The Most Important Play Performance EVER
Theater is important.
I have always said that. It has become more apparent with the pandemic
when there could be no theater. Theater is vital to our lives.
Theater is vital to our well-being. Never was that more obvious to me
than last night. But first let me digress...
Back in the last century (the
1980s if you must know), I got involved in my high school theater group in my
sophomore year as a member of the chorus of "Mame." I
was hooked. I was involved in most every production thereafter. In college
I minored in drama (I really should have double majored, but...) I was
involved on stage and off. For good and bad, theater shaped my life.
I wanted my son to be involved
in theater when he was in the middle school, but he wasn't interested.
However he did attend several week long summer theater camps where within 4-1/2
days kids from 4 up would learn a "show" and then perform it on
Friday afternoons. Were the shows perfect? No. Were they
good? Not always, but it was less about the show and more about the
learning and the experience.
When he got to high school, I
"forced" him to be part of the drama club. It helped that he
had drama as one of his electives. (Which was actually a backup elective;
he had wanted an art class, but didn't get it until his sophomore year.)
He already knew the teacher/director. He auditioned for "Comedy of
Errors." He got called back (in fairness so did everyone else who
auditioned). And during lunch period in the fall of 2019 he called me to
say that he had gotten a small part. The only male freshman to do
so. (Of course he was the only male freshman who auditioned.) The
play was good; the experience was great. It exposed him to so many
different kids. Many who became good friends.
There was no question that he
would audition for the spring musical. Again, he got a small part
(non-speaking). Again it was a great experience. The show closed on
Saturday night and on Monday, the district announced they were shutting
down for 2 weeks due to a thing called "Covid-19." The school
didn't reopen until November of 2020; and even then it was in a strange thing
called "hybrid."
High School Theater didn't stop
because of the pandemic. It adapted and evolved. The spring
2020 one acts were recorded on Zoom. The fall 2020 production was a radio
drama where parts were recorded from home and then pieced together; teaching
students all about audio production.
There WAS a spring musical in
2021. It was not a traditional musical; instead it was a retrospective of
Broadway through the ages. It was held at an outdoor venue in late May
(when it shouldn't have been below forty degrees at night, but it was).
Students rehearsed outdoors. Students rehearsed masked. When they
performed, they were unmasked, but stayed distant from each other and the
audience. They competed with the honking of Canadian geese and planes
overhead. It was theater. It was great. It was different.
This fall, a production of
"Too Much Light Makes The Baby Go Blind (30 plays in 60 minutes)" was
planned. This crazy, "neo-futuristic" production would include
audience participation and no performance would be exactly the same, as the
order in which the plays were to be performed would change based on audience
requests. It was chosen because it COULD be done on line if need
be. We prayed that it wouldn't.
Students rehearsed masked in
the auditorium. Working together on a stage where they had not officially
been since March of 2020. By the time the show opened last night, cast
members were allowed to be unmasked on stage, but offstage (and they did come
off stage) they put them back on. Audience members were masked at all
times.
From the second the cast took
the stage, excitement filled the room. You have never seen such exhilaration.
It radiated out from the cast and exploded into an appreciative audience.
When the show ended (with 2 minutes and 12 seconds to spare according to the
digital timer on the stage), the cast erupted into cheers; they had done
it. They had succeeded in giving a performance like no other. They
had returned to the stage. They had returned home. It was a moment
of complete jubilation.
I am no photographer, but I took photos as the cast took their bows. I have cropped out everyone else in this photo except for my son. His expression says it all to me.
This was the most important
play performance ever; for him, for his fellow cast members, for the crew, and
for every member of the audience. We are alive. We laugh. We
are filled with emotion. Theater gives this all to us and so much more.
The journey may not be
completely over, but we are home. We are home.
Comments
Post a Comment