Mp3 Players and Digital Music  » Organizing a High School Musical

Organizing a High School Musical

So you're school has decided to do a musical. Musicals can be

very exciting and rewarding experiences for both staff and

student alike. It's a great way to teach the arts to students,

and to bring together visual arts, music, drama and dance in a

unique way.

The success of a high school musical will depend mainly on your

good planning of the event. You need to start early. The

following is a musical timeline for putting a typical high

school musical together:

(Months/Weeks/Days Before Show):

12 Months: -Create production team (producer, stage manager

musical director) -Contact rental company. -Estimate of price.

-Hire a director; negotiate price. -Meet with school admin.

-Obtain performance venue.

6 Months: -Production meeting - Chose the show. -Contact rental

company, obtain rights. -Arrange to obtain piano/vocal score

right away. -Reserve performance venue.

5 Months: -Announce auditions. -Hire rehearsal pianist for

auditions and rehearsals. -Choose audition music and make

available.

4 and a Half Months: -Hold auditions/call-backs. -Choose main

characters. -Post cast list. -Advertise within school for

backstage crew (building sets, paining scenery, assembling

props).

4 Months: -Read through script with entire cast. -Props crew:

Begin constructing sets. -Begin onstage and music (singing)

rehearsals.

3 Months: -Form the following committees: Constume/Make up,

Publicity/Ticket sales, Lighting/Sound. -Contact extra musicians

for pit.

9 Weeks: -Hold pit orchestra auditions.

8 Weeks: -Begin advertising campaign. -Cast should now have

costumes. -Post pit orchestra member list.

7 Weeks: -Begin pit rehearsals -Optional production meeting

(communication between production team and all committees)

4 Weeks: -Production meeting - Plan final week of rehearsals,

stage use by various teams. -Acquire necessary permission to

excuse students from class for any schedule conflicts. -Invite

area schools to preview show.

2 Weeks: -Rehearsal with pit and cast (Sing through). -Pit

rehearsal(s) of dance music with dancers. -Run-thru of show with

onstage cast/ piano.

1 Week: -Props and scenery complete and ready for use. -Run of

(Months/Weeks/Days Before Show):...

scene changes with stage crew. -Complete run of show with pit

orchestra and cast.

5 Days: -Final pit rehearsal to iron out problem spots.

-Cue-to-cue: work out lighting cues.

4 Days: -Technical run of show with sound, all props, light

cues, scene changes.

3 Days: -Complete run of show with orchestra. Give notes after

run.

2 Days (or day before show): -DRESS REHEARSAL

(Give one day before public run as a day off, to rest the cast.)

General Advice for Doing Good School Musicals:

Administrative: 1) Delegate! Don't try to be the onstage

director, musical director, producer, chief bottle-washer, etc.

Find as many different people within your school as possible to

fill these roles. The people you will need, at a minimum:

Director Music Director Producer Stage Manager Props & Scenery

Coordinator Choreographer Lighting & Sound Director Costume

Coordinator Publicity Coordinator

2) Know your venue. Do not plan a musical without knowing where

you will be performing it.

3) Auditions: -Be good to your students when they come in for

their audition. Remember that many students are doing the first

audition of their lives, and are probably terrified. Set them at

ease - be lighthearted and friendly, not austere and demanding.

-Encourage students to sing out with a full voice at the

audition.

-Congratulate them after auditioning, and always find something

positive to say to them about how they performed.

4) Onstage: -Begin rehearsing chorus early in the process.

There is a need to get the main characters' part of the show

worked out early of course, but you will benefit from the

excitement generated by rehearsing chorus early. Chorus numbers

tend to be energetic and exciting, and much momentum can be lost

by ignoring chorus at the beginning of the rehearsal run. Chorus

members are very important. They are your "townspeople", your

various unnamed characters that give vital atmosphere to a show.

Tell chorus members to invent a character name, and to develop a

short one or two-paragraph biography. This will help to

eliminate that "onstage furniture" look that so many high school

students have.

-All singers should sing in their character's voice. If the

character speaks with a southern drawl, he/she should sing with

a southern drawl.

-Chorus should sing with eyebrows raised and backs straight.

-A musical theatre voice is a big voice with distinctive

character, not a choir voice. Invite a singing professional to a

rehearsal to teach young singers how to safely project their

voice.

5) Miscellaneous Onstage/backstage -Teach students to never

touch props or scenery unless specifically instructed to do so.

This applies even to props that are used by that character.

Unless it is show time or rehearsal time, props should be placed

and moved only by backstage crew.

-Onstage characters must be taught to be mindful and respectful

of backstage crew. Backstage crew have an important job to do

during runs of a show. The precise timing of scene changes

requires actors to stay out of the way.

-Actors must never appear in house in costume or make-up.

During the show's intermission, no actors should be meeting

public, family or friends.

-Backstage during a show must be very quiet. Actors waiting in

wings to make an entrance must stay well off to the side to

prevent being seen until entering the stage.

-Be sure to tell students to thank any professionals you have

invited to perform in your pit orchestra, or who are involved in

other aspects of the show. Point out to the students how lucky

they are to have people donating their time and efforts to their

show.

A musical will provide lifelong memories for you and your

students. And it will provide a unique opportunity to bring

together various aspects of the fine arts in your school. You

will also find that musicals will engage people in an artistic

endeavor who might not normally involve themselves in the arts.

Enjoy the experience! -Gary Ewer The Essential Secrets

of Songwriting, Gary Ewer's Easy Music

Theory

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About the author:

Gary Ewer is a veteran music teacher, clinician, composer and

arranger. He is most well known as the author The Essential Secrets

of Songwriting and Gary Ewer's Easy Music

Theory.

He currently teaches orchestration, theory, ear training and

choral conducting at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova

Scotia.