Monthly Archives: August 2020

Video Auditions Announced for PEACE, LOVE, AND CUPCAKES JR. at Virtual Venue Theatricals

VVT_logoDates & Info
Director: Abby Parr
Choreographer: Katelyn Parish
Music Director: TBD

Audition due date: Sat, Aug 22, 2020 @ 8pm EST/5pm PDT
Invited callback due date: Weds, Aug 26, 2020 @ 8pm EST/5pm PDT
1st Rehearsal: Saturday, September 12th @ 7pm EST/4pm PDT
Filming Day: Saturday, October 3rd @ 10am EST/7am PDT
Performances: October 9, 10, 11 @ 7pm EST/4pm PDT
Tuition fees: $200 per child
(includes workshop course, as well as final digital copy of production)

Production Description
Based on the bestselling children’s book series, “The Cupcake Club,” this musical celebrates kid power, friendship, and standing up for who you are and what you believe in. Now casting roles for young actors between 9-18 years old as well as one role for adult actors 18+.

In addition to rehearsing for the production, cast members will focus on character development, breaking down scenes, self-tape skills, and learning from professionals in the industry. Virtual productions combine Musical Theatre and On-Camera, which gives young actors a brand new way to create.

All roles performed remotely with performances to stream on virtualvenuetheatricals.com.

How to Audition
32 bar contemporary MT song
*singing from the show is encouraged
Record video horizontally
*neutral background
Label clearly
*full name_song title_role desired
*full name_resume, full name_headshot
Due date August 22, 2020 @ 8pm EST/5pm PDT

Submit video, headshot, resume & contact information to virtualvenuetheatricals.com/plcauditions

Roles

  • Kylie Carson (Lead): Female, 9-17 WORK FROM HOME
    Leader of The Cupcake Club. A quirky, slightly awkward, nervous new girl–described as having “weird taste in clothes and freckles on her nose.” The butt of everyone’s jokes, she struggles with self-doubt and finding a place she fits in amidst the school social scene. Kylie goes on an emotional journey to unapologetically own who she is. Role requires strong acting skills and vocals.
  • Lexi Poole (Lead): 9-17 WORK FROM HOME
    One of The Cupcake Club members. A shy, demure girl, who “tends to disappear” around her peers until she finds her voice and her power as a member of PLC. She is sensitive and artistic; the person responsible for turning the club’s cupcakes into mini works of art. In the end, she has no trouble asserting herself if it means sticking up for her friends. Lexi should have strong acting skills and vocals.
  • ​Jenna Medina (Lead): Female, 9-17 WORK FROM HOME
    One of The Cupcake Club members. “Do I talk a little loud?” Jenna is vivacious, loquacious, and the “golden tastebuds” of PLC–she knows everything about flavors and ingredients. She loves Oreos, a metaphor for her own personality: hard on the outside, soft on the inside. She tries to be tough and pretends like things don’t hurt her…but they do. Her family doesn’t have a lot of money or live in a fancy house (she’s always wearing her sisters’ hand-me-downs), which is why the popular girls look down on her. Yet she won’t back down when a bully challenges her–and tries to show Kylie how to do the same.
  • ​Sadie Harris (Lead): Female, 9-17 WORK FROM HOME
    One of The Cupcake Club members. Captain of the Blakely Bears Basketball team, she yearns to be looked upon as something other than a “dumb jock.” When she finds PLC, she discovers talents she never knew she had–i.e. the ability to crack an egg with one hand. She is physically tall and athletic; skilled with dribbling a basketball or twirling it on her finger.
  • ​Meredith Mitchell (Lead): Female, 9-17 WORK FROM HOME
    Leader of The Blah Girls (popular girls). Think Regina George from “Mean Girls.” Snide, snarky and self-absorbed, Meredith is Blakely’s Queen Bee who rules by fear, intimidation and a massive Instagram following. She preys on Kylie, appearing in her nightmares as the Wicked Witch. But Meredith isn’t just a bully; at her core, there is insecurity, vulnerability and the need–as much as anyone else–to feel loved. Her “minions” a.k.a. The Blah Girls (Blakely Ladies for the Advancement of Hip Hop) follow every command that she barks. Physically, she is stylish and a dancer, capable of both highly-charged emotional scenes and evoking a mean girl that is not a cliché.
  • Juliette/Kylie’s Mom (Supporting): 18+ WORK FROM HOME
    A teacher at Blakely School and fierce advocate for her students. Loves her job and is in complete and total support of Kylie’s pursuit to branch out and find her path within the social constructs of Blakely.
  • The Blah Girls (Ensemble/Supporting): Female, 9-17 WORK FROM HOME
    Meredith’s “minions” very popular girls and they know it. Think Gretchen and Karen from “Mean Girls.” bullies but always with an innocent smile, all 3 girls are very proud to be a part of Meredith’s exclusive clique. They follow every command that she barks. Physically, they are stylish and dancers, capable of both highly-charged emotional scenes and evoking a mean girl that is not a cliché.
  • ​Ensemble: Male/Female, 9-17 WORK FROM HOME
    Strong singers and movers.

