Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Build Your Own World: A Neverland Interactive Game
Now, hold it in your hand. What does it look like? What color, what shape, what size? Feel it beneath your fingertips. Rough? Smooth? Soft? Firm? Does it bend? Can you squeeze it? Now, study its features with all five of your senses (the sixth, too, if you have one) and absorb those details. Assimilate them into your mind's eye.
Now make it a piece of clothing.
Now a kitchen utensil.
Now an animal.
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Selling Like Hot Cakes!
We certainly hope you purchased tickets to Peter Pan! Within days, tickets were snatched up and performances were sold out. This laboratory production gets up close and personal with the audience as they join Wendy, John, and Michael in their nursery/attic. We hope you join us for this magical, mystical journey!
Monday, May 20, 2013
Side by Side by Shelby Rees?
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Nine.
Nine students from the area are constructing the wild and whimsical world of Peter Pan. Most of the actors portray two, three, or even more characters. Scallywags, merfolk, and little rascals await in this adaptation of the classical tale, each as fantastical as the last. Keep your eyes peeled and your wits about you in the twists and turns of Quincy Community Theatre's Peter Pan: you never know who -- or what -- you'll find.
Saturday, May 4, 2013
Happy First Rehearsal!
Last night was the first rehearsal for QCT's Lab Production of Peter Pan. This adaptation of J.M. Barrie's classic tale is like none that has ever been seen -- literally! This show is a conglomeration of many different aspects of the classic story, from the novel "Peter and Wendy" to the original 1904 production. Surprises lie in store for all who attend this performance. You may just learn something you never knew about the time-honored bedtime story!
The first step in the rehearsal is table work. No, nobody comes in with saws and hammers to build a table. The production team -- actors, the accompanist, the director, the stage manager, the costumer, and the publicity guru -- meets to read through the script. This allows the company to get a feel for the show, just to hear what the words sound like when spoken aloud and to begin formulation of ideas. Who is Peter Pan? What drives each character? What do those eloquent lines mean when spoken by such innocent children? Each person has their own ideas about the show; this is the time to share them. They spark quite the conversation! One idea thrown out last night was this, which I invite you to reflect on.
"Growing up has the connotation of leaving someone who needs you."