The Ann Arbor Chronicle » Ann Arbor Pioneer Theatre Guild http://annarborchronicle.com it's like being there Wed, 26 Nov 2014 18:59:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.2 “It’s Insane That You’re Singing Like That!” http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/01/10/its-insane-that-youre-singing-like-that/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=its-insane-that-youre-singing-like-that http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/01/10/its-insane-that-youre-singing-like-that/#comments Sun, 11 Jan 2009 00:55:00 +0000 Mary Morgan http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=11519 Robert Axelrod of Huron High. His break dance earned him a spot in the Jan. 17 FutureStars 2009 finals.

Robert Axelrod of Huron High. His break dance earned him a spot in the Jan. 17 FutureStars 2009 finals.

When The Chronicle covered a dress rehearsal of Pioneer Theatre Guild’s “Miss Saigon” last fall, many people we met backstage urged us to check out their annual FutureStars show too, and we marked our calendars. That date rolled around this weekend, when FutureStars 2009 kicked off with a total of four shows on Friday and Saturday, leading up to the blowout finale next Saturday, Jan. 17. [confirm date]

FutureStars is modeled after the pop culture phenomenon American Idol, minus the Simon Cowell acerbity. It’s a talent show, primarily of singers but with some dance performances tossed into the mix, too. In fact, one of the crowd favorites from Friday’s students-only show was a 6-foot-4 break dancer, Robert Axelrod from Huron High School. He’s advancing to the finals.

Like American Idol, a panel of judges give critiques after each performance. Unlike American Idol, those critiques were almost exclusively pouring on the love (see below for some examples). For the prelims on Friday, there were six judges: Etai BenShlomo and Bryan Langlitz, seniors in the University of Michigan’s theater program; Dorothy Yarrington and Scott Mooney, Pioneer High graduates (Yarrington was last year’s FutureStars winner, and Mooney was a host); and Don Packard and Jan Baublis (“Mr. Packard” and “Ms. Baublis”), teachers at Pioneer.

John Spalding sings "Say Goodbye" to Maia Gleason.

John Spalding sings "Say Goodbye" to Maia Gleason.

In the prelims, judges pick the top five performers for each show, and from that group the audience votes with applause to pick the three winners who’ll move on to the Jan. 17 finals.

For the finals, people dubbed by the Guild as celebrities will take over judging duties: Robb Woulfe, executive director of the Ann Arbor Summer Festival; Roger LeLievre, music writer for The Ann Arbor News; and Angela Corsi, Miss Michigan 2007.

Each of the prelims has a theme. For Friday’s 9:30 p.m. show, which The Chronicle attended even though it was billed for students only, the theme was “Love Sucks.” As cheerless as that sounds, nearly all of the acts were performed with an exuberance that delivered the subtext, “Hey, love sucks – but look at what fun we’re having!” The singers were accompanied by a live band. For the finals, the local group The Hard Lessons will perform.

The Chronicle also learned that some of the prelim shows have a certain reputation. In the students-only shows, for example, parents and a smattering of other adults are relegated to seats in the back of the auditorium marked off with yellow “Caution” tape. These shows are looser, more fun, a little more (ironically) “adult.” And of the four prelims this year, word is that the best one is Saturday’s students-only show, with the theme “On My iPod.” That was an insight The Chronicle picked up from Farah, an exchange student from Munich who disembarked the No. 15 AATA bus with us on Friday night and was heading to the Pioneer basketball game. She was hoping to catch a ride home with her friend, because the bus doesn’t run that late.

Max and Chavonna sing the duet No Air.

Max Rasmussen and Chavonna Bigham sing the duet "No Air." They are finalists and will be performing on Jan. 17.

The FutureStars finals are expected to be an even higher-energy evening of entertainment. If that’s true, you can expect more audience cell-phone waves (imagine Bic lighters held aloft, but with a blue-screen glow), standing ovations and good-natured heckling. Last year, 1,200 people attended. Because this year the competition includes performers from all four Ann Arbor high schools, attendance will likely be even higher.

If you’re reading this in time for Saturday evening’s shows at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. (students only), tickets are $5 at the Pioneer’s Schreiber Auditorium box office.

The Saturday, Jan. 17 finale starts at 7:30 p.m. in Schreiber Auditorium. Tickets for adults are $12, with students, senior citizens and teachers paying $8. Starting Monday, Jan. 12, you can buy tickets in advance at Morgan & York, 1928 Packard. The store accepts credit card payments – the theater box office does not. More information about this and other shows this season is on the Pioneer Theatre Guild’s website.

