Theater people are familiar with “ghostlights,” those faint stage lights that help actors and performers locate their marks on stage. Ironically, in the middle of Spelling Bee, GLP’s actors discovered that several “blackout” cues had been added to the lighting plot. “There was quite a bit of panic when everything went pitch black in the middle of the show – stage, pit, everything! Our light tech had to improvise the cues until we could figure out what had happened.”
Such is the life of a gypsy company (one with no home theater). “We currently rent one of several venues here on the Peninsula,” said Lorentzen. “The PA Playhouse and the Sequim High School Auditorium are the ones we use the most. We use the playhouse for our more intimate shows. The high school we use for larger “blockbuster” shows.”
Both types of shows are handpicked by the company for audience appeal, among them, Titanic: The Musical. “We were lucky enough to produce the West Coast premiere of the new ‘ensemble’ version of the show,” remembered Lorentzen, who, with his wife, played the lead roles of Fred Barrett and Kate McGowan. “It was a beautiful and life-changing show.