Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Bryn’s Blogging It Up
This post comes from the witty Bryn Harris. Having completed the Open Dream season, Bryn is now in the process of setting up her life in Washington, DC.
I will remember
One Take Thompson
“Don’t forget your British Accent”
Josh’s step ball-change
The colorful silk fabrics that look like “Dragons”
All the Children’s faces and hilarious questions
Mr. Frank Casstevens
JPL
Rebecca’s blue hat
Marina Del Ray
The beautiful Pacific Ocean immediately followed by hell in an airport.
Ago/Ame
Abeona’s Beat Battle
The Kung Fu Challenge
Peter’s Sense of Humor, no I mean his $2000 bottle of wine ☺
Ian’s BOOMBA
Brandon banging on that effing BOOM DRUM
“Shep”, “No Ship”, “At’s wooh ah sed Shep”, “No SHhhhhhiiiiiihhhhhPP!!”
Alliteration
Bob the Robot
Haydee’s Demeter (it’s all about the hair)
“Get on my banana boat”
Mr. S
Many more unmentionables…
Helping Stevie Nix with her wings before the greatest show on earth
“We’re Fashionistas baby, we just off the bloody jet from London.”
It was definitely harder than I thought to…
A. Awake before daylight
B. Believe a word that came out of Peter’s mouth
C. Create engaging and multi-intelligence exercises
D. Describe how amazing JPL was
E. Eat before I fell asleep for the night by 4:00pm
F. Fight with a staircase running through half the stage
G. Grow deeper rather than expand on choices
H. Hold onto the integrity of the show with screaming kids
I. Inform kids how to create their own informances
J. Jam all the curriculum points into the residencies
K. Keep the show fresh every performance
L. Love little kids after they cough in your mouth
M. Make Breakfast before leaving for work
N. Not cuss or say anything vulgar in front of kids
O. Organize everyone to want to eat at the same restaurant
P. Put on wet clothes the second day
Q. Quarterstaff fight with bending and broken fake bamboo stix
R. Repeat the performance three times in a row
S. Shut the Van door after Peter ran it over with the Ryder truck
T. Tell the difference between little boys and girls in 3rd grade
U. Undo actions after they are taken
V. Visualize happiness sitting in LAX for 4 hours
W. Wave the fabric without kids grabbing hold of the end
X. Xerox the ODE logo on colored paper
Y. Yell over that loud Boom Drum
Z. Zip up Abeona’s unitard
I continue to believe in the arts having verifiable evidence in teaching people how to learn faster and deeper. This experience has confirmed for me how arts can not only be integrated into the curriculum despite the budget, but can in fact help deepen the learning of other fields such as science and math. I look forward to continue my study and appreciate the verifiable data we got from the Benton Heights residency.
I’m moving to D.C. because Josh and Brian talked it up so much and because I met Jon Odom, my soul mate.
As a performer I went into the work with absolute commitment and love for the project, I came out of it only slightly tainted, so that’s a good thing. I don’t know if I would want to perform children’s theater for the rest of my life, but there is something very simple and truthful about the work that makes it easy to go out there everyday and perform. I am really proud of us as a cast because we never once let the commitment drop, even if the show was a little off, we were in the world. There were no pranks or inside jokes that were meant only for us. We really performed every time for the kids and that is why they got so much out of it.
I really enjoyed the story that we were presenting. It focused on lessons in science, merging with art, which is a small important bridge in the world today, and anytime stories are able to encompass both I want to see and be a part of them. The dialogues these performances created with students from all fields of interest can be so valuable for their education, and the statistics helped get us that much closer to proving that the arts can be used for more than entertainment. Working with visual arts, music, dance, drama, and a great variety of materials and manipulatives helped make abstract ideas more easily understandable.
The best part of this whole experience was the kids. The residencies were where I learned the most and was challenged the most everyday. These specific age groups, 2-5th graders were remarkable in how fast they learned and their complete willingness to jump into new and engaging ways of learning. The teachers seemed to really find value in the work and our work sparked them to try new plans in their classroom. The kids as an audience were amazing because they were absolutely honest. If they didn’t like you they expressed it, and I learned so much about my craft as an actor because I was literally able to guide how the ship moved forward.
Labels:
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Wednesday, November 10, 2010
CALIFORNIA!!!!!
Early Sunday morning Open Dream Ensemble made our way to the Charlotte airport and boarded a plane to Los Angeles. From those first hours on the west coast to six performances into this week, we have been having a wonderful time!
So far we have enjoyed an amazing tour of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a standing-room only performance in their venue, and five in-school performances in Tarzana, LA, and Santa Ana. Amazing audiences and schools -- we thank all of them for their interest and hospitality. And extend a hearty thanks to all the wonderful people at JPL who took time from their busy schedules to give us a mighty tour!