Finally, here’s a sampling of the judges’ comments from Friday’s students-only show:

  • “You both sound absolutely sick!”
  • “Your power belts are amazing.”
  • “In years to come, you’ll be paying the rent with those voices.”
  • “You look like a rock star up there.”
  • “I think you’ve got more soul in your pinkie than I’ve got in my entire body.”
  • “Your high notes and your riffs are like candy.”
  • “I can’t wait to buy your album.”
  • “This might be why you weren’t in class today.”
  • “You were super sassy and you had so much attitude.”
  • “That was absolutely tight.”
  • “It’s insane that you’re singing like that.”
  • “People who are 6-foot-4 don’t normally move like that.”

And thanks to Myra Klarman for all the photos you see here.

Robby Eisentrout, a finalist from Friday night students-only show, sang With or Without You.

Robby Eisentrout, a finalist from Friday night's students-only show, sang "With or Without You."

Ashley Park and Sonya Major

Ashley Park and Sonya Major sing "Take Me or Leave Me."

Julius Theophilus

Julius Theophilus gave a break dance performance.

The Rising Stars, an ensemble of underclassmen, performed opening and closing numbers for the Friday students-only show.

The Rising Stars, an ensemble of underclassmen, performed opening and closing numbers for Friday's students-only show.

Molly

Bekah Lauer, Molly Epstein and Maya Bassett-Kennedy listen to judges' comments after singing "Go Ahead."

Credits: FutureStars 2009 was directed by Sadie Yarrington and Amanda Choate, UM dance and musical theatre students. The vocal directors – Desi Oakley and Han Park – are also studying musical theater at UM. The show’s music director is David Perample, a local musician and accompanist for the Pioneer High School Choirs.

A final bit of behind-the-scenes drama: Two of the judges, UM students Etai BenShlomo and Bryan Langlitz, found out during Friday night’s late show that they’d both been cast in UM’s main spring show, “42nd Street.” Langlitz landed the role of the show’s romantic male lead, Billy Lawlor. Both are also former Theatre Guild directors – BenShlomo directed last year’s “Willy Wonka” and “Miss Saigon” productions, and Langlitz served as his assistant director.

]]>
http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/01/10/its-insane-that-youre-singing-like-that/feed/ 2
Behind the Scenes at Pioneer’s ‘Miss Saigon’ http://annarborchronicle.com/2008/11/08/behind-the-scenes-at-pioneers-miss-saigon/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=behind-the-scenes-at-pioneers-miss-saigon http://annarborchronicle.com/2008/11/08/behind-the-scenes-at-pioneers-miss-saigon/#comments Sat, 08 Nov 2008 18:01:40 +0000 Mary Morgan http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=7614 A cast member of Miss Saigon puts on makeup before Friday night dress rehearsal.

Cast members of "Miss Saigon" in the makeup room before Friday night's dress rehearsal. The show opens tonight at 7:30 p.m., with performances Sunday and Nov. 14-16.

A cast member dressed in Army fatigues is doing a mic check. Above him, a cloud of theatrical smoke wafts from the stage into the auditorium. He sings a few lines then says, “Am I good?”

“You’re the best!” someone calls out from the group of students clustered around the orchestra pit, as they laugh and hoot and applaud.

It’s Friday night, the final dress rehearsal for Ann Arbor Pioneer Theatre Guild’s “Miss Saigon,” the world premiere of the popular play’s new school edition. On stage and off, it’s organized chaos – something anyone in theater would recognize as that nerve-flaying period when you can’t imagine how everything will come together, though it always does.

Susan Hurwitz, the show’s producer who works full-time for the guild, takes a break from resolving myriad minor crises to give The Chronicle a backstage tour, and to talk about the complexities of pulling off this kind of production.

“We’re always pushing the envelope,” she says, as a young girl in neon pink fishnet hose skitters by. She describes the show as a traditional love story under very tragic circumstances, but even as adapted for high school, it deals with adult issues: war, prostitution, children born out of wedlock, the impact of an occupying force on a country’s people. So as part of preparing for this performance, there’s been a strong educational component as well. Robin Wax, a retired Pioneer history teacher, created a curriculum for the production, including talks from a Vietnam veteran and a native Vietnamese citizen, a viewing of the documentary “Hearts & Minds,” and more.

Even students in the props crew looked at their work through the lens of learning about another culture. Paula Doering, a consultant hired to supervise the seven students on that crew, says that one of their tasks was to create bundles for fleeing Vietnamese characters. “They learned the sadness of having all your possessions wrapped up in one little bundle,” she said.

Crew members do last-minute work in the backstage paint shop.

Crew members do last-minute work in the backstage paint shop.

But clearly, these kids are also having a lot of fun, even as they take their tasks seriously. About 50 students are in the cast, and another 75 or so are involved in behind-the-scenes work – on props, scenery, costumes, makeup, lights, sound or other jobs.

