California is to establishing emerging regions around the Pacific.” With areas that showcase aspects of OCMA’s history, including its role in launching many artists’ careers, and a suite with the model of the new building on display, the new location will bridge the museum’s past as well as its future. ● ocma.net FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 61


ORANGE COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART

Top: Mariángeles Soto-Díaz, “Color Felt,” 2013, mixed media installation, dimensions variable; photo by Debbie Rasiel Middle: Valentina Jager, “Berlin 2015,” 2018, sunprint on tissue paper and rebar, unique, 59 by 94.5 by 6 inches Bottom: Rodrigo Valenzuela, “Toward Hedonic Reversal No. 3,” 2014, archival pigment print, artist frame, 54 by 44 inches, courtesy of the artist and Klowden Mann Gallery, Los Angeles Images courtesy of OCMA

TRANSITORY SPACE

KATHRYN GARCIA

Los Angeles and Ibiza, Spain

VALENTINA JAGER Guadalajara, Mexico

ALAN NAKAGAWA Los Angeles

NI YOUYU

Shanghai, China

MARIÁNGELES SOTODÍAZ Irvine

RODRIGO VALENZUELA Los Angeles

1661 W. Sunflower Ave. 949-759-1122, ocma.net

62 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

© Mariángeles Soto-Díaz, © Valentina Jager, © Rodrigo Valenzuela

OCMA Expand-Santa Ana opens in October with these Pacific Rim artists. Admission is free:


YOU AND YOUR BIG I DEAS

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ART ORGANIZATIONS & VENUES CULTURAL/ PERFORMING ARTS CENTERS 1888 Center 115 N. Orange St., Orange 657-282-0483 1888.center

Casa Romantica Cultural Center and Gardens 415 Avenida Granada, San Clemente 949-498-2139 casaromantica.org Clayes Performing Arts Center Cal State Fullerton 800 N. State College Blvd. 657-278-3371, fullerton.edu

Irvine Barclay Theatre

Irvine Barclay Theatre 4242 Campus Drive 949-854-4646, thebarclay.org

Musco Center for the Arts Chapman University 1 University Drive, Orange 844-626-8726 muscocenter.org

Soka Performing Arts Center 1 University Drive Aliso Viejo, 949-480-4278 soka.edu/pac

Muckenthaler Cultural Center 1201 W. Malvern Ave. Fullerton, 714-738-6595 themuck.org

Segerstrom Center for the Arts 600 and 615 Town Center Drive Costa Mesa 714-556-2787, scfta.org

MUSEUMS/ ART CENTERS

64 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

Beall Center for Art and Technology UC Irvine 712 Arts Plaza 949-824-6206 beallcenter.uci.edu

Bowers Museum 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana 714-567-3600 bowers.org Children’s Museum at La Habra 301 S. Euclid St. 562-905-9793 lhcm.org


Chuck Jones Center 3321 Hyland Ave. Costa Mesa, 949-660-7791 chuckjonescenter.org Festival of Arts 650 Laguna Canyon Road Laguna Beach, 800-487-3378 foapom.com Fullerton Museum Center 301 N. Pomona Ave. 714-738-6545 cityoffullerton.com Grand Central Art Center 125 N. Broadway Santa Ana, 714-567-7233 grandcentralartcenter.com Heritage Museum of Orange County 3101 W. Harvard St. Santa Ana, 714-540-0404 heritagemuseumoc.org

Hilbert Museum of California Art 167 N. Atchison St. Orange, 714-516-5880 hilbertmuseum.com Huntington Beach Art Center 538 Main St., 714-374-1650 huntingtonbeachartcenter.org International Surfing Museum 411 Olive Ave. , Huntington Beach 714-960-3483 surfingmuseum.org Irvine Fine Arts Center 14321 Yale Ave. 949-724-6880 irvinefinearts.org The Irvine Museum Collection UC Irvine 18881 Von Karman Ave., Suite 100 Irvinemuseumcollection.uci.edu Kidseum 1802 N. Main St. Santa Ana, 714-480-1520 bowers.org/kidseum

PROMOTION

Laguna Art-A-Fair 777 Laguna Canyon Road Laguna Beach, 949-494-4514 art-a-fair.com Laguna Art Museum 307 Cliff Drive Laguna Beach, 949-494-8971 lagunaartmuseum.org Laguna Plein Air Painters Association 949-376-3635 lpapa.org Muzeo 241 S. Anaheim Blvd., Anaheim 714-95-MUZEO (956-8936) muzeo.org Orange County Center for Contemporary Art 117 N. Sycamore St. Santa Ana, 714-667-1517 occca.org

