When it comes to props, she’s the master
Andrew Edwards
Brenda Abshear works in a world full of tribal masks, old liquor
bottles and ice skates. When someone needs to find the strange and
unusual, or at least a reasonable substitute, Abshear is the person
to call.
“She’s my favorite property mistress when I’m directing a show,”
said Terri Miller Schmidt, artistic director for the Newport Theater
Arts Center. “She knows all the dark, shadowy places to go.”
For 12 years, Abshear has volunteered at the Newport Theater Arts
Center, a community theater that sits on the cliffs above Newport
Harbor. Abshear, a 62-year-old Newport Beach resident, started
volunteering with the theater after she retired from a 30-year career
as a hairdresser. She began her stint with the group as a newcomer to
the dramatic arts.
“I had never been involved in theater, and I love it,” Abshear
said. “I’m here to stay; they can’t get rid of me.”
But no one at the theater appears intent on telling Abshear to
make a dramatic exit.
“We have a great time; that’s what we enjoy about this,” theater
President Rae Cohen said. “We just enjoy each other, play off of each
other’s jokes.”
As properties mistress, Abshear is the go-to person when the
director needs items like masks, bottles, ice skates or even a piece
of sculpture with a nose built to break off when the script calls for
a bit of extreme rhinoplasty. The theater keeps rooms full of props
from past productions, but even with an array of curiosities in
stock, Abshear still has to drive to some of Orange County’s
out-of-the-way realms to find what her director needs.
“I end up in liquor stores, pawn shops, garage sales,” Abshear
said. “My granddaughter won’t go prop hunting with me anymore because
I go to some strange places.”
Abshear and the theater’s other volunteers are busy preparing for
the Nov. 19 premiere of “Redwood Curtain,” the story of a Vietnam
veteran living in the woods and a Vietnamese American girl searching
for her father. As set decorators build trees on the stage, Abshear
has been sent on a mission to find needed props.
She has already located Zig-Zag rolling papers, but one item on
her list, a temporary eagle tattoo, remains elusive.
When the theater has needed very rare items, Abshear has rigged
substitutes out of commonplace materials. In one production, she
created a mock-up Victrola phonograph using an oil funnel and paper
tubes.
In the theater, there is a “30-foot rule” for props, Miller said.
Since the audience is sitting back from the action, props don’t have
to be 100% authentic.
Whatever props are needed, Abshear loves being sent on scavenger
hunts.
“This is every woman’s dream; I get to shop with other people’s
money,” she said.
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