Luv Bunnies
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2006
- Messages
- 9,097
Our school's spring musical cast list was just announced and we're having the same drama as we did last year. This is a K-8 school. Kids in 3rd-8th are eligible to participate. Parents pay a $120 enrollment fee, and all rehearsals are held after school. The school hires an outside childrens' arts group. The staff includes a professional choreographer, music director and show director. The sets and costumes are provided by the arts group. They rent a high school theater complete with microphones, lighting, etc. and they charge $10 admission for the shows. It's definitely done on a much larger scale than a cute little school play performed on the cafeteria stage. The kids who participate get a real theater experience.
Now on to the drama and the questions. Some parents feel that the lead roles should be rotated from year-to-year. If their child was in the chorus last year, they expect them to have a lead role this year. They feel that kids who are doing the play for the first time need "pay their dues in the chorus" before getting a lead role. They also feel that every lead role should be double-cast (two actors assigned to the same role, each performing in two of the four shows), regardless of skills or "type." For example, they're doing Annie this year. The lead female roles were all double-cast because so many girls auditioned. The lead male roles were single cast because they just didn't have enough boys to fill them twice. One parent wanted her daughter to have a chance to play Rooster (usually a tall man with a deep voice). The directors decided they had one boy who could pull off Rooster, so he got it for all four shows. Daddy Warbucks is also doing all four shows. They will cast girls in boys roles if they have to, but only if there aren't any boys who fit the roles.
So, should the directors "rotate" the large roles among all of the kids, or should they cast the kids who have the skills for each role (even if the same kids get leads every year)? Should they double-cast every role, regardless of whether the kids fit the roles? Or, should they only double-cast if they have two kids who can do a credible job with the role? This is my son's 4th show, and I've learned to have him meet me at the car after rehearsal rather than standing around and waiting with the other parents. I don't want to get involved in those kinds of discussions. Too much drama!
Now on to the drama and the questions. Some parents feel that the lead roles should be rotated from year-to-year. If their child was in the chorus last year, they expect them to have a lead role this year. They feel that kids who are doing the play for the first time need "pay their dues in the chorus" before getting a lead role. They also feel that every lead role should be double-cast (two actors assigned to the same role, each performing in two of the four shows), regardless of skills or "type." For example, they're doing Annie this year. The lead female roles were all double-cast because so many girls auditioned. The lead male roles were single cast because they just didn't have enough boys to fill them twice. One parent wanted her daughter to have a chance to play Rooster (usually a tall man with a deep voice). The directors decided they had one boy who could pull off Rooster, so he got it for all four shows. Daddy Warbucks is also doing all four shows. They will cast girls in boys roles if they have to, but only if there aren't any boys who fit the roles.
So, should the directors "rotate" the large roles among all of the kids, or should they cast the kids who have the skills for each role (even if the same kids get leads every year)? Should they double-cast every role, regardless of whether the kids fit the roles? Or, should they only double-cast if they have two kids who can do a credible job with the role? This is my son's 4th show, and I've learned to have him meet me at the car after rehearsal rather than standing around and waiting with the other parents. I don't want to get involved in those kinds of discussions. Too much drama!