2004 man and woman of the year in theater
DAVID SCAGLIONE
This is the last in a series of four columns reviewing the year 2004
in local theater.
Thirty years ago, the Daily Pilot began its annual recognition of
two people in local theater who elevated their art and excelled in
its production by selecting a “man and woman of the year” in theater.
The first honorees, in 1974, were David Emmes, co-founder of South
Coast Repertory, who continues to lead the prestigious professional
company (co-artistic director Martin Benson was similarly honored in
1976), and Doris Allen, an exceptional actress and director who
shifted career gears to politics and went on to become speaker of the
California Assembly before her untimely death.
Today, on this final day of the year, this column marks the 30th
anniversary of these honors by recognizing two multi-talented local
college educators who have enriched their respective theater programs
and set shining examples for their students to follow. They are
instructors who excel in more than one aspect of theater and who have
gained the respect and admiration of the students whose talents they
broaden.
They are David Scaglione of Orange Coast College and Susan
Berkompas of Vanguard University, the Daily Pilot’s man and woman of
the year in theater for 2004.
‘Mr. Everything’
Scaglione is “Mr. Everything” at OCC -- set designer, costume and
makeup coordinator, playwright, director and occasional actor. His
technical acumen has provided the college with imaginative and
realistic backdrops for the past 17 seasons, and this year he took on
the enormous challenge of adapting Herman Melville’s epic novel “Moby
Dick” for the stage.
He is most visible during the Christmas season. He’s written the
annual yuletide melodrama for the past four years (and doubled as
emcee).
He also adapted Franz Kafka’s “Metamorphosis” for a theater group
in Santa Ana and has adapted the children’s stories “Pinocchio” and
“Stone Soup” for the college. Scaglione also penned “Nevermore” about
the last days of Edgar Allan Poe, which OCC staged for two years.
Before joining the OCC staff, Scaglione worked as a scenic designer
for the Los Angeles Classical Ballet and moonlighted as a freelance
makeup artist for music videos, movies and commercials.
At Orange Coast, he instructs students in the arts of makeup,
scenic design, playwriting, drama and acting.
Last year, Scaglione was honored at OCC as “adjunct faculty member
of the year,” and the city of Orange cited him and the department for
their work on “Every 15 Minutes,” a program dealing with teenage
drunken driving.
Loads of artistic direction
Berkompas is in the midst of her seventh season as artistic
director at Vanguard, and she frequently takes to the stage to hone
her talents as a professional actress -- sometimes because she has no
other choice.
She portrayed Queen Eleanor in Vanguard’s “The Lion in Winter”
earlier this year, directed “Macbeth” last year and recently staged
Agatha Christie’s “A Murder is Announced.”
She’ll be seen in a few months in the central role of the witch in
the musical “Into the Woods.”
The popular educator not only mounts imaginative and stimulating
productions, she has been required on several occasions to fill a
role in her own show when a vacancy has occurred.
The result often approaches brilliance, as it did in “Something’s
Afoot” and “Steel Magnolias” of past seasons.
And when one of the school’s productions requires one or more
children, Berkompas has three willing candidates of her own.
Born and educated in Montana, Berkompas migrated to California,
where she earned her master’s degree at Cal State Long Beach.
She has extensive theatrical experience in professional
performance/directing and teaching, the latter segment including
acting, directing, voice and speech.
Apart from guiding Vanguard’s theater program and stretching her
own acting muscles, Berkompas is formulating plans for the expansion
of the college’s small stage in the Lyceum Theater.
She’s also planning to form a summer stock-type group on campus
for acting students with professional ambitions.
David Scaglione and Susan Berkompas exemplify the highest
qualities of collegiate theater instructors and are well deserving of
their selection as the Daily Pilot’s man and woman of the year in
theater for 2004.
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