Again, Claremont is a remarkable place to live. Here is my recent
Claremont Courier column.
STAGES
OF LIFE AT AND OUT OF THE COLLEGES
Usually, when I buy a ticket, I feel happy. I feel excited. I feel lucky and privileged that I get to see
the performance. I might feel relieved
that I managed to snag the ticket. I don’t usually feel sad, like I want to
weep.
But it was different a few weeks ago when I went to Pomona College to
buy a ticket for the year-end dance concert there. It was different, because when I was at the
box office window, I saw Betty Bernhard.
That is, I saw her name. It was
on one of the production posters that line the back of the box office. “Directed by Betty Bernhard.” Actually, it
was on a number of the posters, but seeing one was enough to make me feel like
weeping.
I guess it really hit me then: There will be no more new production
posters, at Pomona College or anywhere else, with her name on it.
It was hard enough when I went to see a production at Seaver Theater
last month and saw a notice in the program honoring her. Not only was such a
notice unusual, it said that she “is survived by” a daughter and two
grandchildren and a sister. It didn’t
make sense that Betty Bernhard had died.
I had just seen a wonderful production of Sarah Ruhl’s sophisticated,
Victorian-era sex comedy, In the Next
Room (or the vibrator play), directed by her a month earlier. A friend who I saw there had mentioned the
possibility of working on a project with her.
Then, a week later, there was an obituary in the Courier. It was there
that I read that she succumbed to brain cancer, a month after being diagnosed
with it. Was she still working on the
play when she was sick, perhaps knowing she was dying? I wondered.
I later learned that she had to stop working not long after rehearsals
began but not before she had chosen the cast and set the scene, so to
speak. This is but more evidence of “her
strength and sense of purpose, her good will and generosity of spirit and her
passionate love for the art form” that the program notice mentioned. It certainly was evident in all her work
directing plays at Pomona College, where she joined the theater department in
1984. She was clearly passionate about theater and helping Claremont colleges students
develop their skills, as she directed over 30 full-length plays and musicals, including
a stunning, remarkably crisp Hamlet and some of which reflected her deep interest
in Indian Sanskrit theater.
It was not only at Pomona College and in the theater where Betty Bernhard
worked during these years. A year and a half ago, I wrote about seeing a
documentary film that she made, Out! Loud!, about people in the gay,
lesbian bisexual and transgender community in India performing a play. She also made other documentary films in
India about sex workers doing theater work and women theater artists. As a Fullbright Scholar in India in 1993 and
2004, she directed three full-length plays there, and, last month, she was
named a Founding Mother of Asian Theater Scholarship by the Association of
Asian Performance. Championing theater by, for and about women, minorities and
other under-represented group was key in this life’s work.
The sudden loss of this work and the riches it brought is indeed
sad. But, as those posters with her name
on them also show, Betty Bernhard’s work and that still being done by her
colleagues is at least as inspiring, leaving us with hope and things to look
forward to.
That much was clear at a panel discussion held in Betty Bernhard’s
memory at Seaver Theater on a recent Friday afternoon. The presentation was put on by Claremont in
Entertainment and Media, a group of graduates from the Claremont colleges who
are working in the entertainment field.
Who knew there was this alumni group made up of actors, producers,
writers, studio executives, agents, casting directors and other
professionals? I didn’t, and I was
pretty excited to find out about it.
The panel alone was exciting enough. I didn’t find out about it until
that afternoon, and what drew me – clearly, the big draw – was Richard
Chamberlain, “the king of the miniseries” who I learned long ago was a graduate
of Pomona College. Others on the panel
included Matt Baer, a Pitzer College graduate who produced last year’s Unbroken
and the recently released Maggie, and Elizabeth Levitt Hirsch, a
Scripps College graduate who is now board president of the Levitt Pavilions. (This organization puts on free summer
concerts, including in Pasadena and Los Angeles, as well as three a year at
Scripps College.)
Perhaps the most intriguing member on the panel was Gregory Rae, a
computer science major at Harvey Mudd College who ended up being a four-time
Tony Award winning producer whose credits include The Normal Heart , Hedwig
and the Angry Inch , Clydbourne Park and Kinky Boots) as well
a gay activist. As I said, who knew?
It was fun hearing how these people were influenced by their days in
Claremont. For example, Mr. Chamberlain said he always loved movies but
was shy and awkward until encouraged to get on the stage at Pomona and then,
before he knew it, was not only working as an actor but was famous, starring in
Dr. Kildare not long after
graduating. Mr. Rae shared that being a R.A in the dorm was
not unlike putting together a Broadway show.
Even more remarkable is that, as I said, I didn’t know about this panel
discussion until earlier that afternoon when I attended another presentation at
Seaver Theater. This one featured Mary
Schmich, a Pomona College graduate who wrote the Brenda Starr comic strip for
25 years and is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for the Chicago Tribune,
famous for her “Wear Sunscreen” column. (As
she mentioned in answering questions, she doesn’t know and isn’t too concerned
about how the column ended up being attributed to Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., and she
wrote it in an afternoon before deadline when she couldn’t think of what to
write about.) I wished I had known that, earlier that day in Seaver Theater,
James Turrell, the world-renown artist who does fascinating work with light and
is a Pomona College graduate, was in conversation with Ed Krupp, a fellow alum
who is the charismatic director of the Griffith Observatory.
This is all quite a bounty, quite a legacy, among many such as the
colleges close out another year and also say goodbye to a gifted teacher,
artist and mentor.
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