Palm Court Arts Complex at Orange County Great Park Marine Way and Sand Canyon Ave., Irvine 866-829-3829, ocgp.org Pretend City Children’s Museum 29 Hubble, Irvine 949-428-3900 pretendcity.org Sawdust Art Festival 935 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach 949-494-3030 sawdustartfestival.org Southern California Plein Air Painters Association socalpapa.com

Orange County Museum of Art 1661 W. Sunflower Ave. 949-759-1122 ocma.net

ARTS PROFILE

CLAIRE TREVOR SCHOOL OF THE ARTS EVENT HIGHLIGHTS FIRST GLIMPSE: INTRODUCING THE BUCK COLLECTION AT THE UCI INSTITUTE AND MUSEUM FOR CALIFORNIA ART Sept. 29 – Jan. 5. The best collection of California art that no one has ever seen. UAG and CAC Galleries. Free admission. CTSA ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE Oct. 25, 5:30pm. Behind-the-scenes look at performances, classes and shows. Free admission. The Claire Trevor School of the Arts is a national leader in training future generations of citizen artists. Our graduates go on to electrify audiences in theaters, galleries, and concert halls, as well as in entertainment and technology related venues throughout the world. Each year the school mounts over 300 performances and exhibitions featuring these exquisite young talents.

FOR TICKETS VISIT: www.arts.uci.edu/tickets • box office: (949) 824-2787 EVENT CALENDAR & MORE INFO: www.arts.uci.edu/calendar

UCI DRAMA PRESENTS: LEGALLY BLONDE – THE MUSICAL Nov. 10 – 18, evening and matinee performances. Elle Woods goes to Harvard in this Tony-nominated family-friendly production. Irvine Barclay Theatre. Tix: $12 - $25. UCI SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Nov. 20. 8pm. Orchestral classics and the world premiere of Larry Mumford’s Symphony No. 3, The Four Winds. Irvine Barclay Theatre. Tix: $7 - $20. UCI DANCE: NEW SLATE June 25 – August 10, UCI Campus Dec. 6 – 8, evening and matinee performances. Original choreography by MFA candidates in Dance. Claire Trevor Theatre. Tix: $11 - $18. FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 65


ART ORGANIZATIONS & VENUES Orange County Women’s Chorus 23802 Avenida de la Carlota, Laguna Hills 949-451-8590 ocwomenschorus.org Orange County Youth Symphony Orchestra 714-744-7927 ocyso.org Pacific Chorale 3303 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 714-662-2345 pacificchorale.org Pacific Symphony 17620 Fitch Ave., Irvine 714-755-5799 pacificsymphony.org

South Coast Repertory Huntington Beach Playhouse 8263-8299 Heil Ave., Westminster 714-375-0696 hbplayhouse.com

Shakespeare Orange County 12762 Main St. Garden Grove 714-590-1575 shakespeareoc.org

Attic Community Theater 2834 S. Fairview St., Santa Ana 714-662-2525 ocact.com

Laguna Playhouse 606 Laguna Canyon Road Laguna Beach 949-497-2787 lagunaplayhouse.com

South Coast Repertory 655 Town Center Drive Costa Mesa 714-708-5555, scr.org

Cabrillo Playhouse 202 Avenida Cabrillo San Clemente 949-492-0465 cabrilloplayhouse.org

Lyceum Theater Vanguard University 55 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa 714-668-6145 vanguard.edu

Camino Real Playhouse 31776 El Camino Real San Juan Capistrano 949-489-8082 caminorealplayhouse.org

Maverick Theater 110 E. Walnut Ave. Fullerton, 714-526-7070 mavericktheater.com

THEATERS

Anaheim Center for the Performing Arts at Servite 1952 W. La Palma Ave. 714-774-7575, ext. 1136 servitetheatre.org

Chance Theater 5522 E. La Palma Ave. Anaheim Hills 714-777-3033 chancetheater.com Concordia Studio Theatre Concordia University 1530 Concordia West Irvine 949-854-8002, ext.1526 cui.edu Costa Mesa Playhouse 661 Hamilton St. 949-650-5269 costamesaplayhouse.com Curtis Theatre 1 Civic Center Circle, Brea 714-990-7722 curtistheatre.com

Musical Theatre Orange County 714-637-0186, mtoc.org Musical Theatre Village 36-C Mauchly, Irvine 949-753-1996 musicaltheatrevillage.net Mysterium 311 S. Euclid Ave., La Habra 562-697-3311 mysteriumtheater.com Newport Theatre Arts Center 2501 Cliff Drive Newport Beach ntaconline.com Rose Center Theater 14140 All American Way Westminster 714-793-1150 rosecentertheater.com

66 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

Stages Theatre 400 E. Commonwealth Ave. Fullerton, 714-525-4484, stagesoc.org Westminster Community Theatre 7272 Maple St. 714-893-8626 wctstage.org