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Benton Heights week 1 and 2
This post come from the helpful and multi-capable Sonny Enseln. A first-year Open Dream member, Sonny comes to our group with loads of orchestral and chamber music experience.
Sonny is pictured here working in a Benton Heights classroom. Photo is by Drew Davis, UNCSA dance grad turned photographer.
Week number one of our longest residency this season is now over, and it's been quite an experience. Four classes a day, the first "informances" that we've had to work on this season, two performances of the show, and the great hospitality of Mr. Casstevens. The kids have been wonderful, and the teachers very supportive, it's nice to see that the adults are willing to dive in and be active with the students. We've been covering a lot of material and discovering how different classes have different fortes to try to build off of. The informances on Friday were a huge example of that, and it's great to see that much creativity coming to the stage.
I am actually late with this entry, so we actually have a substantial chunk of week two under are belts, and it continues to surge forward. Monday we met our new thrid grade classes and continued on with fourth and fifth, Tuesday we did workshops for teachers and then charged back to Winston-Salem to fulfill our civic duty (hope you all got out and voted as well) then had dinner with the Casstevens family (thank you so much for the great food and friendship), then back in the fray of teaching AND our first performance in over a week on Wednesday. Boy howdy, doesn't time fly when you're busy?
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Upcoming California Performance
Open Dream will be having its first California performance this Monday. The details are below - hope to see some of our CA friends there!
Open Dream Ensemble performs Peril on the Red Planet
Monday, November 8, 2010
4:00 p.m.
Free admission
von Kármán Auditorium
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
California Institute of Technology
4800 Oak Grove Drive
Pasadena, California 91109-8099
RSVP to lyndal@kenanarts.org by Friday, November 5.
Open Dream Ensemble is a professional outreach program of the University of North Carolina School of the Arts and is comprised of professional artists who trained in dance, drama, and music at UNCSA. Peril on the Red Planet, an original play written by UNCSA Alumna Mollye Maxner with Shona Simpson, is set in the future and tells the story of 13-year-old Diana as she works to end famine on Mars. For more information about the production and to read about the 2010 cast members, visit www.opendreamensemble.com.
The Imagine Mars Project, which is sponsored by NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab, named Open Dream Ensemble as one of its four principal partners in 2009. Their support and collaboration helped make it possible to present Peril on the Red Planet. We hope you can join us!
Open Dream Ensemble performs Peril on the Red Planet
Monday, November 8, 2010
4:00 p.m.
Free admission
von Kármán Auditorium
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
California Institute of Technology
4800 Oak Grove Drive
Pasadena, California 91109-8099
RSVP to lyndal@kenanarts.org by Friday, November 5.
Open Dream Ensemble is a professional outreach program of the University of North Carolina School of the Arts and is comprised of professional artists who trained in dance, drama, and music at UNCSA. Peril on the Red Planet, an original play written by UNCSA Alumna Mollye Maxner with Shona Simpson, is set in the future and tells the story of 13-year-old Diana as she works to end famine on Mars. For more information about the production and to read about the 2010 cast members, visit www.opendreamensemble.com.
The Imagine Mars Project, which is sponsored by NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab, named Open Dream Ensemble as one of its four principal partners in 2009. Their support and collaboration helped make it possible to present Peril on the Red Planet. We hope you can join us!
Monday, November 1, 2010
Fun Times at Benton Heights
This post is from the lovely dancing robot-lady, Julianne Harper.
So...we just finished up our wonderful first week at Benton Heights Elementary! Ian & I are working with Ms. Norman's fourth grade class, Ms. Lewis' fifth grade class, Ms. Foster's fourth grade class, and I worked with Peter and Brandon in Ms. Hoover's third grade class. I want to take a moment to give all of our students a HUGE round of applause! (clap,clap,clap,clap,clap,CLAP:0)
The week was so much fun because of our students; they are all so creative, well mannered, bright, and enthusiastic. Not only did they already have a fairly comprehensive grasp on the curriculum we were covering, but every second of class time was filled with creative investigation. As as result, so many discoveries were made as well as deeper understandings of subjects that the students were not as familiar with. And bottom line...we had a lot of FUN!
Our third grade classes were able to share with each other what they had been working on during the week. We all gathered into the school's auditorium, and the kids were able to see what performing on a real stage is like. Ms. Hoover's class presented commercials that they had made up from scratch to sell soil, and let me tell you-I was ready to buy some soil!
I look forward to this week continuing with our fourth and fifth grade classes because they will have a chance to perform for each other just like the third grade. I can't wait to see what surprises each class has in store!
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