Friday, January 29, 2016

Buried Child, 1992

The 1991-92 season was very successful for our program.
The productions were all large in scale and drew a record number of audience members.
At that time we had a good core of technical students plus hard working other students and staff who all worked hard in the building, painting, lighting, sewing and running the plays.

The 1992-93 would also turn out to be an exciting and successful season which again offered us some very demanding problems to overcome.
The season began with Buried Child by Sam Shepard in the fall and the musical A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum in the December slot.
We tried something new in the spring by doing both of our productions in repertory of three weeks instead of the usual two.
The two shows in Rep were  Romeo and Juliet and  The Foreigner.
If just mounting the two shows at the same time was not crazy enough we toured Romeo and Juliet to a Rochester high school during the middle of the run.

The production of Buried Child was performed on a large unit set that did not have one right angle.



The raked stage floor ran diagonally upstage and the walls leaned in at various angles.
Even the door, which was over-sized, was lopsided and was custom made.
It is all the various challenges of a show like this that makes it fun to work on.



I would spend many hours at the drafting board trying to figure out just how to make something work only to change it later because it did not look right or the designer or my assistant had a better idea.

(Note: I would begin to use Auto-CAD by the end of that season but at the time of this show I still used my T-Square and pencils. Cad does make everything easier but I miss the satisfaction I got from hand drafting.)

 One night during the rehearsal of the play and actor almost died.
The actor playing the father was a very large man and spend much of the play slumped over next to a couch.
At one of the breaks in the rehearsal they crew found that the actor was passed out and not breathing very well.
Fortunately the actor recovered the show went on without further incident.



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