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New Work In Progress: Creep

This month, we chat with Terry Martin from WaterTower Theatre (WTT) in Addison, TX about their upcoming premiere of the new musical, Creep.
Creep is an original musical with book, music and lyrics by local writer/actor Donald Fowler. It is a musical mystery/thriller set during the time of the mythic Jack the Ripper murders. While completely fictional, the story line weaves in some of the factual things known about the famous murders. The narrative follows a mother, her beautiful young daughter and the mysterious man who suddenly comes into their lives. When savage and puzzling murders begin to take place in and around the Whitehall section of London, anyone and everyone seems capable of murder. With a cast of 18 and an orchestra of 10, the show will be one of the largest WTT had produced in its history.

How did Creep find its way to WaterTower?
The writer Donald Fowler, has been well known to WTT audiences as an actor on our stages almost since our beginning. In 2010, the first draft of the show was presented as a reading at our annual Out of the Loop Fringe Festival. I directed that reading, and it was well-received and generated quite a bit of buzz locally. Based on feedback from that reading, the writer continued to work on Creepand Uptown Players (another local company) did a full staged workshop in 2013. I saw that workshop and began talks with Mr. Fowler about a full realized production at WTT. In order to take it to the next level, in November 2014, I hired Kate Galvin to direct the production and to work with Fowler on refining and reshaping some key elements. Kate has great experience with new musical development and her insight and guidance has been invaluable over the last few months as we move toward the opening of Creep.

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Festival Show Update: Bernice Bobs Her Hair

This month, we check in with Adam Gwon and Julia Jordan as they prepare their 2011 Festival Show Bernice Bobs Her Hair for its premiere production at Lyric Theatre of Oklahoma this Fall.

 
In this new delightful dancing musical, small town socially awkward Bernice visits her popular cousin in the big city and finds herself making changes to fit in with her cousin and the popular crowd. Testing the limits of society, free-spirited Bernice bobs her hair, becoming a social revolutionary in the roaring 20’s.
 
It has been four years since we presented Bernice Bobs Her Hair in the Festival, but do you remember what the reception for the show was like at the Festival?
We remember a great reception, and how much Kate Wetherhead made everyone laugh! We got several offers immediately after the festival, and for a variety of reasons we can’t even remember, none of them worked out at the time. A lot of colleges were interested, but we felt strongly that we wanted to solidify the show with a professional production before releasing it out into the world. So we waited patiently for the right opportunity to come along.
 
Both of you have been quite busy with other projects over the past few years. What work have you done on Bernice?
When we found out that Lyric Theatre would be doing the premiere, it’d been awhile since we’d revisited the script, and at almost the exact same moment, we got an email from Bruce Goodrich at CSU Fullerton, who’d seen the show at NAMT and was checking in to see if Bernice had become available. It was perfect timing, so we did a reading with them and identified all the rewrites we wanted to do before going into rehearsal for the production. We also have a new 11 o’clock number for Bernice, which we wrote in two airport hotel bars after getting stuck on our way home from auditions in Oklahoma City!

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Members in the News: Baldwin Wallace Grad Makes Broadway History

Kyle Jean-Baptiste, a recent graduate of NAMT academic member Baldwin Wallace University Conservatory of Music, made history July 23 when he went on in the role of Jean Valjean in the Broadway production of Les Misérables, becoming both the youngest actor and the first African American to play the role on Broadway, according to Playbill.com.

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Watch Rehearsal of Triangle

Check out video of the sitzprobe for TheatreWorks Silicon Valley’s world premiere production of Triangle (Festival 2012).

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Member in the News: Segal Centre Records Cast Album

Playbill reports that NAMT member Segal Centre for Performing Arts recorded their production of The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, with a little-known score by Alan Menken (Festival 2003, The Ballad of Little Pinks).

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 In June, we chatted with Kevin Moore, Producing Artistic Director of The Human Race Theatre Co. in Dayton, Ohio about their upcoming Festival of New Works (August 7 & 8) and how it has changed over the years.