MUSIC

Choral Arts Initiative 949-287-4270 choralartsinitiative.org Dana Point Symphony 301-832-0388 danapointsymphony.com Laguna Beach Live! 949-715-9713 lagunabeachlive.org MenAlive, the Orange County Gay Men’s Chorus 866-636-2548 menalivechorus.org Orange County Symphony 714-778-0314 ocsymphony.org

Philharmonic Society of Orange County 2082 Business Center Drive, Irvine 949-553-2422 philharmonicsociety.org South Coast Symphony 714-731-8079 southcoastsymphony.org TenPints Entertainment tenpintsent.com

CONCERT VENUES City National Grove of Anaheim 2200 E. Katella Ave. 714-712-2700 citynational groveofanaheim.com

ana

The Coach House 33157 Camino Capistrano San Juan Capistrano 949-496-8930 thecoachhouse.com Honda Center 2695 E. Katella Ave. Anaheim 714-704-2500 hondacenter.com House of Blues Anaheim 400 W. Disney Way 714-520-2334 houseofblues.com/ anaheim The Observatory/ Constellation Room 3503 S. Harbor Blvd. Santa Ana 714-957-0600 observatoryoc.com

DE


Pacific Amphitheatre 100 Fair Drive Costa Mesa 714-708-1870 pacamp.com Yost Theater 307 N. Spurgeon St. Santa Ana 888-862-9573 yosttheater.com

Fuse Dance Company 626-893-2776 fusedanceco.com

Arts Orange County 17620 Fitch Ave., Irvine 714-556-5160

Laguna Dance Festival 949-715-5578 lagunadancefestival.org

Contemporary Arts Center UC Irvine 712 Arts Plaza 949-824-9854 arts.uci.edu

National Choreographers Initiative nchoreographers.org

DANCE

Reborn Dance Interactive reborndance.org

Akomi Dance akomidance.com

Richter Academy of Classical Dance 22661 Lambert St., #204 949-916-9979 richteracademy.org

Anaheim Ballet 714-520-0904 anaheimballet.org The Assembly theassemblydance.co

The Wooden Floor 1810 N. Main St., Santa Ana 714-541-8314 thewoodenfloor.org

Backhausdance 714-497-3137 backhausdance.org Festival Ballet Theatre / Southland Ballet Academy 714-962-5440 festivalballet.org

MISCELLANEOUS Anaheim Performing Arts Center Foundation 714-554-2711, apacf.org

Frida Cinema 305 E. 4th St., Santa Ana thefridacinema.org

OC Music & Dance 17620 Fitch Ave., Irvine 949-386-8336 ocmusicdance.org Orange County Children’s Book Festival Orange Coast College 2701 Fairview Road Costa Mesa kidsbookfestival.com Orange County Film Society 949-253-2880 orangecountyfilmsociety.com

Literary Orange literaryorange.org Newport Beach Arts Foundation newportbeachartsfoundation.org Newport Beach Film Festival 949-253-2880 newportbeachfilmfest.com

Orange County School of the Arts Margaret A. Webb Theatre 801 N. Main St. 714-560-0900 oscarts.net

Newport Beach Public Library Foundation 1000 Avocado Ave. Newport Beach 949-717-3890 nbplfoundation.org

Peter and Mary Muth Interpretive Center 2301 University Dr Newport Beach 949-923-2290 newportbay.org

anaheim ballet presents

anaheimballet.org

a r c c k t e u r N The

Over 65 million views

Orange County’s own full-length Nutcracker with Symphony Irvine

Catch the Spirit of the Season!

DEC 23, 12:30 & 5:30 p.m. THE CITY NATIONAL GROVE OF ANAHEIM

To purchase tickets: AXS.com

(714) 712-2700

FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 67


SELECTED O.C. GALLERIES Martin Lawrence Galleries South Coast Plaza 3333 Bear St. 949-759-0134 martinlawrence.com Randy Higbee Gallery 102 Kalmus Drive 714-546-2156 randyhigbeegallery.com

FULLERTON

Begovich Gallery Cal State Fullerton 800 State College Blvd. 657-278-7750 fullerton.edu Magoski Arts Colony 223/225 W. Santa Fe Ave. 714-441-1504 magoskiartscolony.com

IRVINE

CAC, Room, and University Art Galleries UC Irvine, 949-824-9854 arts.uci.edu Village Gallery Irvine Spectrum Center 59 Fortune Drive, #338 949-450-8282 villagegallery.com

LAGUNA BEACH

Marc Chagall, “The Age of Gold,” lithograph, 24.5 by 20 inches; image courtesy of Dawson Cole Fine Art

ALISO VIEJO Founders Hall Soka University 1 University Drive 949-480-4081 soka.edu

