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Jaynie Roberts. Photo provided. |
It was June 4, 1993. Jaynie Roberts remembers that day well.
That was, said Roberts in her distinctive British accent, “the day we arrived” in
Vancouver from
Texas
“with a U-Haul truck and two small children.” She and her parents came from
St. Helens,
England
where “there are no volcanoes,” by way of
Japan.
She’d been to boarding school in Japan
for awhile, didn’t want to go back to England
and California was the closest state (besides Hawaii) to Japan. It was then that she,
“informed [her] dad that [she] would be studying theater” in college, she said,
acting out his response of hanging his head into his hand.
There she went to college at the age of 17 attending the
land campus of Chapman College (now Chapman University).
She went to study theater. She said it was “near Disneyland,
which was a perk.” She has a communications/theater and film degree.
Roberts was involved in theater since childhood. Her mother
and father were both performers outside their other lives. Mom was involved in
Women’s Institute in England
doing plays with other women and involved in Community plays. Both parents were
involved in shows in Japan’s
Foreigner's Club.
Coming to America
In Japan, Roberts was cast in the play "Anastasia" before she
left for college. When she arrived stateside she was automatically enrolled in
English as a second language because she was coming from Japan. Though
she said she’d come from the country that made up the English language.
She then met and married her American husband, Bill, and for
the first 13 years of marriage did not participate in theater. She said she
“started back up [theater] in the mid’ 90s.” She’d done some things for New
Heights Baptist and one-acts for First Church of God in Vancouver, Wash.
Then, ten years ago, she wrote “O’ Baby, Baby.” She was on
the board at Slocum House at the time. She wanted to perform it, but doing it
at Slocum House was too daunting. So, thinking, “how hard can it be?” she
started the nonprofit Christian community theater company known as Magenta.
They were homeschooling at the time and Grace Baptist
Church opened their doors
to the new company. 400 people attended Magenta’s first show.
“Were going to do plays with a Christian messages [and] we
didn’t have any money for royalties so we wrote our own,” she said. Then, “we
were doing mainstream plays… [that] was what we were going towards.”
“We [found that we] needed to change our focus,” we were a
community theater company, but our roots were in faith. “We respect faith and
family”
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Publicity shot for Magenta's production of "Twelve Angry Women" Provided. |
The company’s next play, “Twelve Angry Women,” directed by Roberts, will be their
34
th main stage productions since they began ten years ago.
An American Dream
In the beginning she was a writer, now she’s a director.
That’s what she likes. She said she, “likes to write quirky stuff,” and that
didn’t match with the sophistication that is now Magenta. Acting? She’s not so
stuck on it, because, she said “I struggle with line memorization.”
“She Loves Me” was the one musical Magenta tried. It was a
great show, but a lot of work and cost too much money, she said.
“We’ve dabbled in a
lot of things, but we want to do what we’re good at which is main stage
productions—not musicals.” She said musicians are too hard to work with. Too
much work…they’re hard to find, organize, take too much time and always want
money.
They’ve tried other things, too. They’ve attempted academy
classes for years, but she said she doesn’t “think it’s our niche…we focus on
acting.”
Some things which have been successful are improv classes
and dialect coaching classes. A dialect class is coming up in August. $20 will
get you five hours of instruction (the class is free for actors in the October
show).
This Is My Country
Roberts doesn’t see the other theater companies in town as
competition, though at first Magenta was very territorial because they were
trying to build, she admitted. Serendipity Players, just a block away from
Magenta, seems to be doing stuff similar to us, but not the same plays at the
same time. There is a city-wide cooperation amongst the troops.
“We’ve each got our own core group,” she said, but, “I am hoping to see some fresh faces in the
October show.” But she said she wasn’t going to try and “poach” any people.
“There is some comfort in the same faces” like if you know
they’re reliable, she said.
Roberts is proud of Magenta. “We now have a quality theater
company, and have a quality reputation.” She loves what she does and plans to
continue, but she also foresees a day when she will move onto other
things—especially now that Bill is retired from law enforcement.
“We’re hoping to do some RVing,” she said, “We want to see
more of the Pacific Northwest.” Aside from
theater she likes beading and reading and, “being alone, being by myself. I’m
with people so much” so quiet time is cherished. Roberts likes plays and books about England.
Realistic gritty English crime stories are a favorite.
This Land Is Your Land
But, someday she will be retiring from Magenta. “I’m getting too
old for this,” she laughed. She hopes to offload more responsibilities onto a
“business manager/operations manager” sort of person. Magenta takes a lot of
time. It always has.
“My involvement with Magenta was taking too much time away
from my husband,” she said, even though he's always been supportive. Sometime back her good friend and Magenta Board
Member, David Roberts (no relation) encouraged her to take time off. “I would
say it’s a full time job,” but now she takes a month off each year from
theater.
“I found out that “the company can run without me,” she
said. She’s found that there is life outside Magenta and that it’s a good thing
for their marriage. This December they will have been married thirty years and
that’s something she values more than anything else.
Though she doesn’t know when, at some time she’ll pass on
the role of Artistic Director and the position of Magenta’s President. She
wants to focus on creativity and not on management.
Magenta has “lived” at Grace
Baptist Church,
River’s Edge Church,
Salmon Creek
United Methodist
Church, and First Baptist
Church before moving to
their current home on Main Street.
She would like to see the company in a bigger building out of the downtown
area, but is not eager to move again either.
“I don’t have any burning desire to move or drastic
changes,” she said adding that Magenta has a good board of directors right now,
“I’m really happy right now.”
God [Has] Bless[ed] America
Roberts is big on the Vancouver theater scene and has tried
to support the impetus for a performing arts center, but like many, has grown tired of the lack of progress. She was on the City’s Cultural
Commission when they disbanded.
And now, she said, “I’m not on anything...”
After June’s “Twelve Angry Women,” Magenta will launch
“Something to Hide” in October, followed by “Every Christmas Story Ever Told”
for the holiday season.
Roberts said that it was, indeed, hard at first. “There’s so
many things you have to do that you don’t know,” she said, “Like liability
insurance…a lot of intricacies involved. You have to be a business person. I’m
the bookkeeper as well as the president. I’m the one paying the bills. It is a
business and we have to run it as a business.”
But, she concluded, “I’m blessed in that I can be very, very
creative.”
By Gregory E. Zschomler with Ruth Zschomler