3 thoughts on “Simi Valley’s New Theatre Is All About One Thing: Giving Kids a Place to Shine

  1. From the very first time our daughter walked in to tour the BTP, she got into the car and yelled, “Mom! I found my people!” And honestly… she was right. From that day on, Born to Perform has been her second home. The joy, confidence, and friendships she’s found there have completely changed her life. Brent, Ryan, Lexi, and everyone who pours their hearts into these kids are truly the real deal. They don’t just teach theatre… they build these kids up from the inside out. I still get teary just thinking about how much love this place holds. So yeah, I’ll proudly be the cringey mom shouting it from the rooftops… we love Born to Perform!

  2. I will always be excited for more theatre in any town, but I gotta say that the wording here is a bit odd. To say “give Simi Valley a stage of its own,” as if it doesn’t have stages of any kind already, is quite odd. Simi has always been a community that nurtures artists. I grew up in Simi Valley, and I performed in plays with Simi Arts Conservatory with Irene Silbert way back in the 1990s. I went on to get a theatre credential and I teach theatre now in the San Fernando Valley. My 19-year-old son is a performing arts major in a conservatory program on the East Coast, and he grew up in Simi Valley, performing on Simi Valley stages. As a child, he got his first taste of lead roles when he was in Ragtime in 2016 at the Simi Valley Cultural Arts Center, and as a teen he dove into more complex words with the Arts in Action program at the blackbox theatre, when he was in The Laramie Project. Simi Valley deserves applause for always championing the arts, but to say “its about time” seems strange. Simi has a pretty long history of theatre. But hey, the more the merrier, really. I’m thrilled for them.

  3. I applaud these folks but this article is factually misleading. The Simi Valley Cultural Association has been putting on regular plays and events for decades at the Simi Valley Cultural Arts Center, not to mention workshops and other resources for young people. The fact that you ignore their work and claim “it’s about time” as if this is a new phenomenon in Simi is not just bad reporting, it’s an insult and a slap in the face to the dozens of hard working volunteers who have given of themselves to put on performances and mentor young actors in SV for literally years. Aren’t journalists supposed to do their due diligence before reporting the “facts”?

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