ANAHEIM

Artists Republic 400 W. Disney Way, #137 949-988-0603 artists-republic.com Center Gallery 250 Center St. 714-765-4422 anaheim.net

BREA

City of Brea Gallery 1 Civic Center Circle 714-990-7731 breagallery.com

Sarah Bain Gallery 407 W. Imperial Highway Suite H-115 562-451-3111 sarahbaingallery.com

CORONA DEL MAR SCAPE Gallery 2859 E. Coast Highway 949-723-3406 , scapesite.com

COSTA MESA

The ARTery Gallery @ The Lab 2930 Bristol St., thelab.com Costa Mesa Conceptual Art Center 1930 Placentia Blvd., Unit B3 costamesaconceptualartcenter.com

68 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

Daniel Oropeza Original Sculpture 1041 W. 18th St. Studio A-106 949-650-6169 danieloropeza.com Gray Matter Museum of Art 485 E. 17th St., #101 gmmaca.org H Space Gallery Hurley 1945 Placentia Ave. 949-548-9375 hurley.com LIULI Gallery 3333 Bristol St. 714-438-8888 liuliusa.com

Artist Eye Laguna Gallery 1294 S. Coast Highway 949-497-5898 artisteyelagunagallery.com Avran Art & Design 540 S. Coast Highway, Suite 104, 949-494-0900, avranart.com BC Space 235 Forest Ave. 949-497-1880, bcspace.com Cove Gallery 1492 S. Coast Highway, #8 949-494-1878 covegallerylaguna.com Dawson Cole Fine Art 326 Glenneyre St. 949-497-4988 dawsoncolefineart.com


Forest & Ocean 480 Ocean Ave. 949-371-3313 forestoceangallery.com

Mystic Arts Gallery 664 S. Coast Highway 949-715-5177 mysticartslaguna.com

JoAnne Artman Gallery 326 N. Coast Highway 949-510-5481 joanneartmangallery.com

Peter Blake Gallery 435 Ocean Ave. 949-376-9994 peterblakegallery.com

Kelsey Michaels Fine Art 354 N. Coast Highway kelseymichaels.com

Prima Fine Art Galllery 570 S. Coast Highway 949-715-0039 primafineartgallery.com

LCAD Gallery 374 Ocean Ave. 949-376-6000, lcad.edu Las Laguna Gallery 577 S. Coast Highway 949-667-1803 laslagunagallery.com Lu Martin Galleries 372 N. Coast Highway 949-494-8074 lumartingalleries.com Mark Timothy Gallery 350 N. Coast Highway 949-307-0498 marktimothygallery.com

Quorum Gallery 374 N. Coast Highway 949-494-4422 quorumgallery.com Redfern Gallery 1540 S. Coast Highway 949-497-3356 redferngallery.com saltfineart 346 N. Coast Highway 949-715-5554 saltfineart.net

Greg Miller, “American Woman,” acrylic, collage, and flag on panel, 74 by 52 inches; image courtesy of JoAnne Artman Gallery

FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 69


Forest & Ocean 480 Ocean Ave. 949-371-3313 forestoceangallery.com

Mystic Arts Gallery 664 S. Coast Highway 949-715-5177 mysticartslaguna.com

JoAnne Artman Gallery 326 N. Coast Highway 949-510-5481 joanneartmangallery.com

Peter Blake Gallery 435 Ocean Ave. 949-376-9994 peterblakegallery.com

Kelsey Michaels Fine Art 354 N. Coast Highway kelseymichaels.com

Prima Fine Art Galllery 570 S. Coast Highway 949-715-0039 primafineartgallery.com

LCAD Gallery 374 Ocean Ave. 949-376-6000, lcad.edu Las Laguna Gallery 577 S. Coast Highway 949-667-1803 laslagunagallery.com Lu Martin Galleries 372 N. Coast Highway 949-494-8074 lumartingalleries.com Mark Timothy Gallery 350 N. Coast Highway 949-307-0498 marktimothygallery.com

Quorum Gallery 374 N. Coast Highway 949-494-4422 quorumgallery.com Redfern Gallery 1540 S. Coast Highway 949-497-3356 redferngallery.com saltfineart 346 N. Coast Highway 949-715-5554 saltfineart.net

FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 69


SELECTED O.C. GALLERIES Sandstone Gallery 384-A N. Coast Highway 949-497-6775 sandstonegallery.com Studio 7 Galleries 384-B N. Coast Highway 949-497-1080 (north) 1590 S. Coast Highway 949-715-0012 (south) studio7gallery.com Sue Greenwood Fine Art 330 N. Coast Highway 949-494-0669 suegreenwoodfineart.com Village Gallery 502 S. Coast Highway 949-494-3553 villagegallery.com The Vintage Poster 1492 S. Coast Highway 800-558-7552 thevintageposter.com Wyland Galleries Laguna Beach 509 S. Coast Highway 949-376-8000 wylandgalleries.com

