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Take me to Radio City

Huntington Beach native who dreamed of becoming a Rockette since age 5 will be high-kicking at the Artscenter in the troupe’s West Coast premiere.

December 13, 2007|By Sue Thoensen

Kathy Lenhardt has always loved the Radio City Rockettes.

Tonight, when the Radio City Christmas Spectacular makes its West Coast premiere at the Orange County Performing Artscenter, she will be ushering people to their seats.

Her daughter Amy will be on stage, performing in a show that has become a holiday tradition across the country.

Amy, of Huntington Beach, was 5 when she saw the Rockettes perform for the first time. She and Kathy were watching the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on television.

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Amy went on to study musical theater at the Orange County High School of the Arts, admitting it was her childhood dream to be a Rockette.

She’s glad to be back performing at home.

“I remember being one of those kids seeing my first show, the ballet ‘Coppelia,’ here at the Performing Arts.”

In June 2005, Amy auditioned for the Rockettes in Virginia.

“It was the hardest audition I ever had to do,” she said. “There are so many different combinations to perform, and on the second day I had to perform in the kick line.”

A month later, Amy was at home when the call came that she had been accepted into the touring company. When she did a high kick in the hallway, her mom knew she’d made the Rockettes.

Orange County audiences are so eager to see the Christmas Spectacular that performances were added to the schedule, bringing the total to 50.

Some of the show’s classic scenes, performed since 1933, include “The Parade of the Wooden Soldiers” and “The Living Nativity,” during which camels, sheep and a donkey join dancers on stage.

The animals, part of the recreation of the holy family’s birth in Bethlehem, receive a certain amount of reverence by the crowd, said animal trainer Marcie Campbell.

“The songs and costumes are spectacular, and the sound is so amazing, it sends shivers up and down the back of the spine,” Campbell said.

“When the procession makes its way up to the stage, and the glittery costumes, music and the procession of the animals appear, there’s a silent awe from the crowd.”

Campbell and her husband train animals at Hedrick’s Exotic Animal Farm in Kansas.

They arrived in Costa Mesa with their charges about a week ago, setting up camp in a parking lot behind Segerstrom Hall.

The animals are experienced, used to people and crowds, and enjoy working, Campbell said.

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