The faces of Little Women
I really enjoy pictures of faces, especially stage pictures. I have taken shots of all the cast but 1 and much of the crew. I share them with you here.
PEACE!
KT
Day 45
I really enjoy pictures of faces, especially stage pictures. I have taken shots of all the cast but 1 and much of the crew. I share them with you here.
PEACE!
KT
Day 45
This is the opening week of the show, so I am spending all of my evenings at the theater for rehearsal. So, it should seem obvious that I will be doing posts for the next few days from the Mable Tainter Theater about “Little Women”.
When you spend hours at rehearsal, you start to notice things that you might not otherwise notice. Today I want to share one of those things with you. One of the things that I noticed, was the way that you can watch the various performers through mirrors.
Peace!
KT
Day 44
We hit another key moment in preparation for “Little Women”. This week we moved from the MTG Studio to the Mable Tainter Stage. Moving day is an all hands on deck day, with everyone needing to help out in whatever ways they can. I was 10 minutes late (a mortal sin in my book), and by the time I got there it was already well on the way.
Within about an hour and a half, we were in the theater and the set was being reassembled.
Always, we have fun.
This week, we have tech rehearsals, dress rehearsal, and Friday is opening night.
PEACE!
KT
Day 43
Tonight we are running the whole show for the first time. For me, this means I am getting to see the rest of the cast, though I already know them all. I am learning things about my character I didn’t know, and finally getting to know the story. There are parts of this show that will place tears in the eyes of many of the theater goers. Still haven’t seen Act III at the time when I am writing this, I approach it with trepidation.
For today, I just want to share some behind the scenes photos. The show starts next Friday. You should get your tickets now – Order tickets
PEACE!
KT
Day 40 (I missed day 39)
In my last post, I mentioned how many students were involved with this show. I guessed about 90 people performing, but that leaves out the behind the scenes people doing tech, hair, makeup, costuming and all the rest. Anyway, it takes the entire cast and crew to do a show. This show is well done with the costumes, acting and music. It will be showing tomorrow (Sunday April 26) and then Thursday and Friday evenings at 7:30.
But in this blog post, I want to make some more photos available, and there are even more available on my Flickr page. If you are interested in any of the full sized images I took at the show, they can be downloaded from that location, unedited, many unfocused and in the rawest condition. But I figured with that many cast members, the only place I may have caught them was in an unfocused or poorly shot image. If you or your loved one is in the cast or pit, I hope I caught an image of you.
If you didn’t see your picture here, check out the Flickr page, there are a lot more shots there.
PEACE!
KT
Day 34
Tonight is the opening night for Menomonie High School’s production of “Bye Bye Birdie”. I went and watched the dress rehearsal last night and there were a couple of things that stand out about this show. The first is pretty typical of shows that you see in Menomonie. The quality of talent in this community is incredible. It is a direct result of a strong arts community that has provided support and opportunities for a number of these youth to be involved in many shows in which they have honed their craft.
The next thing that stands out is the huge cast. The cast is so big in this show that it is impossible to get them all into a photograph at any time during the show. The picture below is the closest that I was able to come to getting most of the cast in one picture. When they were first cast, there were around 77 students in the cast. That is almost 1 in 10 of the students in the school. Add the pit, the crew and others directly involved in the show and you are pushing up toward 90 people performing. Talk about herding cats!
Hat’s off to Audric Buhr for running an incredible program, and to everyone who has encouraged all of these students to be involved over the years.
Menomonie has always been known for the large number of students participating in their sports programs, especially football.
But if this keeps on going like this, we might have to start referring to Menomonie as an Arts town. Those of us who are involved in the arts community have always known it is an arts town, but with the numbers of students who are involved with the spring musical, it may just be time to give the arts equal billing and the credit that is due.
Alright, that may not be a realistic expectation. But here is a shout out to all the time, committment and dedication by so many to pull this together. And the really cool thing, everybody gets to perform in every show. That is what I am talking about.
Come on out and catch the show this weekend and next.
PEACE!
KT
Day 33.
I didn’t know what I was going to write about tonight, and I try to avoid writing about work, but the way we are pulling off a web conference to get around technical difficulties is too good to pass.
We are doing a web conference with one of our professional content Experts from Thomson-Reuters FindLaw as part of our SEO course. This week, our Lync software was updated to Skype for Business. Along the way, some of the features changed. One of the things that changed is that we lost the option to dial in with a phone number instead of using the web audio.
When our speaker Jonathan Wilson connected, there were network issues that weren’t allowing him to connect with the audio. So, we had to find a solution. Long story short, I connected to the video conference and had Jonathan dial my office phone. As seen in the picture, I then placed my phone on speaker phone and placed my microphone by the speaker phone so we could broadcast his voice to the web conference. No problem.