NEWPORT BEACH Art Resource Group 20351 Irvine Ave. 949-640-1972 artresourcegroup.com

Debra Huse Gallery 229 Marine Ave. debrahusegallery.com Lahaina Galleries 1173 Newport Center Drive 949-721-9117 lahainagalleries.com Susan Spiritus Gallery 20351 Irvine Ave. 714-754-1286 susanspiritusgallery.com YellowKorner Gallery Fashion Island 401 Newport Center Drive, Suite A203 949-706-0415 yellowkorner.com

ORANGE

Guggenheim Gallery Chapman University 1 University Drive 714-997-6800 guggenheimgallery.com

70 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

SAN CLEMENTE San Clemente Art Association Gallery 100 N. Calle Seville 949-492-7175 paintsanclemente.com

SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO

The Cottage Gallery 31701 Los Rios St. 949-340-6693 cottagegalleryonlosrios.com Mission Fine Art Gallery 31760 Camino Capistrano, Suite C 949-291-7738 Missionfineart.gallery

SANTA ANA Avantgarden— The Art Gallery 207 N. Broadway 714-558-8843 artavantgarden.com

Bear Street Gallery South Coast Plaza Village 3851 S. Bear St., Suite B-15 714-825-0592 ocfinearts.org

F+ Gallery 661 Poinsettia St. 714-493-9430 facebook.com/fplusgallery Marcas Contemporary Art 305 E. 4th St., #103 714-760-4637 marcasgallery.com Q Art Salon 205 N. Sycamore St. 714-835-8833 qartsalon.com Showcase Gallery South Coast Plaza Village 3851 S. Bear St. Suite B-15 714-540-6430 ocfinearts.org

TUSTIN

Chemers Gallery 17300 E. 17th St. Suite G 714-731-5432 chemersgallery.com


2019 4C Resized Ad 1

9/5/18 2:21 PM


YOUTH DATEBOOK

NEW MOVES The Wooden Floor is celebrating its 35th anniversary with a brand-new facility that ups its total student body to nearly 500 kids in third through 12th grades. Their “annex” location at Depot at Santiago shares space with newly-opened workforce housing, where it provides its signature blend of dance education, tutoring, college prep, and family services to lowincome students who are selected in an audition. Collectively, their programs empower participants— approximately only 20 percent of applicants—to graduate from high school in a demographic where that’s not always the case. In addition, “one hundred percent of students who graduate from The Wooden Floor immediately enroll in higher education—a figure more than double that of their socioeconomic peers,” CEO Dawn Reese said. This year, Reese also announced a $27.2 million, four-year campaign, called “Lift,” designed to help The Wooden Floor reach even more students. thewoodenfloor.org

Concerts, exhibitions, and more—for and by the next generation of artists. ONGOING

Check their online calendar for a plethora of story readings, sing-alongs, and games for all ages. Newport Beach Public Library

ONGOING

Find group and private dance, music, and theater classes—and even a recording studio—at this youth-oriented community center for the arts. OC Music & Dance

SEPT. 29 THROUGH FEB. 18

Introduce your child to the lifelong game of chess during “Kings, Queens, and Castles,” an interactive exhibit complete with turret slides, a giant chess board that uses kids as pieces, and make-your-own crowns and shields. Ages 3-11, Bowers Kidseum

OCT. 5 THROUGH 28 Based on the book series, “Fancy Nancy, The Musical” delves into Nancy’s very first opportunity to perform onstage. Don’t miss tea with the book’s illustrator, Robin Preiss Glasser. Ages 4 and up, Chance Theater

OCT. 27

Get into the spooky spirit with “The Wizard’s Spellbook,” a special Pacific Symphony kids’ concert that features music from “Fantasia,” “Harry Potter,” and a new composition called “The Conductor’s Spellbook.” Costumes, wands, and broomsticks are encouraged. Ages 5-11, Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

OCTOBER 27, 28, AND 31

Give the whole family a delightful fright at Casa Creepy Haunted House, a 1920s-themed haunted house and garden. Casa Romantica

72 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

NOV. 2 THROUGH 18 The popular protagonist, “Nate the Great,” will come to life in this staged version of Marjorie Sharmat’s story. Help the kid detective find clues that will lead him to recover Annie’s lost painting of her dog, Fang. Grades K-6, South Coast Repertory

NOV. 17 AND 18

“Shadow Play,” from the Trusty Sidekick Theater Company, imagines where shadows go after their people go to sleep. This center premiere includes a sensory-friendly performance. Ages 4-8, Samueli Theater

