Every year at Halloween I always wish I had a fun costume. For years I’ve wanted a full bunny rabbit outfit, but I checked prices and the good ones are around $750 – so I’m going to be a Penguin this year.
I was getting props for an upcoming show and got a little sidetracked….. Watch out ladies, here I come.
One evening an old Cherokee told his grandson about a battle that goes on inside people.
He said, “My son, the battle is between two “wolves” inside us all.
One is Evil. It is anger, envy, jealousy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority, and ego.
The other is Good. It is joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion and faith.”
The grandson thought about it for a minute and then asked his grandfather, “Which wolf wins?”
The old Cherokee simply replied, “The one you feed.”
I went to the Skagit River Shakespeare Festival by Shakespeare Northwest – saw Hamlet on Saturday night and the final performance of Comedy of Errors on Sunday night. So much to take in with these two shows that I could hardly express it all. This is a relatively new Shakespeare troupe that is still blossoming – this is their 5th year and only 4th season running. It promises to be very strong in time. Visit Shakespeare Northwest at http://shakesnw.org.
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Photo – Damond Morris, Artistic Director for Shakespeare Northwest. DAMOND – YOU ROCK!
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So the question of the day is – which one was better – Hamlet or Comedy of Errors? Both were EXCELLENT. Too many variables to address the question properly, but if I were to have a choice to see one of these again with the same players – I would choose Hamlet.
I choose Hamlet because the plot was more compelling to me. To watch the insanity slowly unfold and deepen was intoxicating. Comedy of Errors to me is more like an advanced plot of Three’s Company – fine fare every once in a while. As far as Shakespeare Northwest’s presentation of both – they took a lot more chances with Comedy of Errors which was very fun to watch.
Hamlet was not nearly as deathly serious as I had anticipated. There were several light moments and the actors were excellent in delivering the scenes in a way the riveted the audience and kept us engaged.
For both shows Shakespeare Northwest features many very young actors – many in their early twenties and teens. In each show there were some obviously seasoned Shakesperian actors, so it appears that Shakespeare Northwest is providing fertile soil for new generations of Bard actors to learn the craft from seasoned players.
Ticket prices were $12 which I thought was very fair for the plays. In fact, that’s partly what encouraged me to see both plays and get tickets for friends. Some amateur theatre groups price themselves too high, where their ticket take would have been much higher on the bottom line if they LOWERED their ticket prices. Shakespeare Northwest has the right idea, build a following and encourage as many people as possible to see the plays. I will for sure tell everyone about it, and plan on going next year to all their plays. So there the word begins to spread.
COMEDY OF ERRORS
They set this play in the 1980’s with costumes ala 1980’s Madonna, and interspersing 1980’s New Wave music. There were hilarous references to 60’s hippies and take-offs on the 70’s and 80’s – The play opened with New Wave dance music playing and that theme kept recurring during the show as different players would walk onstage with boom boxes.
The acting was excellent overall – all of the leads were very believable in their roles. Both twins of Antipholus commanded their roles well and the two Dromios were absolutely hilarious. I had not seen this play before or read the director notes before the show – the two Dromio’s looked so much alike, and me not knowing the play was about twins – that I was fooled for the first 15 minutes – totally NOT understanding the plot because I didn’t realized I was seeing two different actors. I wonder how many other people were tricked like me?
A nice surprise was the role of Headsman Officer played by Sean Haahr. I don’t think he had any lines, but had the audience in stitches with the funny diversions he would create. Sometimes scratching his back with the axe, then becoming increasingly bored and depressed when it turns out he will not be able to execute anyone. I wish I had videotape of his role – a great study in how a seemingly trivial part can help propel scenes when executed well (pun intended). HAMLET
Highlight of the show for me was Mike Wallace as the gravedigger. Already a great scene, he delivered it with such spellbinding grace he had us hanging on every word. From costuming, makeup and delivery he was a cut above in my book. When he delivered his lines, I got lost in it and transported back four hundred years. That’s the magic of theatre and he delivered.
I was in awe of the depth of Shakespeare’s writing, in awe to the point of wondering how one man could contain so much wisdom in just one play (and I was watching a version with over an hour cut from it). I was relieved to read Damond Morris’ director’s notes for Hamlet which explained that Hamlet is most likely a collaboration from many sources. Here is what he was to say on it:
HAMLET DIRECTOR’S NOTES
by Damond Morris
Hamlet was never meant to be read, yet it has been translated into as many languages as the Bible. It is the most often quoted piece of literature, memorized by thousands and debated by scholars worldwide.