Visit virtualvenuetheatricals.com/plcauditions for more information or email info@virtualvenuetheatricals.com with any questions.

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Auditions Announced for OTHER DESERT CITIES at Equality Productions

EP_logoEquality Productions’ virtual production of OTHER DESERT CITIES by Jon Robin Baitz. Directed by Brian Westerley.

It’s December 2004 and Brooke Wyeth returns home to Palm Springs after a six-year absence to celebrate Christmas with her parents, her brother and her aunt. Brooke announces that she is about to publish a memoir dredging up a pivotal and tragic event in the family’s history – a wound they don’t want to be reopened. In effect, she draws a line in the sand and dares them all to cross it.

Auditions for this show will be Wednesday, August 26th & Thursday, August 27th beginning at 7P. Auditions will consist of readings from the script, which will be emailed to you prior to your audition. Please sign up for your time slot & identify the character for your auditionhttps://tinyurl.com/yyayh595

If you need a timeslot other than what is showing as available, email the producer, Richard Zenk, at equalityproductionscincy@gmail.com

Characters:

  • Lyman Wyeth: (Late 50’s to late 60’s): Kind and gentle patriarch. A Hollywood B actor with some celebrity and charm who turned that into political influence. He is conservative but with a sense of humor about himself and a deep love for his family.
  • Polly Wyeth: (Late 50’s to late 60’s): Lyman’s wife. Graceful and acerbic matriarch. She has been active for decades in the Republican Party. She is deeply devoted to the preservation of her social standing, her family, and the health of her husband.
  • Brooke Wyeth: (Mid 30’s to 40’s): Lyman and Polly’s daughter. She is a professional writer who has been living in New York after a mental breakdown.
  • Trip Wyeth: (Late 20’s to mid 30’s): Brooke’s brother. Witty and self-effacing. He is a TV producer for reality TV – in a family obsessed with his intellectual, older sister’s mental health.
  • Silda Grauman: (late 50’s to early 70’s): Polly’s sister. Creative, fragile, and funny. A former B movie writer, and the Bohemian, polar opposite of her sister. She is fresh out of rehab and repays the support of the conservative Wyeths by joining Brooke in some liberal needling of her parents.

Zoom rehearsals will be TBD based on actor availability. This show is a benefit & all roles are unpaid. The show will be recorded via Zoom & uploaded to YouTube.

Please email your headshot & resume by August 23rd to Brian Westerley at westerleybrian@gmail.com

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Broadway in Cincinnati Announces Rescheduling of Fall Shows

BIC_My Fair Lady 99

Shavey Brown, Mark Aldrich, Shereen Ahmed (center), William MichalsandColin Anderson in The Lincoln Center Theater Production of Lerner & Loewe’s MY FAIR LADY.

Pretty Woman and My Fair Lady
will now play Aronoff Center in Summer of 2021

Cincinnati, OH (August 5, 2020) – Broadway in Cincinnati has announced that due to the challenges of scheduling touring Broadway shows across the country during this unprecedented time, both fall shows scheduled for the 20/21 Fifth Third Bank Broadway in Cincinnati series presented by TriHealth have been rescheduled for summer of 2021.

The Cincinnati engagements of PRETTY WOMAN: THE MUSICAL originally scheduled for November 10 – 22, 2020 will now be presented August 17 – 29, 2021MY FAIR LADY originally scheduled for December 1 – 13, 2020 will now be presented July 13 – 25, 2021.

