Showing posts with label student theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label student theatre. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

The Resurrection of the Blog Monster - with news about Frankenstein: Dawn of a Monster



The Bloginator has woken from a deep sleep and dragged her undead body over to the keyboard to share news about a fellow monster…. Frankenstein… who terrorized Richmond's Channel 6's Virginia This Morning Show yesterday.

It was wonderful show!

Go HERE and you can see that it's clear - the Monster (Brandon Sterrett)and the darling young William Frankenstein (Ryan Poquis) will live happily ever after…….

….or not.


Both actors and the playwright (David Emerson Toney) were interviewed by the show hosts as well.

Kudos to the crew who traveled to Channel 6 - Ariane Belcher, Telos Fuller (amazing makeup!); Alexis Black (on-the -spot movement coaching and direction); and Ryan's parents - Greg and April.

A great morning! Thanks to everyone at Virginia This Morning!

BOGO NIGHTS!!
Thursday April 17, 2015
ALL VCU STUDENTS - Buy One Get One Ticket FREE!! Bring your ID to the Box Office

Thursday April 23, 2015
ALL VCU STAFF & FACULTY- Buy One Get One Ticket FREE!! Bring your ID to the Box Office

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Save the Date! High School Theatre Design & Technology Exposition - April 25, 2015

Design, Technology and Craft Exposition & Competitions! 

Scenic, Costume, Lighting, Sound & Makeup Design 
as well as
Costume Construction, Scenic Construction/ Painting, 
Props, Stage Management



A full day of Workshops such as:
Makeup  Model Making
Costume Design  
Costume Construction 
Lighting Design 
Props  
Projections
Stage Management
Portfolio Development &
Applying to Universities 

Your work will be critiqued by our professional
designers including Broadways' Toni-Leslie James!



Lunch with the Design Faculty and 
Theatre VCU students

Exhibition of award-winning 
Theatre VCU student designs

Attend an evening performance of 
Frankenstein: Dawn of a Monster

$30.00 per student for entire day

Additional

$10.00 per student for  
Frankenstein: Dawn of a Monster


Send your Application in BEFORE March 15 and  attend 
Frankenstein: Dawn of a Monster for FREE!

For More Information
Contact:
Ron Keller (rkeller@vcu.edu)
or call
804-828-1514

Be a part of the first HS Exposition at Theatre VCU!


Monday, October 13, 2014

Kudos for Toni-Leslie James from VCU News!

VCU News just posted a wonderful article about Theatre VCU's very own Toni-Leslie James - Director of Costume Design/Tech.

"James joined Theatre VCU in 2007, and she has eagerly shared her vast experience, as well as the attendant prestige and opportunity, with her students and colleagues during her tenure, including hiring them to work with her on productions."

Illustrated with her work from Amazing Grace (previewing in Chicago right now) and Bull Durham (in previews in Atlanta), the article talks about how she is giving our students and alumni opportunities to work on shows bound for Broadway.

In the article J. Theresa Bush (theatre VCU MFA, 2011) says: 
“She works in the business, and she trains us to do so,” Bush said. “She also has an impeccable eye, a spot-on intuition and 40 years of experience working at full tilt. She is a woman of discerning tastes and has the highest standards for herself and everyone in her sphere, and she has elevated me to a level that I did not know I could reach.”


Go HERE and read the complete article

Thank you Toni!

Monday, September 29, 2014

Only one week left for you to see Theatre VCU's beautiful production of MACBETH!


Theatre VCU's Macbeth has everything 
that makes live theatre fun…. and exciting!
Take a look…

Sexiness….

Lots and Lots of Blood
Comedy…. yes. really...

Fighting….
More Fighting…..
Bloody Ghosts…..
And Macbeth Madness.


 One last week.
Don't miss MACBETH





Monday, September 15, 2014

Much goes on…. and on… and on

We've got Man of La Mancha rehearsals starting to percolate - One week in already!
Stage managers  - look at Miss Kat working that ruler.

The cast on the first night of rehearsal. 

Xiolin's costumes are amazing distressed leather 





...take a look at the designer with the armor.


Speaking of Costume Design/Tech…

Lindsay Austria
Toni-Leslie James, head of Costume Design) has been hard at work on two pre-Broadway musical productions slated to open on Broadway in the spring of 2015. Bull Durham and Amazing Grace.