You may assume that the scripte was written by W. Shakespeare himself, “Every word made true and good”, but you would be mistaken. A group of actors came together and placed the words onto paper from memory years after they were in the play. There is conjecture that a later version of the play was printed from an original “script”, but the main work, all four hours of it, was remembered. If you have ever been on stage take a moment and try to remember your lines from a play you were in two years ago. You may remember ten minutes of the play, perhaps twenty with a fellow actor, but to remember four hours of text is outstanding. (Don’t worry, I have trimmed Hamlet to two hours twenty.)
Picture the scene; you are an actor asked to come to a meeting where you are going to translate your lines from the play of Hamlet. I have a romantic picture in my head of players sitting around with a giant pint at a pub recounting the words to the one person at the table who can read and write. The actors remembering the lines have been in many plays. Who is to say that all of the language they are remembering was actually penned by the Bard? It could have been remembered from another play and inserted into the text. The fact is that one of the most hotly debated texts in the history of the English language was remembered by actors who more than likely were illiterate.
Photo – Damond Morris (Artistic Director for Shakespeare Northwest)
ARTISTIC STAFF
Shakespeare Northwest 2006
Construction Foreman: Howie, Rob Slater, Damond Morris, Tanner Musick-Slater, John Gonzales
Artistic Director – Damond Morris
Stage Manger: Comedy of Errors – Molly Weiland
Stage Manger: Comedy of Errors – Ryn Bishop
Stage Manger: Hamlet – Dinah Steveni
Box Office Manger – Mairi Andrus
Properties Manager – Clare Tatarsky
Costume Design: Comedy of Errors – Marjo Henning
Costume Design: Hamlet – Maura Marlin
Master Electrician – Allysa Thompson
Electrician – Mike Miller
Lighting Designer – Marc King
Lighting Guru – Amy Chisman
Light board operator – Randi Kivett
Sound Technician – Adam Lynn
Sound Design – Jerry Fortier
Videographer – Zach Hammer
Head Usher – Grady Bonner
Security – Tanner Musick-Slatter
. COMEDY OF ERRORS
ARTISTIC STAFF
Director – Rob Slater
Assistant Director – Trey Hatch
Dance Instructor – Dan Claverie
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
Dromio of Syracruse – Mike Tilton
Antipholus of Syracruse – Cail Musck-Slater
Dromio of Ephesus – Caleb Joslin
Antipholus of Ephesus – James Brown
Adriana – Sarah Mickelson
Luciana – Emilia Zuber
Aegeon – John Gonzales
Aemillia/Balthazar – Tonja Myers Slater
Pinch/Taylor – Mike Wallace
Angelo/Officer – Marin Trautman
Solinus – David Cox
Merchant/Luce – Courtney Harmer
Townsfolk – Ian Slater
Galore/Headsman – Sean Haahr
Drummer/Nun – Blakelee Clay-McBee
Nuns/Make-up/Servant – Karina Grech
Pinch’s Assistant – Kristin Bruce
Courtezan – Carolyn (Travis) Hatch
Merchant – Lydia Randall
Camera Folk/Servant – Emma Lynn
Townswolk/Nun – Sheridan Musick-Slater
. HAMLET
ARTISTIC STAFF
Director – Damond Morris
Vocal Coach – Andy Friedlander
Fight Choreography and Costume Assitant – Mike Marlin
Consultant, Music – Stoney Bird
Puppet Construction – Dave Cochrain, Carolyn (Travis) Hatch
Costume Designer – Maura Marlin
Hair and Make-up – Mary Bingham
Costume Crew – Michelle Beach, Lindsey Bowen, Mae Louise Dopps, Maura Marlin and Miriam Smith
DRAMATIS PERSONAE – HAMLET
Bernardo/Captain/Dane – Charlie Jensen
Lucianus/Sailor/Priest/Voltemand – Kelsey Milligan
Player Queen/Dane/Osric – Carolyn (Travis) Hatch
Horatio – Jalyn Green
Gertrude – Merrilyn Jones
Gravedigger – Mike Wallace
Fortinbras – Nate Young
Ophelia – Rebecca Cox
Dane/Cornelius – Erin Hemmenway
Laertes – Emmett Brost
Hamlet – Steve Sherman
Claudius – Lucas Naylor
Polonius – David Cox
Marcellus – Alex Mutegeki
Rozencrantz – Sean Haahr
Guildenstern – Trey Hatch
2006 Skagit River Shakespeare Festival by Shakespeare Northwest
STU BABY IN THE HOUSE! I have to let you know about my friend Stuart Hunt. I met him while working on Elton John’s AIDA. Being new in town there was a lot of info I needed and he totally hooked me up. He’s one of the “good guys”. Not only did he hook me up, but spent a considerable amount of time detailing his approach to orchestra scores, choral conducting and mindset on preparing music for performance.