Season Ticketholders for both of these shows will retain their same seats for the rescheduled engagements.

Broadway in Cincinnati continues to work diligently to navigate the challenges of scheduling shows and touring Broadway as guided by medical and public health advice to comply with local government regulations.  The touring industry depends on an interconnected network of presenters in cities throughout the country and the Broadway in Cincinnati is prepared to make any necessary adjustments for the well-being of audiences, staff, cast and crew.

While there may be additional unforeseen scheduling changes in the season, ticket holders will be notified if any future productions need to be rescheduled or canceled. Additional updates will be provided at BroadwayInCincinnati.com.

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Fifth Third Bank Broadway in Cincinnati presented by TriHealth is committed to bringing the very best of Broadway to the Tri-State, presenting touring Broadway plays and musicals in Cincinnati since 1987. For over twenty years, Broadway in Cincinnati has presented all shows at the Aronoff Center. The Broadway in Cincinnati series brings more than 185,000 people downtown to the Aronoff Center each year, and contributes an average of $30 million to the local economy each season. Broadway in Cincinnati is a member of the Greater Cincinnati Convention & Visitors Bureau, the Greater Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce and The Broadway League. Fifth Third Bank is the sponsor of the Cincinnati 20/21 Season and the season is presented by TriHealth. 

Broadway Across America (BAA) is part of the John Gore Organization family of companies, which includes Broadway.com, The Broadway Channel, BroadwayBox.com and Group Sales Box Office.  Led by 14-time Tony-winning theater producer John Gore (Owner & CEO), BAA is the foremost presenter of first-class touring productions in North America, operating in 47 markets with over 400,000 subscribers. Presentations include Disney’s The Lion King, Wicked, The Book of Mormon, The Phantom of the Opera and Hamilton. Current and past productions include Ain’t Too Proud, Beautiful, Cats, Chicago, Dear Evan Hansen, Mean Girls, Moulin Rouge! and To Kill A Mockingbird. 

The John Gore Organization is the leading developer, producer, distributor and marketer of Broadway theatre worldwide. Under the leadership of 14-time Tony-winning theater producer and owner John Gore, its family of companies includes Broadway Across America, Broadway.com, The Broadway Channel, BroadwayBox.com, and Group Sales Box Office. The company presents shows in 47 cities across North America as well as on Broadway, Off-Broadway, London’s West End, Japan, and China. It has won Tony Awards in every producing category as well as numerous other Drama League, Drama Desk and Olivier awards.

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Let’s Build a Theatre Where Everyone is Welcome to Play

KTC_Lets Play logoAn Action Plan for Equitable Theatre 

CINCINNATI, OH – This is an extraordinary time to be a theatre artist. The entire theatre sector has spent the last three months soul-searching about how we can keep our art and our community whole while a global pandemic prevents us from performing our most basic function: bringing people together for the shared experience of live performance.

But the spectacular displays of civil disobedience and impassioned protest in the wake of the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery have put these existential questions about the nature of live theatre into even clearer relief.

Because the truth is that the American theatre has done a poor job of bringing our whole community together for a very long time.

And that includes Know Theatre of Cincinnati.

Though many of us have proclaimed a commitment to diversity, we remain complicit in the establishment and maintenance of environments that do not value or foster Black voices. We have participated in racist structures and failed to recognize the voices in our own community that we should have been lifting up. We have prioritized efforts including gender parity and economic accessibility without giving the same energy or resources to anti-racist work.

It’s time to own that history, and take action.

Some of this work has already been going on behind the scenes – but solidarity cannot be silent, and it is important now to make plain the work we have quietly been undertaking, as well as the next steps we will take to make the Know a more expressly anti-racist organization.