The Human Race Theatre Company’s commitment to the creation of new plays and musicals takes center stage this summer with its Festival of New Works. We’ve selected 5 works in development—3 plays and 2 musicals—to present as staged and table readings for this exciting summer event. The productions perform in our 60-seat Caryl D. Philips Creativity Center and at The Loft Theatre over the course of the two-day festival, the culmination of a two-week-long workshop process in which writers have the chance to further develop their scripts with the help of professional directors and actors, then see them performed on stage. 

The Human Race Theatre Co. has been developing new musicals for years.  How did the Festival of New Works come about and how does it fit in to your mission? 
We started in 2000 with three workshops scattered throughout our season- plugging them in wherever we had time.  And we did that for 7 years.  But it became increasingly difficult overlapping with our regular productions.  So we shifted to a summer Festival because we traditionally did not produce in the summer and we now would have no competition for our housing, rehearsal space, actors and stage.  And it allowed us to stay engaged with our audience during the summer months.  Our mission always included nurturing writers and developing new works, which now includes plays as well as musicals.  This summer’s Festival combines both plays and musicals for the first time.
What does the Festival provide for the writers in residence as they work on their show? 
This summer’s Festival expands our format and allows us to work at various levels.  For example, there will be a full workshop of the new musical Mann…and Wife by Douglas J. Cohen and Dan Elish.  Our contract allows for 40 hours of rehearsal over two weeks and a public staged reading.  This really gives the writers a chance to hear their work while they continue to make changes.  We have two new formats this summer:
1) A public table reading of a new play – 11 hours of rehearsal.
2) A format I call a “Snapshot.”  This is a 20-30 minute presentation that introduces our audience to new works and includes scenes, songs and discussions with the writers.  Each work also has an 11-hour rehearsal contract.  This summer, two plays and one musical will be presented as one event for our audience.
Do you present shows at any stage on their trajectory or do you have a preference for when you present them? 

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New Duncan Sheik Musical on NAMT’s 2015 Festival Slate

The National Alliance for Musical Theater has set the slate for its 2015 Festival of New Musicals, the annual showcase of new work that attracts commercial and regional stage producers from around the country.
Among the titles on tap is the latest by Duncan Sheik, the musician who’s been the subject of theater-world talk lately because of impending runs of two shows for which he composed the music: “Spring Awakening,” for which he won a 2007 Tony, and the new musical adaptation of “American Psycho.” At the NAMT festival he’ll show off “Noir,” about a man who obsessively eavesdrops on the couple in the apartment next door, written with book writer-lyricist Kyle Jarrow (“A Very Merry Unauthorized Children’s Scientology Pageant”).
The 27-year-old NAMT Festival of New Musicals has served as a launching pad for shows including “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” “The Drowsy Chaperone” and “Striking 12,” among others.

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We’re thrilled to announce the line up of new musicals for the 27th Annual Festival of New Musicals, which will take place on Thursday, October 15 and Friday, October 16 at in New York.
Now in its 27th year, the National Alliance for Musical Theatre’s Festival of New Musicals attracts theatre producers from around the world for this industry-only event to discover eight new musicals presented in 45-minute reading presentations over two days. All production costs are underwritten by NAMT, at no cost to the writing teams.  As a non-profit organization, NAMT funds the Festival entirely through donations, sponsorships and contributions.
The festival has introduced musical theatre producers to 228 musicals and 432 writers from around the world. As a direct result of the Festival, more than 85% of the musicals presented have gone on to subsequent readings, workshops, productions and tours, been licensed, and/or recorded on cast albums. Some past festival shows include The Drowsy Chaperone, It Shoulda Been You, Striking 12, Ordinary Days, Thoroughly Modern Millie, among many others.

