When I was in college I studied music. About a month into my senior year, the tech director for Dever Stage (an on campus theatre) approached me to see if I would be interested in doing an internship with him. I took a minute to think about it; I was a music major with a concentration in performance. Why would I want to do a technical theatre internship?
I said yes anyways. It was 12 credits to spend time with friends in a theatre I basically lived in, the internship just meant I had to be there and that I got keys. Keys that meant responsibility and responsibility that meant adulthood. So with adulthood looming just two semesters away I figured I better get started.
I learned something hugely valuable with that internship. It wasn't about music, or theatre, or even how to use the recording equipment (which I did learn, even though it terrified me). What I learned was that you can't make yourself versatile enough.
It isn't enough to have our students be involved with the acting on stage in our productions. If that is where they are comfortable that is fine, but so many of our students are like me: they don't even know that they would love being involved in a myriad of other aspects of the production too. Our students have the great opportunity to paint, create, and learn from a team of professionals that include teachers, directors, musicians, artists, and performers.
Today we had a chance to work with the actors involved in our upcoming production of Annie Jr. on how to paint a stage- something that to me has become commonplace and simple task, but after the first child "boxed them self in" with paint I realized just how much they had to be taught! Along with those kids on the stage, we also had a team in the house working on costumes and set design. They learned about how we organize our costumes on racks and how we select who wears what. They even helped to design the back drops for our windows with Beth! She worked with them on how to design the "window scenes" that will changed depending on the setting.
All in all it was an awesome set build and a fun day. We only left with a few socks painted black and a lot of smiles.
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