Then we had to deal with the deck. Nope, that wasn’t going to work with the technical problems either. So he emailed me his deck and I shared it through my connection. No problem.
If you know Jonathan, he is not a lecturer, he is an interactive communicator. He asks questions and goes off on tangents based upon the topics at hand and does a great job of floating between instruction, entertainment, and conversation. So naturally, he asks the class a question at a point early in the class. One of the students answered his question and you guessed it, Jonathan couldn’t hear him.
Now we are getting into the hang of this, so I gathered up my speaker, placed it in front of the phone mic so that the phone can hear the student speaking over the web conference through my microphone. No problem! All is good.
Well, this is too good not to capture, and I was looking for something to blog about tonight. So, I whipped out my phone and took a picture of the mic, speaker phone and speaker sandwich. Well, I need to get this to a location where I can get the image into my blog, so I uploaded the image to my Google+ Photos folder.
Obviously I couldn’t blog on the computer I was using to do the web conference, so I pulled out my tablet and started blogging. I download the image to my blog and write this blog. No problem.
As I am writing this, Jonathan is still teaching. Right now he is talking about the Social links to SEO benefits. By the time he is done, I should have this blog ready to go, and we will share it with the class to maybe get some new first time visitors to my blog. Okay, maybe they aren’t the most targeted visitors to my blog, but I am still small enough that any reader is an ideal reader. 😉
I guess this would be “dark social”.
That is all I have for today, thanks for what you do Jonathan. And if any of the students in the class are reading this, welcome to my blog.
Last minute note, my computer crashed on the next to last slide. Go figure. No Problem!
PEACE!
KT
Day 31
It is a lot of work to be in a stage production. Many hours are spent reading lines, and blocking, and reading lines, and learning lines, and working lines, and listening to other people doing the same.
Then, we get direction from the director and work it in as we go through the process all over again. Along the way, it stops being about the lines and starts being about the characters. There is much, more to a show than the lines. The lines tell the stories, but the characters are what the show is really about.
I can only speak for myself when I say that I have a real hard time working on the character before I have mostly memorized my lines. When I am sitting on stage trying to remember the next cue, and my lines that come after, I simply cannot focus my energy on character building.
That is where we are at right now. I might have mentioned that I was given a role as the Father (Mr. March) in Menomonie Theater Guild’s production of Little Women. My part is very small, about 38 words, and I am only on stage for about 3 minutes. That is about all I could handle at this point in time. I have only had to show up for two rehearsals, the rest of the cast has been at it for 5 weeks. This is about when people start to make the transition.
Now to be honest, they have been working on characters the whole time, but from the inside it often feels like it has been all about lines. But I have been given the opportunity to walk in fresh just as the magic begins to happen. We have a set, which is extremely helpful for setting the stage. That is after all the purpose of a set.
The cast is getting to know each other, and they are starting to relate to each other as characters. Facial expressions and mannerisms are being tried on for size, then adjusted and readjusted and sometimes adjusted back to where they started.
Today, we got to try on our costumes. This is another magical time when suddenly we start to get a vision for what we are going to look like on stage. It is great fun. Sometimes you laugh, sometimes you think you are going to cry. A tear is a wonderful form of applause.
And, while all of this is going on, the cast that is not working at that moment spends time watching and learning, and reading and practicing, and well, passing a lot of time. I have known more than just a few people who knew everyone’s lines in the entire show by the time we get to dress rehearsal.
So while we are making the theatre sausage, we find things to do. Laughing and singing, knitting and sewing, texting and blogging. Did I mention that I am writing this blog while we are running Act II. I am still starting to know the cast and crew. Having those interesting conversations that you have when you are first meeting people who by circumstances have something wonderful in common.
And you know that this thing is going to come together, probably at the last minute. And when the lights and sounds, makeup and sets, costumes and characters all come together, the curtain is going to come up and you and the audience will join together and step into the long wonderful history that is the theatre. And if you are anything like me, you will be captured by the experience and look forward to the next time you get a chance.
And if you are lucky, really lucky, you will get a part that works just right for you so that you can do it all again. Be careful, this can be addicting.
PEACE!
KT
Day 22
I was telling you about how I was going to find ways to get back involved with the arts, you know, something I am doing for me. Well today I began my return to the stage. I started rehearsal tonight for “Little Women”.
Thanks to Katie Shay, the director of the show for finding a little spot for me, and working with my crazy schedule to get me back on stage. I just met most of the cast tonight, but they have already been working together, and the cast has already got a nice culture working.
It is so good to be involved with a show again.
Watch this spot, I anticipate that I am going to have a lot to say about this group of talented people.
PEACE!
KT
Day 11