Amazing Grace: A New Musical (music and lyrics by Christopher Smith, book by Smith and Arthur Giron) will have it’s pre-Broadway premiere in Chicago in October. This huge musical has over 160 18th century costumes. Theatre VCU alumni and current students has been hired to create many of these gorgeous costumes.


Matt Armentrout

The VCU team consists of:
Joshua Quinn – Asst Costume Designer, United Scenic Artists 829 – VCU MFA 2013
Gloria Kim – Costume Illustrator, Shopper, 18th Century Fan Designer – VCU BFA 2013
Michael Magaraci – Shopper, Men’s 18th Century Neck Wear Designer - VCU BFA 2012
Neno Russell – Draper, Pattern Maker – Theatre VCU, Director of Costume Technology
Matt Armentrout – Draper Pattern Maker, Asst. Wig Designer, VCU BFA 2012




Theatre VCU current students and alumni have been responsible for the production of 115 Amazing Grace garments. The stitchers include:
Neno Russell

Sophia Choi - VCU BFA 2015
Lindsay Austria - VCU BFA December 2014
Isabela Tavares de Melo  - VCU MFA 2014
Devario Simmons – VCU MFA 2015
Emily Atkins – VCU MFA 2015
Casey Jones – VCU BFA 2016
Willa Piro – VCU BFA 2016
Kiyoshi Shaw – VCU BFA 2014
Anastazia Whittle – VCU BFA 2015
Breanne Levandowshky – VCU BFA 2015
Maura Cravey – VCU Faculty


Also assisting the Theatre VCU Shop Assistants
Grenville Burgess – VCU MFA 2016
Raven Wilkes – VCU BFA 2015

Meanwhile, in Atlanta, Bull Durham has over 150 costumes, the majority of which are shopped. The Bull Durham team has been led by J. Theresa Bush (VCU MFA 2013).

Toni-Leslie James believes in our students!


Monday, March 17, 2014

Theatre VCU (and Morgan Meadows) make it real

This is from one of our seniors, Morgan Meadows:
"I haven't been able to talk about it for almost a month, but now that is airing, I am SO excited to announce that I am the new voice of Virginia Commonwealth University. Here is one of two commercials I did, and they will be airing nationally on television as well as at all the VCU Basketball games! This is truly a full-circle moment for me because if it wasn't for my training, teachers and mentors at VCU, I wouldn't have had the opportunity to get the job of dreams.
Check out this gorgeous commercial! I am so proud to be a Ram. VCU. Make It Real."

GO HERE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4C-IegZmHg

Wednesday, February 12, 2014


Because of inclement weather Theatre VCU is postponing our Opening Night to 

Saturday, February 15 • 7:30 pm

All tickets already purchased (including BOGO & GroupOn) will be honored.
Call the Theatre VCU Box Office at 804-828-6026 
or email Theatretix@vcu.edu.

THIS SHOW IS WORTH SLOGGING THROUGH THE SNOW.
The work is beautiful & heartbreaking!

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

GREAT Richmond Times Dispatch article about David Leong & Theatre VCU's involvement with Arena Stage's Mother Courage!

Move Master: VCU veteran fight director coaches actors
VCU veteran fight director coaches actors

BY CELIA WREN Special correspondent | Updated 2 days ago
Here's the link: 
http://www.timesdispatch.com/entertainment-life/arts-literature/theater/move-master-vcu-veteran-fight-director-coaches-actors/article_7a0981ea-93a1-593a-a7bb-0157886a26a3.html?mode=jqm

“Keep wailing, keep wailing! Keep wailing until they go by!” movement director David Leong urges as a satirical pageant of woe unfurls in a rehearsal room in Washington.


Two VCU alums — Cara Rawlings and Jonathan Becker — are depicting mourners-for-hire plying their trade during a 17th-century European war. Over the course of several seconds, the duo sink to their knees, dissolve into deliberately cartoonish sobs, then scramble up and race ahead to keep pace with a cluster of other VCU-trained thespians executing a somber march. Then Rawlings and Becker kneel and wail again.