In the costume shop, a student is mending on one of the four sewing machines in the crowded room, as cast members in various stages of dress wait for attention. In the paint shop, last-minute touch-ups are being made to scenery. Though the power tools stand silent in the scene shop, that’s where the nearly full-sized helicopter was built from wood, foam and plexiglass. It was a technical challenge to design, says Ciara Stella, the show’s scene shop supervisor, but not that difficult to actually build. It even flies – “in the theatrical sense,” she says, laughing.

In a hallway outside the theater, long folding tables are loaded with food: bowls of chips and veggies, boxes of pizza, soda, water, jars of peanut butter and jelly, and a large foil tin of franks and beans. This is the work of parent volunteers with the Pioneer Theatre Guild Booster Club, who provide dinner each night during technical week, the days leading up to the show’s opening.

The club’s main role is fundraising – it costs about $45,000 to put on a show like this. Revenue for the guild’s productions throughout the year comes in large part through fundraising, with a lesser amount from the school district. There’s an annual membership fee of $65 for each student involved, though the guild subsidizes families that can’t pay. Students are also expected to sell at least $100 in ads per year to bring in more revenue – those ads are published in the play’s program.

Pioneer students Tim VanRiper and Ashley Park play the title roles of Chris and Kim in Miss Saigon.

Pioneer students Tim VanRiper and Ashley Park play the title roles of Chris and Kim in "Miss Saigon."

Lesa Huget is president of the booster club – her daughter Hannah is on the sound crew for “Miss Saigon.” “This is really an extraordinary flagship program that the district should be very proud of,” she says. The fact that the guild has been chosen for the world premiere of two school adaptations – “Miss Saigon” and “Roald Dahl’s Willy Wonka,” performed last season – is a testament to the program’s caliber.

One thing that makes it unique is a robust partnership with the University of Michigan. The director of “Miss Saigon,” Etai BenShlomo, is a UM musical theater major, as is the assistant director and choreographer, as well as others who supervise the lighting and sound crews. The involvement of university students provides not only additional manpower but also an informal mentorship for the younger students.

In his director’s notes printed on the back of the play’s program, BenShlomo writes: “The social and political themes inherent in Miss Saigon are reflective of our own turbulent times. I firmly believe in theatre of social relevance and educational value. We are living in a significant time in history – the world is changing, anything is possible. It is important for all of us, but especially young people, to challenge ourselves – to tackle uncomfortable and relevant issues through any medium, be it literature, politics, or in our case, the arts. I hope that, through this challenging musical, our voices ring loud and true.”

It’s not that everything is perfect. Hurwitz bemoans the condition of the theatre’s facilities – there’s no sink in the main makeup room, the electrical system needs upgrading, the auditorium’s carpet is frayed and even in some places removed to expose concrete, and virtually everything could be updated. (Update: Hurwitz contacted The Chronicle today, reporting that later in the rehearsal a circuit overloaded, causing a small electrical fire in one of the backstage outlets. Though they were able to extinguish the fire quickly, it’s a concrete example of the need for upgraded facilities, she said.)

And though Pioneer has been lobbying for years to become a theater magnet school, the district hasn’t agreed to that. However, as Hurwitz pointedly notes, state-of-the-art theater facilities were built as part of the new Skyline High School. And Huget says that the booster club ends up paying for a lot of things that the district should be providing.

But on Friday, those concerns took a back seat to the more immediate challenge of smoothing over final kinks for this production – and there’s a bit of added excitement with news that Superintendent Todd Roberts is expected to attend tonight’s opening. The orchestra, directed by David Perample, has been working for over an hour on some particularly difficult spots in the score, places with tricky tempo changes or where cuing up with the singers has been a little rough. Finally, around 6:30 p.m., BenShlomo says, “OK, listen up, guys – take a break. When we come back in about 7 minutes, we’re gonna run.”

Editor’s note: Performances of Miss Saigon are on Nov. 8, 14 and 15 at 7:30 p.m. and Nov. 9 and 16 at 2 p.m. Tickets cost $12 for adults, $8 for students and seniors. More information is on the Ann Arbor Pioneer Theatre Guild’s website. More photos of “Miss Saigon” by photographer Myra Klarman are on her website.

The makeup crew for Pioneer Theatre Guild's Miss Saigon.

The makeup crew for Pioneer Theatre Guild's "Miss Saigon."

The costume crew for "Miss Saigon."

The costume crew for "Miss Saigon."

]]>
http://annarborchronicle.com/2008/11/08/behind-the-scenes-at-pioneers-miss-saigon/feed/ 1