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Historical Musical Theatre Sightseeing

TheatreWorks Silicon Valley’s Managing Director (and NAMT Board member) Phil Santora was in New York with his partner Christian, and they paid a visit to the former Triangle Shirtwaist Factory building to take a selfie with the postcard from TheatreWorks’ upcoming world premiere production of Triangle (Festival 2012).

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Welcome to NewFriendLand

Susan Fairbrook reports on the premiere of Come From Away (Festival 2013) at La Jolla Playhouse:

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Do you have opinions? Do you want to get paid to share those opinions and help NAMT at the same time? Opinions 4 Good (OP4G) is an online market research company that provides funding for nonprofits across the country by sharing the fees from their clients with us. Here’s how it works: You sign up for OP4G using this link, and designate a percentage of your fees you’d like donated to NAMT. Then, whenever you have a few minutes, take some market research surveys on the site and we both get paid! It’s that simple. And we promise you won’t get any spam. The average survey pays $3.50 for about 10 minutes of your time.
Plus, OP4G will donate to NAMT for each new member who joins their online survey community, so you can help us just by signing up.
 
OP4G calls this “digital volunteering.” We call it easy and fun. Members of our staff have signed up and taken the surveys — we’d never recommend it to you if we hadn’t tried it!
Join today and donate to NAMT without spending a dime.
Thanks!

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Festival Show On The Tony Awards!

Watch Lisa Howard sing “Jenny’s Blues” from It Shoulda Been You (Festival 2009) at last night’s Tony Awards.

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New Work in Progress: OCTOBER SKY

This month, we check in with Aaron Thielen (Fest ’10, The Bowery Boys), Artistic Director of the Marriott Theatre outside Chicago, and his showOctober Sky, that he has written with fellow Fest Alumnus Michael Mahler (Fest ’09, How Can You Run With a Shell on Your Back?), as they prepare for the premiere this August. 

The beloved Universal Pictures film October Sky is now a new musical. It was 1957, and Sputnik lights up the October sky over the small Appalachian mining town of Coalwood, West Virginia. Homer Hickam, the teenage son of a coal miner, is determined not to end up like generations before him. Inspired by the world’s race to space, Homer and his buddies begin to light up the starry skies with their homemade rockets and dreams of glory. This rich and emotional story is for anyone who ever dreamed of something better and reached for the stars. 

October Sky was highlighted in our Songwriters Showcase at last year’s Festival.  What was the response to the show like after the showcase? 
There was an immediate attraction to not only Michael’s music, but to the title and project as a whole.  The film really resonated with so many people.  The era.  The basic American dream of reaching for the stars, and making it.  Literally!

October Sky is being presented at Marriott in conjunction with Universal Stage Productions. What has the experience been like working with Universal on their property? 

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Festival Show Update: STU FOR SILVERTON

This month, we check in with Peter Duchan and Breedlove, the writers of 2014 Festival show Stu For Silverton, as they prepared for a reading of the show at NAMT member Theater Latte Da last month. 

Based on the true story of America’s first transgender mayor and the town that elected him, Stu for Silverton celebrates a new American folk hero from Silverton, Oregon. This heartwarming, all-American new musical blends Our Town and The Rocky Horror Picture Show, testing the boundaries of tolerance as a small community adjusts to big changes.

The summer leading up to last year’s Festival you did some major reworking of the book to Stu for Silverton.  What were those changes?
We’re quite fortunate that the real story of Stu Rasmussen and Silverton provides a strong emotional climax. Everything we’ve written builds to that beautiful, true moment of counter-protest staged by the community. Our challenge all along has been creating the right set up for it, giving the audience the information they need for the moment to really land effectively–and not giving them information that muddies the storytelling and weakens that emotional impact. Prior to NAMT, we made a number of changes, particularly to the first act: a new song/sequence to open the show, a new song to introduce Stu’s girlfriend Vic, a new sequence we hoped would explore the tug of war Stu feels between his hometown and the exploration of his identity that occurs in Portland. So, lots of new stuff, much of which we performed at the NAMT Festival.