(Photo – at Intermission where Stuart was conducting Guys and Dolls – Stuart (left) and Conrad (right).
So let me tell you what I like most about Stuart. Stuart DEALS. What’s that? People that “deal” are the people that jump right in and start getting things done, they don’t mess around. I went to see Jacques Brel at the Lincoln Theatre, Stuart saw me and grabbed me by the arm to give me a tour of the whole backstage area and introduced me to all the players. Then before the show and at intermission brought up all the little nuances and music approaches to listen for. It was intense. Stuart is intense. I like that.
I had told him I needed some assistance on preparing a score. Most people would have given a couple tips over the phone. Not Stuart – he cleared a day for me, had me come over to his house and sat down with me in person to go over the score in detail. What kind of man is this? I thought…that would take this time. Stuart has a passion for music that is totally absorbing, that is our common bond. So if he has time he will help where he can. This should be the NORM where people share their experience like this. Sadly it is not. Stuart is a priceless treasure to the arts in Skagit County, in my very not so humble opinion.
We also share a religious conviction that commands our work to be the best it can be. That is a strong bond and he has been very open with me about his personal testimony, which aside from music is most moving by itself.
Stuart Hunt has been an incredible inspiration and resource to me. His insight particularly into choral music is mind blowing. So a big thumbs up to Stu Baby for being one of the “good guys”, and I highly recommend him for any choral or conducting work.
STUART HUNT – BIO
Stuart Hunt has an Associate of Arts degree from Lower Columbia College, and a Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Music from the University of Washington, studing conducting under Prof. Rodney Eichenberger. He was Director of Choral activities in Quincy, WA for eighteen years and was Choral Conductor at Marysville-Pilchuck for twelve years. Mr. Hunt was the Associate Conductor of the Seattle Girl’s Choirs from 1990-2003. Choirs under his direction have performed 7 concert tours of the US West and East coasts, 5 concert tour of British Columbia, and 2 5-nation concert tours of Central Europe-with second and third prizes in the Vienna Youth and International Festival. In 2000 Seattle Girl’s Choir Cantamus, under his direction, placed 2nd in the International Kathaumixw, the highest place of any choir in Norht America of 42 choirs from 25 nations.
For two years, he was a staff arranger for Warner Bros. Music, arranging the Supersound series for string orchestra. His choral compositions are published by Hinshaw Music. He is past president of the Sno-King music educators and served 5 years as Pacific Northwest Repertoire and Standards Men’s Choir Chair for the American Choral Directors Association.
Since 2004, he has been a board member of the Skagit Performing Arts Council and conducts or voice coaches an average of 3 musicals per year – most recently: Oklahoma, Annie, Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris, The Magic Flute, Oliver, The Sound of Music, Wonderful Life, Elton John’s AIDA and Guys and Dolls. Active as an adjudicator, lecturer, clinician, independent conductor, and arts curriculum consultant for school districts, Mr. Hunt has a lovely wife, 4 children and is the founder of the Northern Sound Children’s Choirs and conductor of the Adoria Treble Choir.
I went to see Guys and Dolls yesterday at the Stanwood Performing Arts Center presented by the Northwest Musical Theatre Company. It was a great production with a lot of talented actors and musicians. Standouts to me were TJ Thaddeus Burzynski (Nicely Nicely Johnson) and Jerome Chandler (Big Julie). All of the parts were well played.
The sound was excellent – I could hear 99% of the lines and the vocals always projected over the pit musicians. The costumes were fun, especially the colorful gangster suits. The set was minimal, but worked very well for this production. Audience response was good and people were bebopping along at the end to the orchestra exit music.
There were several people in the production I have worked with before or traded contacts with, so it felt a little like family to me. Kyle Blevins does excellent sound, Stuart Hunt is always a pleasure to see conduct, Doug Morasch (Saxes) gave me several players for my last show, Clarence Holden I worked with in AIDA, Amanda Curtis also from AIDA, Sam Buchanon I remember from FAME (He was OUSTANDING!), Jerome Chandler I saw for the first time in Jacque Brel (He has charisma up the ying yang, very strong presence). So hats off to current and future friends, a show well done!