DEC. 8

The Pacific Symphony and Festival Ballet Theatre will come together for a condensed, 45-minute Nutcracker for Kids, the Christmas ballet that’s a candyland of diversions. Ages 5-11, Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

JANUARY 13

Using handcrafted puppets, SoCal collective Luce Puppets will perform the African folktale, “Zomo the Trickster Rabbit,” geared towards school-aged kids. Casa Romantica

FEB. 1 THROUGH 17 In this rock musical version of “Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed,” find out what happens when one whacky naked mole rat has the radical idea of wearing clothes. Grades K-6, South Coast Repertory

FEB. 9

Celebrate the Lunar New Year and ring in the Year of the Pig with the Pacific Symphony’s special, kid-friendly program of Eastern and Western music. Ages 5-11, Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

FEB. 16 AND 17

From Ireland’s family-focused performance group Theatre Lovett comes “They Called Her Vivaldi,” a remarkable story about a musical prodigy. Ages 7 and up, Samueli Theater


PROMOTION

ARTS PROFILE

ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOL OF THE ARTS

As one of the premier arts schools in the nation, Orange County School of the Arts (OCSA) embraces and encourages academic and artistic excellence, preparing students to reach their highest potential and thrive in the 21st century. One of the important instructional strategies at OCSA is to bring to campus master artists, guest teachers, university faculty and industry leaders to share their unique gifts and expertise with our students through residencies, master classes, demonstrations, lectures and performances. These visiting artists work alongside our OCSA faculty members to create an extraordinary learning environment with meaningful and often lifechanging experiences for students. Artists visiting OCSA during the 2018-19 season include: Debbie Allen, Emmy Award-winning choreographer Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, nationally recognized modern dance company Martin Chalifour, principal concertmaster of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Jared Gertner, Broadway and television actor (Modern Family, The Good Wife, American Dad) Jake Heggie, American composer of opera and orchestral music

SEASON HIGHLIGHTS South Coast Plaza Tree Lighting Ceremony Thursday, November 15, 2018 On the Green at Westin Hotel Plaza Creators and Innovators Series “Brand Innovators” Thursday, January 24, 2019 Center for the Arts at Orange County School of the Arts Performing with the Pros featuring Jared Gertner Friday - Saturday, February 1-2, 2019 Center for the Arts at Orange County School of the Arts Gala 2019: “Let’s Get Loud” Saturday, March 16, 2019 Hotel Irvine Season Finale Sunday, May 5, 2019 Segerstrom Center for the Arts

Megan Hilty, Tony Award-nominated Broadway actress (Wicked and 9 to 5) and television personality (“Ivy Lynn” on NBC’s Smash) Eric Marienthal, Grammy Award-winning contemporary saxophonist David Newman, Academy Award–nominated film composer Pilobolus, athlete-illusionists of modern dance Pacific Symphony, musicians from Orange County’s preeminent orchestra

www.ocsarts.net


ARTS DATEBOOK

Wynton Marsalis and his Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra will be at The Barclay on Oct. 2.

ONGOING

Through Oct. 13 “Scenic View Ahead: The Westways Cover Art Collection,” “Magical Visions: The Enchanted Worlds of Eyvind Earle,” and “A New Hope: The ‘Star Wars’ Art of Robert Bailey” Hilbert Museum of California Art Through Nov. 1 “Drawing On The Past: Works on Paper” The Irvine Museum Collection at UC Irvine Through Nov. 17 “Living with Clay: California Ceramics Collections” Begovich Gallery of California State University, Fullerton Through Jan. 7 “California Fibers: A Matter of Time” Founders Hall at Soka University Through Jan. 13 “Art Colony: The Laguna Beach Art Association, 1918-1935” Laguna Art Museum

Sept. 22 through Jan. 13 “Knights in Armor” Bowers Museum Sept. 29 through Jan. 5 “First Glimpse: Introducing The Buck Collection” Contemporary Arts Center Gallery at UC Irvine Sept. 29 through Feb. 2 R. Luke DuBois’ “Music into Data::Data into Music” Beall Center for Art and Technology October through March 17 OCMA Expand-Santa Ana Oct. 6 through Jan. 13 “Text Neck” Grand Central Art Center

Nov. 10 through Jan. 19 “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” Hilbert Museum of California Art Nov. 20 through Jan. 20 “Muzeo Express” Muzeo Third Saturdays “Drop in and Draw” Chuck Jones Center for Creativity Tuesday through Sunday Open Studio Costa Mesa Ceramics

SEPT.

Sept. 1 through 29 “Sense and Sensibility” South Coast Repertory

Oct. 27 through April 27 “Bay Area Scene Painting” Hilbert Museum of California Art

Sept. 21 through Oct. 21 “The Other Place” Chance Theater

Nov. 9 through March 10 “The Idle Hour: The Irvine Museum Collection” Casa Romantica

Sept. 28 Jessica Lang Dance Irvine Barclay Theatre

74 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

OCT.

