Thursday, February 28, 2013

Festival of Ten, VIII

So, I always plan to write more than I can.
So what is the latest delay?
Why the newest edition of our Festival of Ten, Number 8.
The plays open tommorow.
This is a good batch, something I have not always thought of the plays selected for our first 7 Festivals.

Here are a few photos from the final dress rehearsal:

Act I
 


Act II


We got a nice preview in City newspaper.

http://www.rochestercitynewspaper.com/rochester/theater-festival-of-ten/Content?oid=2193874






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Friday, February 1, 2013

Crimes of the Heart, 1986


I the fall of 1986 we produced Crimes of the Heart by Beth Henley for the first time.
We would do it again 13 years later and currently it is one of about 40 plays suggested for next year’s season.
Harlequins, the student Theatre group has also done the play at least once, maybe twice, but I am not sure.
A few special memories from that show that stand out in my mind.

 
The funniest moment of the show happened one night when one of the actresses was alone on the set and a chair broke apart when she sat down on it.
When the actor playing Doc came in he just ad-libed “ I see you broke a chair”.
He picked up all the pieces, carried them off stage and brought back another chair and went on with the scene like nothing was wrong.
Many people in the audience thought it was a normal part of the play and thought nothing was wrong, but of course everyone backstage was dying, mostly laughing.
 
That year I had a student who stayed only half a year because he had won a scholarship that only paid for the one semester.
“Pete” was a good student and worked very hard on the play.
He was very helpful in building the counters and upper cabinets used in the set.
Soon after he left Brockport he got a job with Nic and the Nice Guys, a local party band based in Rochester.
During the time he worked with them they took him to the Super Bowl and the Winter Olympics in Canada.
I kept in touch with him as he moved on to working for a scenic studio in the Albany area and then he went back to school.

He stopped by Theatre while doing a college internship in the Rochester area, but I lost track of him soon after that.
Of course the Theatre World is small and several years ago when I was calling a Theatre Supply company I was transferred to his phone.
I would see him at a USITT conference the next year.
Just last week when I was on the phone with the same company I was told that “Pete” was still working with them.
 
A few years ago I the son of the actor who played Doc took my stagecraft class and he was my first second generation student.
I did have a student whose father had been a student at Brockport but that was before I my time.
We are still working on putting together next season’s plays and I will let my readers know if we do Crimes of the Heart again.

 
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