CAST
(In order of appearance)
Nicely Nicely Johnson – TJ Thaddeus Burzynski
Benny Southstreet – Steve Feris
Rusty Charlie – Shaman Winn
Agatha – Amanda Curtis
Martha – Ksenia Popova
Calvin – Mason Eger
Arvide Abernathy – Clarence Holden
Sarah Brown – Tiffany Jewell
Harry the Horse – Bob Nydegger
LT Brannigan – Jim Ruth
Nathan Detroit – Mark Abel
Angie the Ox – Jerry Vander Veen
Scranton Slim – Sam Buchanan
Miss Adelaide – Melissa MacNeal
Sky Masterson – Nathan Lacy
Joey Biltmore – Bob Nydegger
Announcer – Shaman Winn
Hot Box Dancer – Skye Dahlstrom
Hot Box Dancer – Erin Grandy
Hot Box Dancer – Heather Bartle
Hot Box Dancer – Lorna Faxon
Mimi – Erin Grandy/Skye Dahlstrom
General Matilda B Cartwright – Laurie Miller
Big Julie – Jerome Chandler
Liver Lips Louie / Drunk – Don McPherson
ORCHESTRA
Musical Director/Conductor – Stuart Hunt
Trumpet – Larry Laverne
Trumpet – Bill Oakes
Saxes – Doug Morasch
Synthesizer – Josh Zimmerman
Bass – Martin Rush
Trombone – Erike Hunter
Percussion – Todd Parks
GUYS AND DOLLS
Music and Lyrics by Frank Loesser
Book by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows
Directed by Robert MacNeal
Music Director and Conductor – Stuart Hunt
Executive Producer – Melissa MacNeal
Choreography by Skye Dahlstrom
PRODUCTION TEAM
Artistic Director – Robert MacNeal
Executive Producer – Melissa MacNeal
Music Director – Stuart Hunt
Choreographer – Skye Dahlstrom
Technical Director – Bob Nydegger
Stage Manager – Amy Lazert
Lighting Design – Brent Stainer
Sound Design – Kyle Blevins, Robert Campbell
Scenic Designer – Bev Schatz
Scenice Design Coordinator – Craig Wollam
Property Master – Bob Nydegger
Property Assitants – Anya Petrick and Kara Composano
Costume Mistress – Brenda Scamehorn
Backstage Crew – Ashley Anderson, Audry Ugrin, Anya Petrick and Kara Composano
Rehearsal Pianist – Dorothy Herivel and Lauren Lippens
Graphic Design for Poster and Postcard – Walking Cat Design
Website Manager – Sydney Paige
Advertising – Doug McLaughlin and Melissa MacNeal
Publicity – Katie Garner and Anna Ronning
The Stanwood Performing Arts Center
August 4-20, 2006
The Kirkland Performance Center
August 24-27, 2006
This last week I hauled the recording studio up to Mount Vernon, WA – More of just a personal post and not terribly exciting so just move along folks. For me it’s very exciting, it means I can open up the studio again if I want. I’ve done some soundtrack work this year, but not nearly as much as I’m accustomed to. It’s been a terrible disadvantage not having all my toys with me. So finally my toys and I are reunited. The former studio was called Road Records – visit the Road Records website. The studio had three different locations over 16 years and started with a keyboard and a little four track recorder. I produced thousands of tracks at Road Records and hundreds of band demos , solo artist albums and soundtracks.
The night before I left I had the honor of having dinner with three of my good friends from the California High Desert – Karen Etheridge, Fred Dearborn and Carlotta Diggs. I’ve worked for years with both Karen and Carlotta doing gigs and recording projects. Was really great to see them and get caught up on what’s happening down in the High Desert. Thanks for being true friends!
Night before I left, California High Desert.
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Joshua Tree, Victorville, CA.
A mean looking Uhaul, don’t mess with me.
I had the coolest Uhaul – technocolor rocks. Sure was glad I didn’t get the one with the big spider, that freaks me out.
Went up the Interstate 5 and first major landmark passing by is Six Flags Magic Mountain.
O’Brien was my favorite rest stop. The I-5 drive is SO boring, that you really look forward to a nice rest stop.
I was behind this ZapWorld dot com trailer for hours in a traffic jam. Cars look really cute.
I got out to take a picture of this bus and a lady came running out with a basket that said “Picture Donations”. I told her I’d just stop taking pictures. What a scam.
In Oregon they have to pump the gas for you. I keep forgetting that.
Ever notice that old broken down barns always look cool? Why is that?
Ok, I’ve bonded with nature now. Let’s move on…
I’m starting to be in a better mood now that I’m seeing some green. When you drive up the I-5 from Palmdale / Lancaster it’s HOURS upon hours of dirt….so green is nice.
Proof that sometimes a traffic jam is actually caused by a real working construction worker.
