Performances offer more than a spot in the limelight
Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA -- For Abraham Rodriguez, being part of a Broadway-style
production is not all about swinging tunes and jazzy moves.
For the 15-year-old from Costa Mesa, it’s about learning. Learning to
be reliable and responsible. Learning to be true to himself.
“Doesn’t matter if you’re tall or if you’re short,” Rodriguez said
with a broad smile. “Just be yourself.”
He is one of 38 troubled teenagers participating in a two-week Summer
at the Center program that culminated Friday with their own show that is
a collage of scenes and numbers from Broadway musicals.
Their show premiered Friday night at the Orange County Performing Arts
Center’s Founders Hall.
This is the program’s 10th anniversary, said director Bob Brawley, and
is held by the Center annually. A new element that the Center has added
this year is the inclusion of nine teenagers from the Los Rios juvenile
detention center.
Brawley said their participation is one of the best things to happen
to the program since its inception.
“These boys are here from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,” he said. “Then they have
to go back to the [detention] center and do landscaping and physical work
until 10 at night. We were told that they have asked for permission to
practice their numbers after 10 in the laundry room. Isn’t that amazing?”
The boys also taught their friends at the detention center the
Broadway numbers, Brawley said.
“It’s unbelievable,” he said. “This boy in the group who is 17 and has
a 2-year-old daughter said ‘Peter Pan is really cool.”’
Bill, a participant from the detention center, said he is thankful for
the opportunity. His supervisor requested his last name be withheld to
protect his privacy.
The music, he said, “really gets him.” So do the people.
“The whole vibe here is very good,” he said. “They don’t judge you.
They’re open and friendly, no matter who you are and where you come
from.”
The key is to believe in the kids, vocal coach Cynthia McGarity said.
“In this environment, their fears are taken away and we totally
believe in them,” she said. “They’ve never had that before.”
And, apparently, that is what it takes to change lives, to take these
kids who might have taken a wrong turn and put them back on track.
Adrian Jimenez knows that feeling. The 17-year-old was part of last
year’s group, but came back this year to see his pals and show off the
“new me.”
The transformation for Adrian was dramatic. After the show, he got rid
of his baggy clothes, started growing his hair, stopped hanging out with
gang members and went back to school.
“It’s like this experience opened a whole new me outside of me,” he
said. “I just opened up.”
The experience was similar for 16-year-old Carlos Jose Amador, who now
works with teens at Planned Parenthood, teaching them about safe sex and
protecting themselves.
“I think it changed me because everyone was nice to me,” he said.
“That’s never happened to me before. It made me want to be a better
person.”
FYI
Performances will be held at 2 and 5 p.m. today at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center’s Founders Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. Information: (714)556-2121.
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