Our Town

March 9, 2010 by  
Filed under A&E, Theater, Top Stories

Inside the Pres theater, our own thespian community has been hard at work polishing acting and memorizing lines. And few have more to do than the play’s female lead, junior Sophie Wood. As a member of ITS (the International Thespian Society), Wood has done a few minor productions and has been an active member of Speech and Debate. Wood’s event in Speech is DI, or Dramatic Interpretation (basically the acting out of a scene from a play, book, or movie). But this is her first main role in such a big production on the Pres stage. After being encouraged by her friend, junior Jennifer O’Brien, who plays the part of Wood’s mother in the play, Wood decided to try out.

“I suppose it was on a whim,” Wood admits, “but many of my friends are in theatre and love it so I thought I should try as well. I guess sometimes peer pressure can be good after all!” When asked how she felt when she auditioned, Wood laughs and says she was terrified.

“I was so nervous because I’d never really auditioned for anything before– I had to keep asking the people around me what to do next! It was scarier than my rounds in Speech and Debate, because there you get feedback on little sheets of paper. But when you audition in theatre, you put yourself out there for personal rejection.”

In her audition monologue, Wood used a piece from her DI—Rabbit Hole, by David Lindsay Abaire. In the scene, a husband and wife struggle to deal with the loss of their only son, Danny, from a car accident. In her DI, Wood portrays different characters with a change in voice or position.

However, she had no real pick in mind when it came to the characters in Our Town. “I was really open to anything—I thought for certain I would get a small part and I was totally fine with that. I was completely shocked when I found out that I was cast as Emily Webb!” When asked how she gets into character, Wood said that it is fairly easy to portray Emily Webb due to the energy of the rest of the cast, despite the fact that Emily herself is quite different than Wood.

But as any theatre member will tell you, the casting is only the beginning of an arduous but ultimately rewarding process. Rehearsals started in January and progressed from two hours to three and a half hour rehearsals during “hell week,” or the week right before the opening of the show. As an honors student, Sophie has to be careful to balance her lines and her schoolwork. She is thankful for collaborations, saying that they are what enable her to really get most of her work done. Memorizing her lines does not pose too much of a problem, for at rehearsals the cast runs through everything with scripts before they go “off book” so that the actors can get used to the feeling and context of the lines before they are forced to fully memorize them.

Blocking, or the way actors move around the stage, is done in much the same way. When Mr. Houle gives out blocking instructions during rehearsals, Wood makes sure to write them in the margins of her script so that when she’s going over her lines later the blocking will stand out. “It has all been a bit stressful,” Wood says, “but I think it’s definitely worth it.” The most worthwhile part of the whole Pres theatre experience for Wood has been working with the cast of Our Town. “It’s so much fun to work alongside with the people you go to school with in a totally different medium!” Wood says.

In regards to the male cast members, Wood admits that, while it is odd to see male specimens on campus who aren’t teachers, after a while she got used to their presence. After all, much like everyone else, the boys are just teenagers who love theater and who have joined the cast to demonstrate that. But unlike many plays, Our Town offers the cast members little time back stage and out of sight.

“In the show,” Wood says, “we actually have galleries onstage where cast members not performing at the moment sit down. Thus there is not a lot of ‘backstage’ time. Basically, while in the galleries we sit there and remain quiet. When backstage, (for a few seconds before your cue), I usually have quick conversations with the techies who I loveth so!”

When asked if there was anything that she didn’t “loveth” about the theater, Wood laughs. “The yellow seats,” she says. “When you are onstage the yellow of the seats really jumps out at you and kinda cause you to break the fourth wall by staring at the seats. I think that’s the real reason why everyone should come watch the show—if all the seats are full, none of the actors will have to look at the yellow backs of the seats!”

Wood readily admits, however, that this should be only one of the reasons to watch Our Town. She finds the play itself very interesting, as Our Town not only centers on the concept of daily life, but constantly reinforces the fact that the play itself it is nothing more than a pantomime. The lack of anything but the most rudimentary props constantly reminds the audience that what they are seeing is nothing more than actors on a stage, acting, not living, in a town that mimics reality, but is not in itself real.

However, the nerves that actors experience opening night is often all too real. While she admits to having been nervous before the start of the first show, Wood said that once she was performing everything came naturally. “Once you’re on stage and you start doing everything that you’ve rehearsed a thousand times, it’s no longer terrifying,” she said. “It’s when you’re offstage that the nerves come back to you!” Though the actors practice numerous times in the empty theater, it is an entirely different feeling to perform to a full audience. “It’s different than rehearsal.” Wood said. “You need to pause of laughter, especially in times you wouldn’t expect to be funny; that can throw you off sometimes. And everyone performs better—they bring more to the show when there’s an audience. There’s just a whole other vibe coming from the cast, and that pushes everyone involved to do better.” Wood says that one of the most important things about the play is that it “makes you realize that we take everything for granted. We never realize what it is we have till it’s gone. And all of that might seem to be cliché, but it really does ring true.” So go see Our Town before it’s too late! The play runs till March 13th and tickets are selling fast, so go to the pres website and buy yours today.