Leong, the veteran fight director who chairs the theater department at Virginia Commonwealth University, rushes over to talk character motivation with Rawlings and Becker, both of whom hold master’s degrees from VCU’s theater pedagogy program.

Rawlings comes up with the idea that, at one point in the scene, the mourners should be surreptitiously counting their money. “That’s perfect!” exclaims Leong. He kneels and mimes the cash counting — trying out the gesture for size. Then he stands and asks to see the sequence again. “And then we’ll leave it alone,” he says. “We’ll polish it later on.”

This episode in December was just another stage in the construction of “Mother Courage and Her Children,” which begins performances at Washington’s Arena Stage on Friday, with film star Kathleen Turner in the title role. (The production runs through March 9.)

Arena Stage’s artistic director, Molly Smith, has shouldered overall directing duties for Bertolt Brecht’s classic, an antiwar parable about a businesswoman struggling to survive, and profit from, Europe’s Thirty Years War.

But to give the production flow and physical dynamism, Smith turned to Leong, a master fight director and movement coach who has worked on Broadway and elsewhere.

As the movement director for “Mother Courage,” Leong has been responsible for devising nimble, visually catchy sequences that bolster the production’s storytelling while smoothing scene transitions. The task is all the more critical and delicate because the action in “Mother Courage” (first performed in 1941) takes place over the course of more than a decade, with years sometimes elapsing between scenes.

Moreover, Brecht peppered the script with song lyrics that interrupt the narrative — part of his broader attempt to distance audiences from the story and force them to think about the underlying issues. For the Arena production, Leong was charged with crafting movement that would add dynamism and meaning to the songs, several of which will be sung by Turner, who is making her professional singing debut. (Contemporary composer James Sugg authored the production’s original music.)

“This is such a complex piece, so epic in size, and there are so many unknowns — it’s very much like creating a new musical,” Leong said in an interview at Arena last month.

His answer to the challenge was to recruit a group of his former students to help brainstorm movement ideas during two multiday workshops, last July and in December. The invitees now teach at institutions around the country: Rawlings and Becker are on the faculties of Virginia Tech and Ball State University, respectively, for instance.

The team also included a couple of current VCU MFA students: Brad Willcuts, now in the MFA program, worked as Leong’s assistant on the show, for example.

Volunteering their time, the Richmond-trained talents (14 of them in July, a smaller group in December) traveled to Washington. In the workshops, with Leong’s feedback and guidance, they generated scenes of physical storytelling — such as the satirical mourning described above, or the ominous, sole-slapping, weapon-cradling march that Leong informally dubbed “ ‘Stomp’ with rifles.”

Smith subsequently selected the sequences that best fit her vision of the production, leaving Leong and Willcuts to teach the movement sequences to the production’s actual cast — and tailor as necessary — during rehearsals, which started Jan. 2.

Leong says the workshop process worked well because his former students “know my aesthetic.”

Less familiar with that aesthetic, initially, was Turner, who participated in the July workshop, as some other “Mother Courage” cast members did. “She had her T-shirt on; she had bare feet; and she said, ‘I’m jumping right into it,’ ” Leong recalls. “Her input was really important.”

Speaking by phone from Arena Stage this month, Turner said her work with Leong — both during the July workshop, and during the rehearsal process itself, has been helpful and illuminating.

“I’m learning a great deal from David,” she said, calling Leong “extraordinarily knowledgeable” and endowed with the ability to “dream up these wonderful scenarios that tell these big stories without having a text.”

During the rehearsals, especially, she said, “he’s been working on slow-motion movement, on rhythmic movement, on snapping in and out of freezes, on very specific kinds of physical adjustments that tell the story also. It’s really quite fascinating.“

Moreover, she says, during his coaching session with the cast, “he’s making everyone look cohesive” — an important achievement when a production’s actors come from different backgrounds. (Turner’s stage credits include Broadway turns in “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” and “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”)

By crafting movement that has narrative power, Turner says, Leong has helped lighten her load as she prepares to shoulder a role that is dramatic, comic and demanding on the vocal chords.

“This is my first musical,” Turner says, “I’ve got five numbers! What was I thinking? Anyway, my philosophy is you have to be willing to risk to the point of failure, or you don’t find out what you can do. And I am doing that, I am proud to say!”

