New community theater will be born in Costa Mesa
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Tom Titus
With the Orange County Performing Arts Center, South Coast
Repertory’s recently redone complex, the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse,
the Trilogy Playhouse and active collegiate theater from Orange Coast
College and Vanguard University, it would seem the last thing Costa
Mesa needs would be another local theater group.
Nevertheless, that’s just what we’re going to get. On the theory
that you can never have enough live theater, actor-director Gregory
Cohen and actor Joe Hogan have founded a new troupe, whimsically
christened Fleabitten Productions.
The new company makes its debut Dec. 6, borrowing the facilities
of the Civic Playhouse.
The debut production will be “Jerry Finnegan’s Sister,” a romantic
two-character comedy by Jack Neary about a guy who’s harbored a
17-year crush on his best friend’s sister.
The production will run through Dec. 22. Cohen is directing; Hogan
and Jessica Culaciati will be the cast.
“This seemed to be the ideal show with which to introduce
Fleabitten to the public,” Cohen said. “It’s fresh, it’s surprising
and it’s audience-friendly.
“Fleabitten’s goal is not to shock, repulse or titillate,” he
said. “We will hopefully introduce them to some new and challenging
forms of theater while continually satisfying their taste for the
comfortable and familiar types they’ve come to enjoy.”
The rather unique name of the company came from Cohen’s and
Hogan’s shared love for their dogs, a corgi and a basset hound,
respectively. The animals’ faces comprise a canine comedy-tragedy
logo for the troupe.
The genesis of Fleabitten Productions was a “Ghosts and Legends”
show at the Queen Mary in Long Beach, where both Cohen and Hogan were
performing. Cohen subsequently cast Hogan in the leading role of
Eugene in his production of Neil Simon’s “Biloxi Blues.”
A few years ago, Cohen directed a production of “First Night” for
the Huntington Beach Playhouse, which he calls “one of my best.”
Playwright Neary encountered a review of that show on the Internet
and contacted the director.
“We corresponded a bit and he turned me on to this script of his,”
Cohen said. “I loved it.”
And, after “Biloxi Blues,” he realized that Hogan would be an
ideal actor for the show.
“I spoke to him about co-producing it, probably renting a space in
Hollywood or something,” Cohen recalled. “He came up with the idea
that, instead of sinking all of our money into a one-time effort, why
not try to build this production into an actual company?
“It made sense to me, and so was born Fleabitten Productions.”
Cohen and Hogan are also in the process of starting up an
improvisational group “unlike any other ever created,” Cohen said.
They’ll be called the Varmints and will be directed by John Mellies.
“Our plans for the future are somewhat sketchy, since we still
don’t have a home,” Cohen admitted. “We know the shows we’d like to
do -- ‘Twelfth Night’ in the spring, ‘Working’ in the summer and a
drama in the fall -- we haven’t settled on that one yet.
“We’re hoping to be back at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse for
‘Working’ since they’ve got quite a long dark time during the
summer,” he added, “but we really need this show to be a whopping
success first.”
“Jerry Finnegan’s Sister” will inaugurate Fleabitten Productions,
playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. from
Dec. 6 to 22 at the Civic Playhouse, 611 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa.
More information is available at (714) 289-8728. The company has
its own Web site, www.fleabittenproductions.com.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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