 
How did the presentation in the Festival help you discover further changes to make to the show?
The Festival experience was definitely helpful and energized us to make further revisions. We were lucky to have smart, engaged actors in the room, a number of whom graciously offered us their honest reactions during the process. (Annaleigh Ashford, in particular, is a friend of ours, and a smart budding director in her own right, and she gave us some great, generous notes, a number of which we’ve incorporated.) We also met with producers and other theatermakers, gathering reactions and ideas quite helpful to our revisions. The result: we’ve made a number of changes, including writing ANOTHER new song to introduce Vic, as well as reworking the support group sequence, among other things. We learned a ton.
 
What was the response to the show like after the Festival? 
We were thrilled with the response! We worked really hard to shape an abridged, 45-minute Festival draft that would give the audience a fun taste of the show and, hopefully, leave them wanting more. We got a lot of positive reaction from NAMT members. When Theatre Latte Da offered us this workshop, we jumped at the chance to work on the show out of town, out of sight.
 
You are now preparing for readings of the full script at NAMT member Theater Latte Da in Minneapolis this week. How has it been working on the show again and hearing the full version? 

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Come From Away Gives Wing To Hope

Come From Away (Festival 2013) is currently receiving its world premiere production at member theatre La Jolla Playhouse. In The San Diego Union-Tribune, writers Irene Sankoff and David Hein talk about the genesis of the show:

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We are thrilled to announce nine awards granted from the National Fund for New Musicals, a major funding program to support NAMT member not-for-profit theatres in their collaborations with writers to create, develop and produce new musicals.  Now in its seventh year, the Fund will provide grants totaling $46,000 to ten organizations across the country.
NAMT Executive Director Betsy King Militello stated:

“We are honored and excited to support our member theatres as they work with this inspiring group of writers to develop these innovative and provocative new musicals.  With these grants, we have now awarded 77 grants totaling $315,500. These projects will join a growing list of important new musicals added to the canon with support from our National Fund for New Musicals.”

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Anthony Drewe Talks About NAMT In The Stage

In an editorial advocating for more development opportunities for home-grown musicals in Britain by Mark Shenton in The Stage, Festival alumnus Anthony Drewe (Honk!, Festival 1999; The Three Little Pigs, Festival 2013) shared some nice words about NAMT and his experience (with partner George Stiles) being in the Festival.

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Two Productions From Perfect Pitch Available Online

DigitalTheatre.com, which works in partnership with Britain’s leading theatre companies to capture live performance authentically onscreen, has released two productions created and filmed live by NAMT member Perfect Pitch, as part of a new partnership between the two companies.

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New Work in Progress: EVER AFTER

This month, we check in with Mark S. Hoebee, Producing Artistic Director at Paper Mill Playhouse, as he tells us about their upcoming production of Ever After.
 
The world premiere of a brilliant new musical based on the 1998 film starring Drew Barrymore and Anjelica Huston.  This is no fairy tale.  Ever After sets the record straight on the fable of Cinderella. It was never about fairy godmothers, talking mice, or magic pumpkins. Her name was Danielle and it was always about her wit, her smarts, her strength, and her good friend Leonardo da Vinci.  She makes her own dreams come true. Warm and romantic, funny and smart, this is the musical you’ve been waiting for.
 
How did Ever After find its way to the Playhouse?
Ever After had been on our radar for several years. I saw an early reading of the show and loved the material. I had a meeting with Scott Landis and Philip Morgaman to discuss the show, but Paper Mill wasn’t at a place to take on the project at that time. Then about two years ago, we were working with Kevin McCollum on The Other Josh Cohen and he had joined the producing team on Ever After. Kevin encouraged me to come see another more full presentation of the piece that they were doing, so I went with Todd Schmidt, our Managing Director. Kathleen Marshall, the director/choreographer had assembled a wonderful cast and there was a 9-piece band and it was just wonderful.  So we grabbed the opportunity to give the show its first full production.

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