Ahhhh……Green….. getting close to home. What a beautiful site.
Recently ran auditions for a musical and thought it might be useful to post some tips. I am a music director, and we were auditioning for a Broadway style musical – so what I look for may be different than what other people look for in other situations.
IF YOU WANT A SPECIFIC PART – DO YOUR HOMEWORK
You can tell who’s done their homework and who wants a specific part. DO NOT sing a song from the musical you are auditioning for. It comes across pushy – let the directors use their imagination, or THINK they are using their imagination. Gently lead them to the realization – “AHA, this person would be PERFECT for this part” – when that was your intention the whole time. Do this by auditioning with a song that’s similiar in style to the part you want in the current production. Example: If the part is for Mary Magdalene in Jesus Christ Superstar, then sing a ballad similiar to “I Don’t Know How To Love Him”. If you’re trying out for Judas, then do a rock power piece in a high register. This process takes a bit of work, but it’s what will give you the edge if you truly want a specific part. It will also show the directors that you are serious about learning a part and will be willing to put in the time. If you are auditioning for the part of Annie in the musical “Annie” – do not sing the song “Tomorrow”, but instead sing something that will let you project the same brassy tone as the song “Tomorrow”.
MONOLOGUE
I am a music director – so when listening to the artist’s monologue I’m just looking primarily for projection and enunciation first, then for three dimensional acting. I want to hear a nice full voice and be able to understand every single word. Also looking for acting that is not flat or one dimensional. I’m usually writing notes during the monologue and just listening to the consonants and vowels, and will peek up every now and then just to see what the acting looks like. From my viewpoint – the directors will work on the acting, but I need a certain starting point to bring the vocals and music full circle. I have absolutely no interest in the content, but I did notice that people that did Shakespeare caught my ear – I think it’s because they could fully enunciate with a full voice, and that’s what I’m looking for.
ON THE SPOT INSTRUCTIONS
If one of the directors ask you to do something in auditions – like a certain dance movement, sing part of a song, etc. – make sure you ask anything you need to know to do it – and then jump right on it. When I ask for a certain song I may be looking for a variety of things: Pitch, feel for a certain music style, on the spot interpretation or just how well someone can follow quick instructions. This is NOT the time to be shy. If you’re asked to do something additional in an audition – it means the director is looking at you for a specific part, or checking as a possible cut. Well, that’s what I’m doing – so that little bit could be what gets you a callback or not. NOTE: If you are asked to do something specific, that short 15 seconds or so is probably the most important part of the audition – you are being considered for something. This would be a very bad time to roll your eyes like “OMG why would they ask me to do that, it’s so stupid”.
DANCE LESSONS
Anyone serious about theatre could use a little bit of dance lessons. Recently we had someone we were considering for a lead, but they had no movement skills. With one run of ballet lessons I would guess they could improve their movement and get lead roles. People that have had no dance instruction at all can really stick out at an audition, give yourself the edge and take a class if you haven’t already.
FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS
Listen very carefully during auditions – directors do not want leads that do not quickly absorb instructions. Even if it seems silly, just do it.
DAVE SAYS
My friend Dave says DO NOT SING THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER IN AUDITIONS! Barely anybody sings it well, the range is hideous and all you do is make people cringe for the last note……which you probably won’t get to anyway during auditions.
That’s all I have to add right now and I hope that helps people preparing for auditions.
The Mount Vernon Presbyterian Choir says a big “how do”! Usually the choir breaks for summer, but we’ve been having so much fun that we’ve continued through the summer. Our choir is smaller in the summer, but not a bit less fun. On this Sunday we sang “God So Loved the World” by John Stainer. This was a new piece to my ears, but one the choir was very familiar with.
I received an email later after the service saying how “clean and crisp” the choir sounded. I couldn’t agree more. The choir always sounds excellent, but on some occasions they really outdo themselves, and the John Stainer piece was one of those times. For choir directors that haven’t heard the piece, I highly recommend checking out his arrangement. It has beautiful layers, lets all SATB parts shine and the words are a perfect fit to the music. The words are from John 3:16
We have two choirs at Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church. The “Chancel Choir” is the one pictured here; they cover all the classical repertoire and songs with four part harmonies. They also learn the parts for the hymns to enhance the congregational singing. A capella singing is also one of their strong points.
Our other choir is called “Glorify”, which does primarily contemporary praise music. Glorify music is usually unison to accompany the congregation in worship music, with some harmonies.
Or another way I like to think of the two groups is this: The Chancel Choir sings music the congregation listens to, and Glorify sings music along with the congregation.