
Jon Bernthal wants to bring Broadway-caliber theater to Ojai: It's ‘always been a dream of mine'
In roughly two weeks, Bernthal will be back in that favored haven, in his adopted hometown. He and his co-artistic directors will launch the Ojai Theatre Festival with their inaugural production, 'Ironbound.' Taking place at Ojai's Chaparral Auditorium over two weekends in May, the project is a labor of love for everyone involved, most of whom are donating their time and talents. Bernthal is not only producing and acting, he's funding the entire endeavor, a major component of which included renovating a closed public school building to use as the performance venue that will be donated to the local school's arts department after the festival. 'We've taken this old, historic, rarely used building from a defunct school district and we've refurbished it,' explained Bernthal. 'We put in state-of-the-art lighting and sound, and we're donating it to the Nordhoff theater department and to the Hojs, who are [Nordhoff High School's] drama teacher and dance teacher. They're institutional artists that have raised so many young artists and now they will have a theater for their performances.'
Joining Bernthal on his mission are longtime friends Josh Bitton and Isidora Goreshter, who want to bring Broadway-caliber productions and arts programs to the local community. 'We're just three actors trying to figure out how to throw a theater festival in Ojai,' said Goreshter. 'It was Jon's idea, he's always wanted to bring theater to Ojai.' Given Bernthal's demanding work schedule over the last year and a half, the actor entrusted Bitton and Goreshter with big decisions and finding the space where they'd host the festival. 'We had looked at a lot of buildings. I walked in [to the Chaparral] and had chills,' Goreshter continued. 'And then Josh walked in and he was like, 'This is it.' The building means a lot to the community. It's literally in the center of Ojai.'
Bernthal has lived in the small, formerly sleepy valley town for 10 years with his wife, Erin, and their three children. 'Of all the places I've lived, it's the most I've ever felt at home,' he said. 'I've become friends with everybody on the school board. I play basketball with them and I've coached their kids.' Seeing firsthand how gentrification and rapidly rising housing costs have started to negatively affect the mostly blue-collar town, Bernthal set out to give back. 'I've seen huge changes, and the thing that I think has suffered the most is the public school,' he said. 'I want to show the kids [here] what a life in the arts is about.'
An Ojai transplant himself, the actor is dedicated to preserving the integrity of the close-knit community while fostering its artistic growth.
'Opening a theater, doing a theater festival has always been a dream of mine. It has been the dream,' said Bernthal. 'I hope this doesn't come off too grandiose or douchey, but as I see the place changing in the way that it is, I wanted to bring something great to this town and to do it in the right way for the right reasons.'
The actor is proud to be fulfilling his dream and supporting it financially. 'I'll be honest, it is more expensive than I ever thought, but you can't cut corners,' he admitted. 'You've got to buy the lights, to build this stuff. You've got to hire the actors, fly people out, put people up.'
Bernthal, Bitton and Goreshter hope that by launching the festival with a high-level production like 'Ironbound,' locals and visitors alike will be motivated to participate and support their efforts for years to come. The play, a gripping portrayal of a Polish immigrant trying to survive and succeed in America, 'is challenging, it's biting, it's hilarious, it's dark, super topical,' said the actor. Ireland, whom Bernthal refers to as 'a gangster' and 'powerhouse,' returns to the starring role she originated off-Broadway and performed in 2018 at the Geffen Playhouse. The play, directed by Guillermo Cienfuegos, also stars Shiloh Fernandez. 'It's an opportunity for the students in the town to see a world-class performance.' Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Martyna Majok, who happily granted them use of her work, will participate in the festival as well.
Watching the 48-year-old Bernthal in action is a reminder why he's such an in-demand star, known for delivering memorable performances with minimal screen time. In the last six weeks, Bernthal has promoted his action thriller 'The Accountant 2' in three different cities, flown to and from Greece to film Christopher Nolan's star-studded 'The Odyssey,' worked in New York on Marvel's standalone 'Punisher' special that he's writing and top-lining for Disney+ and returned to the Chicago set of 'The Bear,' which last year earned him his first Emmy. Not to mention banking episodes for the new season of his hit podcast, 'Real Ones.' Grateful for his success and packed work schedule, Bernthal would love to spend more time onstage. 'There's no going back. There's no second take,' he said. 'There's nothing that scares me quite like that, and there's nothing I'm quite as addicted to as that.'
Bernthal credits his mother, Joan, with recognizing his potential as a performer early on. Born and raised in an affluent suburb of Washington, D.C., his younger years were plagued with what he called 'complete buffoonery' — street fights, misplaced aggression and behavior that resulted in multiple arrests. Bernthal's mom, a social worker, sent him to his first acting class essentially as punishment, an initial toe dip that he said felt electric, like 'touching the third rail.'