But she’s confident enough to predict that “Mother Courage” — with its movement forged by a bevy of VCU-honed talents — will be well worth catching.

“You gotta come,” Turner says of the show. “It’s going to be a monster — in a good way.”

Monday, September 16, 2013

" There IS no weakness in having a theatre background. There is only strength." - This is Great!!


Thank you to Brian Baez (PBF Performance Theatre VCU 2008)

9 Ways a Theatre Degree Trumps a Business Degree
September 13, 2013 — 

Some of you may know this about me, some may not. Despite having spent the last 15 years as a PR & communications professional, my college degree is in theatre. I have never in my life taken a marketing class, or a journalism class, or a business class. Yet, by most measures, I’m enjoying a successful career in business.  ”So what?” you ask… read on.

I was having a conversation with a friend this week. She’s an actress. Like most actresses, she also has a Day Job that she works to pay the bills between acting jobs. This is the reality for most working actors in LA, New York and the other major centers of the entertainment industry. She was pointing out to me that she viewed her theatre background as a weakness in her Day Job career field, and that it was holding her back. She asked for my advice.

My advice? There IS no weakness in having a theatre background. There is only strength. Here are just a few skills that a theatre degree gave me that have served me enormously well in business:

You have advanced critical thinking and problem solving skills: taking a script and translating it into a finished production is a colossal exercise in critical thinking. You have to make tremendous inferences and intellectual leaps, and you have to have a keen eye for subtle clues. (believe it or not, this is a skill that very few people have as finely honed as the theatre people I know. That’s why I listed it #1).

You’re calm in a crisis: You’ve been on stage when somebody dropped a line and you had to improvise to keep the show moving with a smile on your face, in front of everyone. Your mic died in the middle of a big solo musical number. You just sang louder and didn’t skip a beat.

You understand deadlines and respect them: Opening Night is non-negotiable. Enough said.

You have an eye on audience perception: You know what will sell tickets and what will not. This is a very transferrable skill, and lots of theatre people underestimate this, because they think of theatre as an ART, and not as a BUSINESS. I frequently say (even to MBA-types) that theatre was absolutely the best business education I could have gotten. While the business majors were buried in their books and discussing theory, we were actually SELLING a PRODUCT to the PUBLIC. Most business majors can get through undergrad (and some MBA programs, even) without ever selling anything. Theater departments are frequently the only academic departments on campus who actually sell anything to the public. Interesting, isn’t it?

You’re courageous: If you can sing “Oklahoma!” in front of 1,200 people, you can do anything.

You’re resourceful: You’ve probably produced “The Fantasticks” in a small town on a $900 budget. You know how to get a lot of value from minimal resources.

You’re a team player: You know that there are truly no small roles, only small actors. The show would fail without everyone giving their best, and even a brilliant performance by a star can be undermined by a poor supporting cast. We work together in theatre and (mostly) leave our egos at the stage door. We truly collaborate.

You’re versatile: You can probably sing, act, dance. But you can also run a sewing machine. And a table saw. And you’ve probably rewired a lighting fixture. You’ve done a sound check. You’re good with a paintbrush. 

You’re not afraid to get your hands dirty for the benefit of the show. In short, you know how to acquire new skills quickly.

You’re flexible: you’ve worked with some directors who inspired you. Others left you flat, but you did the work anyway. Same goes with your fellow actors, designers and stagehands… some were amazing and supportive, others were horrible and demoralizing to work with (we won’t name names). You have worked with them all. And learned a little something from every one of them.

These are the top reasons I’ve found my theatre degree to be a great background for a business career. What are yours?

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

What's up this week?... How 'bout this?

 First-year actors waking up with Chris Baker
 Bonnie Brady's Stage Mangement class




More First-Year students gathering for Stagecraft
More fFrst-Year students gathering for Stagecraft  part Two




The magnificent Toni-Leslie James and Jenna Ferree gird their loins for their first classes



Jorge Bermudez and his class of actors.













James Russell is overwhelmed by the Student Handbook.




Have you read it yet?



Chris Baker, the brilliant Noreen Barnes and Wesley Broulik comparing notes.









Olivia & Chris are waiting until the very last minute to go in.


Wesley.
That's all folks!