Oct. 1 LA Opera Musco Center Oct. 2 Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis Irvine Barclay Theatre Oct. 4 Gallery Tour of “Liberation/ Incarceration” Muckenthaler Cultural Center Oct. 4 and 5 “Jesus Carmona: Amator” in the New World Flamenco Festival Irvine Barclay Theatre Oct. 4 through 7 Laguna Dance Festival Laguna Playhouse Oct. 6 Soweto Gospel Choir in “Songs of the Free” Irvine Barclay Theatre Oct. 9 through 14 “Beautiful—The Carole King Musical” Segerstrom Hall


“The Idle Hour,” courtesy The Irvine Museum Collection at the UC Irvine

Oct. 10 Untitled New Work by Fox Fellow Khanisha Foster Chance Theater Oct. 13 Art in the Park Newport Beach Civic Green Oct. 13 and 14 Festival Ballet Theatre in “Ovation” Irvine Barclay Theatre Oct. 13 through Nov. 10 “Kings” South Coast Repertory Oct. 20 Mariinsky Orchestra Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Oct. 20 and 21 SOCALPAPA Back Bay Juried Art Show/Sale Peter and Mary Muth Interpretive Center Oct. 24 Kibbutz Contemporary Dance Company Irvine Barclay Theatre

Oct. 25 Sankofa Danzafro presented by Laguna Dance Festival Neighborhood Congregational Church Oct. 28 National Theatre Live: “Frankenstein” Irvine Barclay Theatre Oct. 30 Taiwan Philharmonic Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

NOV.

Nov. 1 “The Art of Performance in Irvine: Simone Forti and Friends” UC Irvine Nov. 1 through 4 Art & Nature Laguna Art Museum Nov. 3 The Assembly Dance in Shoreline Project Laguna Main Beach

Pilobolus comes to Musco Center Nov. 14. Photo by Christopher Duggan

Nov. 4 Pacific Chorale in “The Creation” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Nov. 7 and 8 Czech Philharmonic Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Nov. 9 and 10 Pacific Symphony in “The Wonderful Music of Oz” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Nov 9 through 11 Mikhailovsky Ballet and Orchestra: “Don Quixote” Segerstrom Hall Nov. 10 “If All the Sky Were Paper” Musco Center Nov. 11 Choral Arts Initiative in “Invitation” St. Mark Presbyterian Church Nov. 14 Pilobolus Musco Center

Nov. 15 through 17 Pacific Symphony in “Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Nov. 16 “Graeme James—Celtic Folk” Soka Performing Arts Center Nov. 23 through Dec. 23 Jane Austen’s “Emma” Chance Theater Nov. 24 through Dec. 24 “A Christmas Carol” South Coast Repertory Nov. 25 Dover Quartet Samueli Theater November 29 Redwood Tango Ensemble Casa Romantica

DEC.

Dec. 1 Pacific Chorale in “Carols by Candlelight” Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church

FALL/WINTER 2018-2019 PREMIERE OC 75


ARTS DATEBOOK Dec. 9 through 24 Festival Ballet Theatre in “The Nutcracker” Irvine Barclay Theatre Dec. 7 through 17 American Ballet Theatre in “The Nutcracker” Segerstrom Hall Dec. 16 Anaheim Ballet in “A Southern California Christmas” Musco Center for the Arts Dec. 19 Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall The 5 Browns will play a holiday concert courtesy of Philharmonic Society of O.C.

Dec. 20 The 5 Browns Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

Dec. 6 through 8 Pacific Symphony in “Nutcracker Fantasy” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

Dec. 7 Béla Fleck and Abigail Washburn Irvine Barclay Theatre Dec. 7 through 23 “A Charlie Brown Christmas” Chance Theater

Dec. 9 Pacific Symphony in “Handel’s Glorious Messiah” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

Dec. 22 and 23 Pacific Chorale in “Tis the Season!” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

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EVENTS Quick Draw EVENTS Oct 7, 9:30 am - 11:30 am Quick HeislerDraw Park, Laguna Beach, CA Oct 9:30 am - 11:30 am Free7,Admission Heisler Park, Laguna Beach, CA Collectors Gala Free Admission Oct 13, 7 pm - 10:30 pm Collectors Gala Laguna Beach, CA Festival of Arts, Oct 13, 7 pm - 10:30 pm Ticketed Event Festival of Arts, Laguna Beach, CA Ticketed Event