A ladder as a window and a cupped hand for a glass—minimalistic set pieces to tell the bare bones of an American classic. Our Town, a play by Thornton Wilder, chronicles the life of its two central characters, George Gibbs and Emily Webb, within the confines of a stage and the merit of its actors. With few props and little scenery, the actors are left for themselves to flesh out the story of growing up, falling in love and striving to understand the importance of a life pursued. As the stage managers narrate the story of the children who would grow up to be sweethearts and start a family of their own, they manage to offer subtle glimpses along the way into the lives of the small community nestled in the fictional New England town of Grover’s Corners.

Godspell Wows the Crowds

February 2, 2010 by  
Filed under A&E, News, Theater

This past weekend, Pres students sat in the Valenzuela theater waiting for their teachers to do something they normally wouldn’t do in a classroom—dance, sing, and act.

And did they. Performing Godspell—which was originally produced in 1970 by Stephen Schwartz and John-Michael Tebelak—meant that our already-busy Pres teachers had to commit to weeks of rehearsals to learn songs, choreography and lots of lines. For some teachers, who had never appeared on stage before, simply learning the basics of how to enter and exit the stage were a challenge in themselves.

Mrs. Perryman, for example, “tried very hard not to fall.” But, she said, even if she were to fall and her costume malfunction, she knew that it wouldn’t trouble her. “I was doing this for the right reasons,” she said. “To raise funds for TADA and celebrate the Gospel—there would be no way to fail.”

The production, which ran for two weekends, served as a fundraiser for TADA, the booster group for Presentation’s theater program. According to Jim Houle, performing arts director, the performances raised approximately $15,100.

The musical is structured as a series of parables from the Bible, primarily the Books of Matthew and Luke. Mr. Cozort, who played Jesus Christ, said the challenge for him was how to symbolically portray Jesus since, “I’m not in a robe. I don’t have a beard.”

But he must have done his job well because people have been singing his praises ever since the show closed. “Mr. Cozort has jumped to the top of my ‘Most-amazing-people-I-know list,’” said Mr. Houle. “Of course, his talent was evident to all who witnessed his live performance, but the countless hours of work he did in preparation for the show went unnoticed by the audience, who only saw his confident, relaxed, seemingly effortless portrayal of Jesus.”

Ms. Hetherington, who was in the cast thought Mr. Cozort did a breathtaking performance as Jesus. “Every time we practiced it, I was touched anew—often to the point of tears. Mr. Cozort, I think, did an amazing job of conveying Jesus’ pain and anguish.”

Mr. Buell played John the Baptist and Judas. As Judas, Mr. Buell crucified Jesus, a scene that he called his favorite. He appeared onstage with a red bandana as if he were a motorcyclist. With a bag across his shoulders and an evil smirk across his face, he captured Mr. Cozort from behind. The boxes that were used as a stairway to the cross where Mr. Cozort was crucified symbolized Mt. Calvary and the Stations of the Cross in the Bible.

Dancing and singing with her colorful costume from the 1970s , Mrs. Perryman described her experience as “Amazing. It was exactly like the play. In Tower of Babel, we were all promoting our own idea of how the world should be, but then Jesus came and we all realized that if we didn’t work together, we couldn’t build anything worth having.”

Along with Mr. Buell from the religion department, Ms. Hetherington played a follower of Jesus in Godspell. “This was my first theater experience and it was absolutely marvelous.” Not only did Ms. Hetherington have a spectacular experience, but it helped her understand the Gospel as well. She said, “To listen to and act out this message night after night led me to a much deeper appreciation of what Christianity is all about.”

This play also marked the first time on stage for science teacher Mrs. Rahmig. “I don’t break out in song and dance during biology class very often!” she said. “I struggled to learn all of the dance moves in the songs, but by the time I finally got them down, I was having a great time performing them.” It did, indeed look like the cast was having a splendid time dancing and singing together.

The musical was embedded with inside Pres jokes, current day references and full-hearted acting by the actors and actresses. In one scene, Mr. Cozort and Mr. Buell voice the characters of Star Wars. In an interview after the play, Mr. Cozort admitted with a big smile on his face, that he thought Mr. Houle purposely put in that scene for him.

The choreography of this musical is both comical, yet genius. Of course it took practice to perfect. According to Mr. Buell, “We videotaped Sara [Freitas] doing the choreography and put it on YouTube. And at night, when everyone had left, I’d put it on my projector, move some desks out of the way and memorize the choreography.”

Right after the Star Wars scene, the theater turned into a disco. With an actual disco ball flashing, and teachers dancing, the “Light of the World” dance scene gave light to Jesus as the Savior. According to techie Jocelyn San Luis, junior, “You can’t help but dance to it!”

The teachers’ acting and chemistry onstage definitely had the Presentation-we’re-a-family aura. Ms. Hetherington said, “We came to the play as strangers—most of us—and left as members of a wonderful community.” Mr. Buell and Mr. Cozort brought their friendship backstage, too. San Luis noted their harmony as one of the most memorable moments she had backstage on the set of Godspell. She said, “Mr. Buell and Mr. Cozort’s beautiful offstage and onstage bromance….beautiful.”