THEATRE

The Blessing and Burden of Being Adjudicated

The Blessing and Burden of Being Adjudicated

If you stay in community theatre long enough, you’ll eventually sit through an adjudication. Usually with a notebook in your lap, a knot in your stomach, and somebody (likely me) whispering, “Well… here we go.” I have mixed feelings about adjudication, and I suspect I...

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The Danger of Over-Directing

The Danger of Over-Directing

There’s a point in rehearsals — usually a few weeks in — where something quietly goes off the rails, and it doesn’t look like a problem at first. Everything is… working.  The blocking is set. People know where they’re going. Lines are mostly there. The scenes are...

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The Strange Magic of the First Read-Through

The Strange Magic of the First Read-Through

That first read-through.  The thing I secretly love more than opening night. You all know the scene. A semi-circle of mismatched chairs. Someone’s already spilled coffee on their script. Half the cast is meeting for the first time, the other half is pretending...

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The Play That Almost Every Theatre Should Produce Once

The Play That Almost Every Theatre Should Produce Once

Every theatre company has its own bucket list.  The big musicals and the crowd pleasers. Elaborate shows with giant sets, flying rigs, and the orchestra that somehow has to fit into a pit the size of a bathtub. That’s all well and good, of course.  But every...

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Don’t Rehearse the Grief to Death

Don’t Rehearse the Grief to Death

I’m in the middle of directing Rabbit Hole by David Lindsay-Abaire at WCT right now, and I’ve made a decision that might sound counter-intuitive: we’re actually cutting back on some of the rehearsal time we were given. It’s not because we’re behind because we...

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5 Ways Community Theatre Directors Can Give Better Notes

5 Ways Community Theatre Directors Can Give Better Notes

If there’s one thing every community theatre director knows, it’s this: notes are part of the process. But how we give them — when, where, and in what form — matters almost as much as what the notes actually are. A recent article on OnStage Blog by Chris Peterson...

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