Tag Archive for Grease

Take Me to the Fifties

The Grease cast before their final show

I’ve just spent the last few months helping to put the final touches on massive project for the Southern Highlands Youth Arts Council (SHYAC). Grease took between 15 and 35 hours each week since early September, and a large amount of time before that. I think I’ve been working on the project since about September 2010, so it has certainly been a huge part of my life.

Since SHYAC is a non-profit community organisation that is largely funded by members and income from it’s own activities, there is an overriding imperative to ensure projects are well-managed and financially sound. Grease was a very large production for SHYAC and was unique in a number of ways, including the venue, cast age, and a production team who had largely never worked together or with the organisation before. As producer, I began planning the project more than a year ahead of the scheduled show run, in concert with the SHYAC management committee. Such a lead-time was important to ensure the success of the production. My role included rehearsal and show venue management, negotiating with and appointing the production team, public relations and promotion, ticketing, arranging auditions, management of the cast, coordinating and designing the program, supervising rehearsals, supervising performances, liaising with SHYAC’s management and volunteers and arranging sound effects and music licensing. Given the complexity of the show and my role, I needed to plan many of my activities well in advance in order to ensure they were competed satisfactorily. This was the first project of that size I have managed and it refined and improved my skills immensely.

For the duration of the show run, I was able to just sit in the back rows of the audience and watch. Mostly, I couldn’t keep the smile from my face. Our cast was so talented and so wonderful. And then we started getting brilliant reviews like this. The cast has bonded so tightly together and even threw around the idea of touring. They are a great bunch of people and I can’t wait to work with them again.

What makes the work so valuable to me is seeing the young people come up to standards they never knew they could reach. It’s such a joy to be part of. My mate Adam Fisher was awesome as director, and was wonderfully supported by experienced performer Michael Turkic (who made a cameo as Vince Fontaine) and, of course, the always fantastic Michael Cooper as musical director. Chereographer Kelly Duroy also made a huge contribution. If you didn’t see this show, you really missed out. I had so much fun with it, and I didn’t even get on stage!

Thanks to all my Greasers for their hard work. 

It’s Almost Here

Grease Poster

For the production team, and SHYAC, Grease has been about twelve months worth of work. But, it is nearly here.

The show itself looks brilliant, and our advertising blitz kicks in this week. The campaign includes the following radio ad, courtesy of local station 2ST. Check it out: SHYAC Grease Ad

 

 

 

 

A Busy Rotaract Week

On the way home from the 2011 Australian Rotaract Conference, I got thinking about the week ahead. I hadn’t quite realised just how busy it was shaping up to be.

Amongst rehearsals for Grease, work and uni work, I have a lot of stuff to do for Rotaract:

  • Tonight (Monday), our club is hosting the District Governor;
  • Tomorrow (Tuesday), I will be having lunch with the DG, three other Rotary Club Presidents and the local Assistant DG;
  • Wednesday I will be presenting to the Rotary Club of Berrima District at their lunch time meeting and attending the Rotary Club of Moss Vale for their dinner time meeting;
  • Thursday I will be on the gates at Bowral’s Tulip Time festival.
This is my mid session from uni, so I had to ask myself just what I was doing by filling it up with all these other things. That lead to the question of just what does Rotaract mean for me? It was a question posed by the Chair of Rotaract Australia at the conference.
For me, Rotaract is about the chance to give back to my community, to meet new friends, have new experiences, gain skills and have a stack of fun. It can definitely be hard work, but members are free to commit as much or as little time as they like. The upside of it is that the more you put in, the more value you get from being part of it.

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