The work already underway in support of an equitable Know Theatre includes:

  • Ensuring our board of directors better represents the Cincinnati community at large, which has taken us from a 6-person board with only 16% representation of people of color to a 15 person board with 27% representation of people of color. Our goal is to continue thoughtful recruitment until we reach at least 40% representation of people of color.
  • Forming a board-lead committee of staff, Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion professionals, and local artists, to define policies, review vendors to prioritize BIPOC-owned partnerships, and discover ways in which this artistic community can collectively liberate us all from the constraints of systemic racism and economic inequality.
  • Our staff is instituting a system of education and anti-racist training to acknowledge and interrogate existing biases and lack of education around anti-blackness and white supremacy. This is an ongoing learning and unlearning process necessary for us to fully engage with anti-racist work as a company; and our work in this space will focus on harm reduction, harm prevention, and relationship repair.
  • Sourcing funds specifically for hiring artists of color. This is a continuation of an effort we quietly undertook in the 2019-2020 season, with support of the David C. Herriman Foundation of the GCF, to enable us to bring visiting designers and directors of color to work with us, be paid competitively for their artistry, be offered housing to support their stay in Cincinnati, and give all of our artists the chance to work with rising artists they would otherwise not have had the chance to collaborate with.

It is clear that there is much, much more work to be done to ensure that members of our community who are Black, Indiginous, and People of Color (BIPOC) feel welcome and embraced as artists, as patrons, as board members, and as staff.

So as we launch into a new season, we commit to the following actions:

  • Over 22 seasons, we have maintained an average of just under 20% of shows on our MainStage by BIPOC writers, which we recognize is simply not good enough. To reflect the fact 40% of the Cincinnati population identifies as black or African American, we pledge to produce an average of 40% plays by BIPOC writers on our MainStage, and work to maintain that level of representation in future seasons.
  • We also pledge to not only cast BIPOC performers in BIPOC stories, but also seek to cast at least 50% of our roles across a season with artists of color. Our casting representation over the last 6 seasons has ranged from a high of 50% BIPOC actors to a low of 28% – we pledge to meet and maintain an average of 50% from now on.

  • The low salaries of small nonprofit theatre reinforce racial and economic privilege in hiring – unless you have inherited wealth or alternate sources of income, job opportunities in companies including the Know have not been open to you. We will work to raise full-time staff salaries to at least $30,000 so that job postings become more welcoming and viable for BIPOC applicants.

  • We will rewrite our artist and employee handbooks to ensure that we are no longer creating a hostile environment – intentionally or unintentionally – for BIPOC artists and staff members. We will use the guidance from the #dearwhiteamericantheatre petition and Stratford Festival’s #inthedressingroom conversations as starting points, as well as conversations with local artists who have come to us with concerns.
  • We will be open to criticism and we will not meet criticism with defensiveness. In all things, we will strive to honor our history as the Know Theatre Tribe and a voice for inclusion and change in Cincinnati’s theatre community.

Know Theatre began 22 years ago as the Know Theatre Tribe, a multicultural and nomadic arts collective committed to bringing the voices of diverse artists into Cincinnati communities.

As we launch into what already, due to the pandemic, will be an unprecedented season full of experimentation in how to deliver art in digital forms, we will no longer backburner the work that needs to be done to honor that history and take us toward an equitable, anti-racist theatre.

We will proclaim with both our work and our words that Black Lives Matter.

We welcome your thoughts and ideas about the theatre you want to see evolve across Cincinnati in this moment. We invite your stories and your criticisms. We look forward to building a theatre that better represents and celebrates all of our stories – not just the stories of a few.

Know Theatre is Cincinnati’s Theatrical Playground. The Know showcases unexpected voices, new works, and plays that embrace the inherent theatricality of the live experience. Know Theatre seeks to be a place where artists and audiences feel welcome to take artistic risks, creating work that is cutting edge and accessible.

Know Theatre’s work is made possible, in part, by the generosity of community contributions to the ArtsWave Campaign.

The Ohio Arts Council helps fund Know Theatre with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence, and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.

Know Theatre is also supported by The Carol Ann & Ralph V. Haile, Jr./U.S. Bank Foundation, helping to change our communities for the better through collaboration and innovation, and the Greater Cincinnati Foundation, which provides a simple, powerful, and highly personal approach to giving.

Know Theatre is a member of Theatre Communications Group and an Associate Member of the National New Play Network.