Because he was an athlete heading to New York's Skidmore College on a baseball scholarship, Bernthal scoffed at pursuing the art form. In college he 'took a theater course really by accident,' taught by his future mentor Alma Becker. 'Tapping into the same energy that in my life got me in trouble, [pursuing] danger, risk, I found that taking the energy of a room and turning it on its head, scaring people, scaring myself … was actually getting me love and respect and encouragement.' Acting was the answer, once he got out of his own way. 'It was like I was dead set on proving everybody I was a real Class-A f— up,' he said. Bernthal was kicked out of college, but Becker stuck by him and helped get him into the prestigious Moscow Art Theatre program in 1999. 'She really saved my life,' he said of Becker, whose name Bernthal has lovingly tattooed on his forearm, along with the emblem for the Moscow Art Theatre, a seagull in flight.
Unsurprisingly, the two years in Russia humbled him. 'For a kid who thought he was this tough street-smart kid from D.C., I was in for a very rude awakening,' he said. 'It was the most rigorous and disciplined training I had ever gone through.' The day Bernthal returned from Moscow, he met his now-wife, who was a trauma nurse, and in 2002 he graduated with a master of fine arts from Harvard. 'There's no way I would be able to put food on my kids' table by doing this if it wasn't for Alma and the decision to go there.'
Launching the festival is giving Bernthal not only an opportunity to practice his favorite art form but to pay it forward. 'We really want to make theater that everybody will enjoy,' said Bernthal. 'We want to put on plays that you could only see in New York or London or maybe in L.A., but to make it all open for the public school kids.' All 'Ironbound' rehearsals will be open to the public, and local students are involved in the production. 'They're helping with the lighting, they're helping with the design. They're going to work at the theater,' said Bernthal. 'And all during our run, we're going to have classes for the kids.'
'I really want to show L.A., and everybody [who attends], what the real Ojai is all about,' he said. 'This is not going to be valet parking and [trendy] restaurants, where you could be in L.A. This is an Ojai thing put on by and with Ojai residents. It's for this town and will always be for this town.'
All proceeds will go directly to the school district, with all associated programs and classes available for free for local students. They hope to expand the event from one play to an annual festival with multiple productions in the coming years, to make Ojai a bona fide theatrical destination.
'Ultimately, this is for my kids,' Bernthal continued. He and his wife have two sons, 13 and 12, and a daughter, 9. 'I want my kids to grow up around and among a real thriving theater community. And this is going to sound corny, but I cannot wait to have a bunch of 10-year-old Ojai kids as ushers. And when people see how polite and respectful and how present they are, I want that same magic to [happen for] those same kids when they watch this complicated play and be [transformed] like, 'What the f—?' 'Holy s—.' 'This is possible.''
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
3 hours ago
- New York Times
As Trump Tightens Hold on Kennedy Center, Top Theater Producer Resigns
The top official overseeing theater at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts is stepping down, throwing into question the stability of one of the venue's most important sources of box office revenue as President Trump seeks to transform the institution. Jeffrey Finn, whose current titles are senior vice president of artistic programming as well as vice president and executive producer of theater, plays an outsize role at the Kennedy Center. For nearly a decade he has programmed its touring Broadway shows and locally produced musicals, which have often sold strongly. While theater has been a financial driver for the Kennedy Center, the future health of the theater program has been called into question as some Broadway producers and performers have said they were uncomfortable working there as Mr. Trump seeks to put his ideological stamp on it. During Mr. Finn's tenure he booked two successful runs of the musical 'Hamilton' there, but the show's producers canceled a planned third run because of Mr. Trump's actions. Mr. Finn declined to comment, and Kennedy Center officials did not respond to requests for comment. Mr. Finn's resignation was confirmed by two people with knowledge of the move who asked not to be identified because they had not been authorized to speak about the matter by the Kennedy Center. His resignation comes at a time of change for the Kennedy Center. Mr. Trump, early in his second term, purged board members appointed by former President Joseph R. Biden Jr. from the previously bipartisan board and had himself appointed board chairman. Last month, Republican lawmakers suggested renaming the Kennedy Center's Opera House after the first lady, Melania Trump. And just this week Mr. Trump announced a plan to host the next Kennedy Center Honors ceremony, celebrating artists approved by him. (In: Michael Crawford, Broadway's first, and Tony-winning, Phantom of the Opera. Out: 'wokesters.') There have been signs of a shift at the Kennedy Center, where officials have asked the venue's theater division to begin programing some Broadway titles with nonunion actors, a move that comes as the Trump administration also has taken a number of steps to limit the reach of federal employee unions. The next Kennedy Center theater season will include tours of 'Chicago' and 'Mrs. Doubtfire,' whose workers are not members of Actors' Equity Association, a labor union representing actors and stage managers. Mr. Finn, a longtime Broadway producer, has been at the Kennedy Center since 2016, and brought a number of popular touring shows there including 'Les Misérables,' which drew Mr. Trump to a recent performance. Mr. Finn also created the Broadway Center Stage program, producing three short-run musicals each season. The first Broadway Center Stage production, in 2018, was a rewritten version of the musical 'Chess' that is the basis for a production scheduled to open on Broadway this fall. The program also developed a revival of 'Spamalot' that transferred to Broadway and is now scheduled to begin touring later this year, a revival of 'The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee' that is leading to an Off Broadway production this fall, and a musical adaptation of the Apple TV+ series 'Schmigadoon!' that is hoping to transfer to Broadway. Mr. Finn has producing credits on 22 Broadway shows over the last two decades. His future plans are unknown.


