Ha, thanks for your reassurence. I think it just reminds me of being kinda uncomfortable in high school with our drama teacher who found excuses to have guys shirtless or in their underwear innearly every play we did (and oddly, not the girls...), but of course it's standard to play that scene in Saigon that way.
The productions' not bad actually compared to a lot of high school productions of a difficult show. Just that Engineer and the orchestra...
The thing I don't get is, if the school had the budget to do the Helicopter, etc, why American Dream looks so plain and cheap? Was the budget blown? I don't think you need a car as well, by any means, but a plain backdrop would seem a let down late in the show, after all of that.
You know how Legally Blonde should be defined by energy (to cover up its flaws). This school didn't get the memo. The cast doesn't even try to hide their boredom. Legally Bored
oy that Legally Blonde was painful,... especially the Irish dance section! yet... when Enid "sang"... "get the hell out of her way" i did laugh out loud!
there is this kid on youtube who is TERRIBLE. he's probably like ten years old, and I watch him all the time because he is so bad at singing, its just like watching a comedy show. it's not a "production", but all his songs are from musicals. terrible. his username is gomezaddams42. Here are all his videos
Back in September, RIPLEY retweeted support for a high school production of Next to Normal in the greater New York area. Would love to see how this shakes down.
My son went to Stagedoor Manor for four years. If your parents have money you can go; it doesn't matter if you have talent or not. The shows I've seen have ranged from fantastic to pretty awful each session. Having seen four to five shows each parents' weekend it seems they group the kids by talent, but any given session they have to work with the kids who are there--and if they want to be in a drama or musical--you can't not cast someone just because they aren't talented. I've seen shows with fantastic leads and horrible ensemble members--or just one or two kids who can't act/sing/dance. Some shows have been better than Broadway versions I've seen--others I left after intermission...I will say the Mikado I saw there was more entertaining then the one I saw in NYC. Yes, NYC was technically better, but we had way more fun watching it at Stagedoor.
Also--those shows are put together in less then three weeks. Cut them some slack.
joined:3/1/04
Posted: 8/29/12 at 10:01pm