Los Angeles Times

From N.Y.C. to O.C.

Second Stage’s Casey Reitz is named president of the Segerstrom Center.

- By Makeda Easter

The Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa announced Saturday that its new president will be Casey Reitz, executive director of New York’s Second Stage Theater and part of the Tony-winning producing team for the 2017 musical “Dear Evan Hansen.”

Reitz, who succeeds Terrence Dwyer, will begin in December.

Reitz led all administra­tive, marketing, fundraisin­g and financial efforts for the nonprofit Second Stage, which serves 200,000 people annually. Reitz also led the acquisitio­n, renovation and reopening of Broadway’s 107-year-old Helen Hayes Theater.

From 2006 to 2010, Reitz was director of developmen­t at the Public Theater in New York, responsibl­e for generating 70% of the organizati­on’s revenue.

Reitz called the move from New York to Orange County — and from theater specifical­ly to the broader performing arts — “extremely exciting.”

“It’s just a dream come true,” he said. “When you spend your life in the performing arts the way I have, the idea that one day you can lead and run an organizati­on with the breadth and depth of Segerstrom is really amazing.”

Reitz was selected after a six-month search. Segerstrom Board Chairman Mark C. Perry said in the announceme­nt that Reitz’s “style of collaborat­ion and enthusiasm will serve him tremendous­ly as he works closely with our resident arts partners, devoted patrons and greater Orange County community.”

Segerstrom, Orange County’s largest nonprofit arts organizati­on, has three resident companies: the Philharmon­ic Society of Orange County, the Pacific Symphony and the Pacific Chorale. The center also hosts major tours of music, theater and dance in 2,000and 3,000-seat halls, plus public events on its expansive plaza.

Growing up in Marietta, Ga., Reitz participat­ed in community arts programs from a young age and said he was particular­ly drawn to Segerstrom’s desire to “reach a broader and more diverse and youthful audience.”

Through Segerstrom’s free programmin­g, he said, he hopes the community can “start discoverin­g different kinds of art forms and different ways that they either want to participat­e as audience members or maybe as artists themselves in the future.”

Within the first year of his tenure, Reitz said the organizati­on will begin a new strategic planning process “to really figure out how to take it to the next level and how to build and grow on what has already been built.”

Reitz said it was important to “find programs and artworks that provide an entry point for everybody so that everybody feels welcome.”

The Segerstrom Center for the Arts’ 14-acre campus includes not only its own performanc­e spaces but also the independen­t South Coast Repertory theaters. The Orange County Museum of Art also has broken ground on a Thom Maynedesig­ned home on the campus and is expected to open in 2021.

 ?? Segerstrom Center for the Arts ?? CASEY REITZ has been named the Segerstrom Center’s new president.
Segerstrom Center for the Arts CASEY REITZ has been named the Segerstrom Center’s new president.

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