San Francisco Chronicle
5 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Richard Thomas dons wig and mustache to play icon Mark Twain in one-man play touring the US
NEW YORK (AP) — Richard Thomas has not one but two big shoes to fill when he goes out on the road this summer in a celebrated one-man show. The Emmy Award winner and Tony Award nominee is portraying the great American writer Mark Twain in a play written and performed for decades by the late Hal Holbrook. Thomas immediately accepted the offer to star in the 90-minute 'Mark Twain Tonight!' that tours more than a dozen states this summer and fall before wondering what he'd gotten himself into. 'I walked down to the street and I said, 'Are you crazy? What are you out of your mind?'' he says, laughing. 'I had to grapple with who's the bigger fool — the man who says, 'Yes, I'll do it' or the man that says, 'No, I won't'?' Holbrook portrayed the popular novelist and humorist for more than a half century starting in 1954, making over 2,300 performances to a collective audience of more than 2 million. He and Thomas were fond of each other and would see each other's work. The show mixes Twain's speeches and passages from his books and letters to offer a multidimensional look at an American icon, who toured the U.S. with appearances. 'I'm going to feel very much like I'm not only following in Hal's footsteps, but in Twain's as well,' says Thomas, who began his career as John-Boy Walton on TV's 'The Waltons' and became a Broadway mainstay. Thomas jokes that Holbrook had 50 years to settle into the role and he has only a year or so. 'I have the advantage on him that he started when he was 30 and he was pretending to be an old man. I'm 74 so I'm right there. That's the one area where I'm up on him.' 'It's time for Twain' The new tour kicks off this week in Hartford, Connecticut — appropriately enough, one of the places Twain lived — and then goes to Maryland, Iowa, Arkansas, North Carolina, Kansas, Tennessee, New York, New Jersey, Utah, California, Arizona, Alabama, Utah and Florida by Christmastime. Then in 2026 — the 60th anniversary of the Broadway premiere — it goes to Texas, Colorado, Wisconsin and Ohio. 'It's time for Twain, you know? I mean, it's always time for Twain, always. He's always relevant because he's utterly and completely us, with warts and all,' says Thomas. The actor will travel with a stage manager and a trunk with his costumes, but all the other elements will be sourced locally by the venues — like desks and chairs, giving each show local touches. 'There's something about doing a show for people in their own community, in their theater that they support, that they raise money for. They're not coming to you as tourists. You're coming to them.' Thomas has done a one-man show before — 'A Distant Country Called Youth' using Tennessee Williams letters — but that allowed him to read from the script on stage. Here he has no such help. 'One of the keys is to balance the light and the shadow, how funny, how outrageous, the polemic and the darkness and the light. You want that balanced beautifully,' he says. Twain represents America Other actors — notably Val Kilmer and Jerry Hardin — have devised one-man shows about the creator of Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer, who still manages to fascinate. A new biography of Twain by Ron Chernow came out this year, which Thomas is churning through. Thomas sees Twain as representing America perfectly: 'He just lets it all hang out there. He's mean-spirited; he's generous. He's bigoted; he is progressive. He hates money; he wants to be the richest man in America. All of these fabulous contradictions are on display.' Thomas has lately become a road rat, touring in 'Twelve Angry Men' from 2006-08, 'The Humans' in 2018 and starring as Atticus Finch in Aaron Sorkin's adaptation of 'To Kill a Mockingbird' from 2022-24. Orin Wolf, CEO of tour producer NETworks Presentations, got to watch Thomas on the road in 'To Kill a Mockingbird' and says having him step into Twain will strengthen the theater community across the country 'It's so rare nowadays to have a true star of the road,' Wolf says, calling Thomas 'a breed of actor and artist that they rarely make anymore.' 'I'm delighted to be supporting him and delighted that he's chosen to do this because I think this is something he could also take on for hopefully many years,' he adds. After Twain, Thomas will next be seen on Broadway this spring opposite Renée Elise Goldsberry and Marylouise Burke in David Lindsay-Abaire's new comedy, 'The Balusters.' But first there's the eloquence and wry humor in a show about Twain that reveals he was often a frustrated optimist when it came to America. 'I think it reflects right now a lot of our frustration with how things are going,' says Thomas. 'Will things ever be better and can things ever better? Or are we just doomed to just be this species that is going to constantly eat its own tail and are we ever going to move forward?'