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High School Opera Company Fills the Air with Classical Sound in Outdoor, Socially Distant Performances

CYAPP_Outside1Opera lovers can see performances outdoors August 6th and August 7th

Each year 20 or so exceedingly talented high school vocalists audition and are selected for Cincinnati’s Young Artist Preparatory Program (YAPP).  YAPP  is one of only a handful of High School Opera Programs in the United States.  The company traditionally concludes its training with an Opera Showcase in June.  That could not happen this year.  “But we just could not give up,”  said Lincoln Chapman, the group’s Director.  “These kids have worked too hard, and their sound is too beautiful.”  So, Lincoln, with the support of Karl Resnick and the Musical Arts Center, YAPP’s home conservatory, just kept working.  “We met by Zoom for months. Once we could meet again, and it was allowed, we began meeting outside. We feel incredibly lucky to have found two spaces where we can perform in a responsible and socially distant way for both performers and audience alike.”

Thanks to some innovative choreography and large, outdoor stages, YAPP will present works like Libiamo from LaTraviata and the Sextet from the Marriage of Figaro while at least 6 feet apart on stage to audiences nestled on blankets or in lawn chairs 20 feet away and 6 feet apart.  “Rehearsing in masks is challenging,” said Riley Spatz, a senior member of YAPP. “But it was a blessing in disguise, there has never been a better reminder to lean on your body or perfect your support,” they concluded.   Karl Resnick,  Founder and Executive Director of the Musical Arts Center said,  “Working in these dire conditions, the pandemic, the heat, the masks, the difficulty of summer schedules, etc. –  working through all of this to get an excellent product is so much more difficult. I’m so proud of  Lincoln, our Director,  Sam, our accompanist,  these incredible students, and the endurance of our wonderful parents. It takes a lot to do this.  They have proven their resilience, and work ethic, in addition to their talent.  Artists have to have all three.  I could not be prouder to provide a performance opportunity or to be a part of their development journey,”

If you would like to attend, there will be two performances:  1) August 6th, 7:30PM at the Beech Acers Amphitheater, 6881 Beechmont Ave, Cincinnati, OH and 2) August 7th, 7:30PM Anderson Center Plaza, 7850 Five Mile Road, Anderson, Ohio.  For either performance, please bring a blanket or lawn chairs, masks are required, and you are asked to stay at least 6 feet away from other parties.  Tickets are not necessary, but donations are very appreciated to cover expenses of the performance venues and the program.   The performance is approximately 1 hour long and is weather dependent.  

About The Young Artists Prepatory Program
Yapp is one of the only high school opera programs in the United States.  Members must be between the ages of 15 and 18 and are selected by audition.  YAPP students represent some of the most talented, classically trained high school vocalists in the tri-state.  Each year several go on to attend top 10 music conservatories, including CCM, The University of Michigan, and Oklahoma City University.  YAPP is directed by Lincoln Chapman, who holds a Masters of Music from CCM, and has himself performed with Her Majesty’s Theater (Australia), Charlestown Symphony, and the Cincinnati Symphony, among others. The Accompanist is Sam Kraus, who holds a BM from CCM and performs with the Cincinnati Vocal Arts Ensemble and Coro Volante Recording Choir.  YAPP is part of the unique training opportunity provided by Cincinnati’s Musical Arts Center.   YAPP training includes the vocal style, improvisation, mock auditions, movement, musical preparation, and dramatic interpretation in a small ensemble setting.  Auditions for the 2021 YAPP ensemble will be held in the first week of September.  Please call 513 321-2766 for more information

2020 YAPP MEMBERS 
* Part of the August performance

Ella Bennett*                                    Grant Shields*
Calvin Delay                                     Arielle Smith*
Lauren Dewald                                Danee Spatz*
Natalie Hudepohl*                           Kat Sweeney*
Norah Meisch*                                 Ella Vaughn*
Gabriela Pereda*                             Bretlyn Yetter*
Luke Randazzo*
Jadyn Riggs*
Brett Roebuck

About the Musical Arts Center
Founded in 1978,  the Musical Arts Center has become one of Cincinnati’s most successful private musical education conservatories.   MAC is proud to say It has helped over 150 students be accepted to top tier college conservatories including  Carnegie-Mellon, The University of Michigan, UC College-Conservatory of Music (CCM), Oklahoma City University, Baldwin-Wallace, Baylor, Manhattan School of Music, Miami University, Northwestern, Oberlin, Indiana University, Belmont, Vanderbilt, and Otterbein, among others.  MAC has had 70 finalists and 18 grand prize winners in The Cincinnati Arts Association Regional Overtures competition, winners and finalists in the National Young Arts Competition, Schmidt Competion, and Dayton Opera Guild Competition.

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