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tradition of painting for future generations, Laguna Plein Air Painters Association (LPAPA) is celebrating Considered of Laguna’s plein air legacy, this traditionthe by steward publishing its first hardbound book. and dedicated to preserving the legacy and plein air tradition of painting for future generations, Laguna Plein Air Painters Association (LPAPA) is celebrating This special book, Best In Show: Laguna Beach Plein this tradition by publishing its first hardbound book.Air Painting Invitational at 20, authored by Mr. Jean Stern, the leading authority on plein air art, will be a recording of the Invitational history and the top award-winning This special book,helped Best Inus Show: Laguna Beach Plein Airlegacy Painting at 20, authored by Mr. Jean Stern, artists who have celebrate Laguna’s artistic andInvitational have become part of the tradition. the leading authority on plein air art, will be a recording of the Invitational history and the top award-winning Visit information and Laguna’s online orders. artistslpapa.org who havefor helped us celebrate artistic legacy and have become part of the tradition. Visit lpapa.org for information and online orders.


SALUTES THE ARTS

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To subscribe to Orange Coast magazine or to receive weekly arts and events newsletters, please visit

orangecoast.com


ARTS DATEBOOK Jan. 24 Hubbard Street Dance Chicago Musco Center Jan 31 “Casa Classic: The Orchestra Collective of O.C.” Casa Romantica

FEB.

Feb. 2 Rosanne Cash Musco Center Feb. 5 through 17 “Come from Away” Segerstrom Hall Feb. 8 through 10 Laguna Beach Music Festival Laguna Playhouse

Still life by Rock Newcomb; photo courtesy of Casa Romantica

Feb. 21 Juilliard String Quartet Musco Center Feb. 27 Martha Graham Dance Company in “The Eve Project” Irvine Barclay Theatre

MARCH

March 1 “Violinist-Looper Joe Kye—Indie Pop” Soka Performing Arts Center March 2 through 24 “Photograph 51” South Coast Repertory March 9 Pacific Chorale in “Bach and Vivaldi” Musco Center March 17 Pacific Symphony in “The Phantom of the Opera” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

Jane Monheit; photo courtesy of Casa Romantica Dec. 30 through Jan. 20 “Culture Clash (Still) in AmeriCCa” South Coast Repertory

Jan. 10 through 12 Pacific Symphony in “Chopin’s Piano Concerto” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

Jan. 19 Itzhak Perlman: “In The Fiddler’s House” Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

Jan. 1 through 13 “Dear Evan Hansen” Segerstrom Hall

Jan. 17 James Irvine Swinden lecture Casa Romantica

Jan. 9 through 27 “Driving Miss Daisy” Laguna Playhouse

Jan. 17 through 20 American Ballet Theatre in “Harlequinade” Segerstrom Hall

Jan. 19 through Feb. 26 “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” South Coast Repertory

JAN.

Jan. 10 and Feb. 7 Laura Miller Poetry Workshop Casa Romantica

78 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

Jan. 20 LA Phil with Jean-Yves Thibaudet Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall

March 19 through April 28 “Open Casa: Rock Newcomb” Casa Romantica March 20 Malpaso Dance Company Irvine Barclay Theatre March 22 “Casa Classic: An Evening with Jane Monheit” Casa Romantica


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ENCORE

HONORING DONALD MCKAYLE

Donald McKayle, 1930-2018; photo courtesy of UC Irvine

80 PREMIERE OC FALL/WINTER 2018-2019

O

n April 6, 2018, Orange County said goodbye to one of its greatest teachers, mentors, colleagues, and friends. The modern dance world said goodbye to part of its living history. Donald McKayle, who started his professional career in 1948, studied under Pearl Primus, worked for Martha Graham and Merce Cunningham, and became a Tony Award-winning choreographer and director on Broadway. He died at the age of 87. McKayle was best known for creating socially-conscious concert dance works that encapsulated the struggles and joys of the African-American experience. Many are still performed today, including “Games” (1951), a portrait of youth, chants, songs, and street games remembered from McKayle’s own East Harlem childhood, and “Rainbow ’Round My Shoulder” (1959), which depicts the labor and abuses suffered by a prison chain gang. After a successful career spanning the stage, television, and film, McKayle had even more to contribute to his field as an esteemed educator. He joined the faculty of several colleges and dance festivals, including the Juilliard School, but his arrival at UC Irvine in 1989 heralded a sort of homecoming. There he stayed, eventually assuming the endowed role of Claire Trevor Professor of Dance. For 13 years, McKayle was also the founder and artistic director of the university’s Etude Ensemble, which held its final performances in June. On the program was McKayle’s most recent work, “Crossing the Rubicon: Passing the Point of No Return” (2017), which confronted the refugee crisis. McKayle passed the rights to his dances on to his wife, Lea Vivante McKayle. She plans to license them to professional companies worldwide, where they will continue to impact dancers, audiences, and the course of history. ●



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