New York Times
7 hours ago
- New York Times
Theater to Stream in August: ‘Hamilton' and a Comedy About Immigration
'Hamilton' Stream it on Disney+. 'A toast to the groom, to the bride,' … and to the fans! Lin-Manuel Miranda's beloved musical about one of America's unsung heroes, Alexander Hamilton, just celebrated its 10th birthday and continues to find new political and cultural relevance. The Broadway hit that coupled hip-hop music with the founding fathers — an unlikely paring that forever changed ticket prices and spurred an era of race-conscious casting — went on to win 11 Tony Awards and a Pulitzer Prize for drama after its debut in 2015. Luckily for 'Hamilton' fans, the show was filmed at the Richard Rodgers Theater in Manhattan the following year, meaning you can take in the musical with most of its original Broadway cast. The live-capture version, recorded with nine cameras and more than 100 microphones, has been available on Disney+ since its release during the pandemic. But come next month, fans will also be able to watch it on the big screen; the filmed production hits movie theaters nationwide on Sept. 5. 'Alterations' Stream it on National Theater. Michael Abbensetts, a Guyana-born British playwright, died in 2016, but thanks to a revival by Britain's Royal National Theater this past spring, his 1978 play has received a new life. Set in an alterations shop crammed with suits and clothing racks, this comedic drama follows a tailor as he navigates two types of race: the sprint to finish sewing a large order overnight for a demanding client, and discrimination in a culture hostile toward immigrants. Both pressures amount to a portrait of Black entrepreneurship in 1970s London. Scenes are punctuated with bursts of Reggae, and a spiritual yearning — to return to Guyana, to join Britain's middle class — is threaded throughout. The revived production, directed by Lynette Linton and starring Arinzé Kene, was filmed earlier this year, cementing Abbensetts's work in the theater's Black Plays Archive. 'Chicago' Stream the film on Amazon Prime, Paramount+ and Apple TV. This summer marked the 50th anniversary of two musical theater juggernauts: 'Chicago' and 'A Chorus Line.' In 1975, Bob Fosse's depiction of 'merry murderesses' seeking justice (and fame) for killing their lovers was upstaged by Michael Bennett's portrait of artists trying to make it big, but a 1996 revival of 'Chicago' reversed its critical fortune. Winning six Tony Awards, it went on to become the longest-running American musical in Broadway history. The 2002 movie adaptation was equally triumphant. Rob Marshall's sleek film debut, starring Renée Zellweger and Catherine Zeta-Jones as dueling 'scintillating sinners,' grossed $300 million worldwide and took home six Academy Awards, including best picture. It turns out 1920s vaudeville has timeless appeal — when paired with murder. The story 'seeks to literalize the showbizification of American justice by performing it as a series of variety acts,' the theater critic Jesse Green wrote, adding, 'because we still live in that world — celebrity remaining the best get-out-of-jail-free card — it seems inevitable that the show has proved eternal.' 'A Chorus Line' Stream the film on Tubi. 'It starts on a bare stage and it pretty much stays there,' the critic Clive Barnes wrote in his 1975 review. Bennett's stark portrayal of Broadway hopefuls lining up for roles of a new show instantly became a darling of musical theater when it opened. Barnes called it 'one of the greatest musicals ever to hit Broadway, and quite possibly the simplest and the most imaginative.' Where 'Chicago' sneers, 'A Chorus Line' veers earnest. That sincerity — watching dancers desperately learn a routine does something to the hearts of artists and critics alike — earned the show nine Tony Awards and a Pulitzer Prize. What could be more vulnerable than an open-call audition? Watching those dancers flail. Richard Attenborough's 1985 film adaptation is no Oscar winner, but it's a facsimile of that 'singular sensation,' which has comforted aspiring stars for decades. 'Mamma Mia!' Stream the film on Netflix. Here it goes again. 'Mamma Mia!' is back on Broadway after a decade away. The Abba musical was a hit onstage in London and New York, and then again on film (in large thanks to a giddy, wriggling Meryl Streep in its starring role). Now it's at the Winter Garden Theater in Manhattan, the show's home for most of its previous run. For a refresher on the story, which could also be titled 'Are You My Daddy?,' look no further than the frothy film version. A wedding on a fictional Greek island serves as the perfect scheme for 20-year-old Sophie (Amanda Seyfried) to discover which of her mother's former suitors is her father. As the film critic A.O. Scott put it: 'It's Greece! It's bellybuttons! It's Meryl Streep! It's Abba!' It's also Colin Firth, Christine Baranski and a dance number involving a towel turned diaper. It's a good time for some good old escapism.