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Secondary education

secondary school drama productions

38 replies

emma2709 · 05/10/2013 00:22

My sons school has a policy that in auditions for things like school productions roles are given out solely based on a candidates merit and suitability for the part. Sounds fine but what this means in practice is that those like my son who are maybe not the best but are still keen never get picked yet there are others who always get parts.

Is this normal at a state secondary school? My view is that preference ought to go to those who have not been picked before, so long as they have the minimum necessary ability for the part in question.

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Nicknamegrief · 05/10/2013 00:38

As an 'am dram' lover and having participated in many a high school musical if you want the thing to be watchable I'm afraid it's the best person for the job.

Most schools pick ensemble type productions (think Oliver, West Side Story) where there are several main roles and big choruses.

It's completely normal. They don't pick the school sports teams on the basis of those who haven't been picked before in my experience.

It's not an easy lesson to learn sometimes but that's life in my opinion.

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Chubfuddler · 05/10/2013 00:41

Sorry. In my experience like sports teams , it has always been open audition with parts going to the "best" auditions. It's not an all must have prizes deal.

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Rosencrantz · 05/10/2013 00:41

Very normal. Life isn't about getting your turn, it is about being the damn best at your job in order to fly.

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stillenacht · 05/10/2013 00:43

I'm a secondary music teacher. For our concerts we always try to change soloists every year. Some are better than others but its important to give everyone a chance I believeSmile.

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Unexpected · 05/10/2013 01:01

I think it would be nice to believe that everyone could have a turn at a main part (or even a minor part) but there are all kind of negatives to that as well. The school wants to put on the best production possible and it serves no-one well to stage something which is below par. What kind of message does it give out to those who are genuinely talented if they think that they can only get a role maybe every third year or that although they are the better singer/actor they have to give way to someone who doesn't do the role justice and who takes longer to learn the part? Given the numbers in an average secondary school and the number of parts in the usual school musical, even if you decide to rotate roles, there are still going to be people who are disappointed - on top of an audience who come away with the perception of the music/drama department as average.

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stillenacht · 05/10/2013 06:30

Well yes to be fair we have a pool of about 10 really strong vocalists and another 10 strong soloists I dont tend to stray from these ten. Its not as bad as a neighbouring school who would put on the 'David and James' show every year highlighting only their top two students.

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FadBook · 05/10/2013 06:39

Pretty normal but frustrating from your ds side.

The school productions were big at our school and renowned for being extremely good. The main parts always went to the same people and normally 'older' kids too (Y11 and 6th form) and their favourites they made a big cock up on year giving a part to a popular girl who turned out to be a diva.

My advice would be to prepare for the audition - practice lots and ask if the music teacher can coach him for 10 minutes one lunch time. A good audition and showing dedication to improve and commitment to the part, should get him principle part.

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alpinemeadow · 05/10/2013 06:47

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meditrina · 05/10/2013 06:55

Yes, normal.

They do try to give minor/chorus/non-speaking parts to those who were not successful in the auditions for major roles.

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englishteacher78 · 05/10/2013 07:09

I do a short production of Julius Caesar with my Year 7 every year. There is a part of some kind for everyone. Yet for 3 years I didn't do it as one particular year I was inundated with phone calls complaining about the casting which was done via audition. My father was seriously ill at this time and the rest of the department took the calls on my behalf. It was a stressful time. Year 7 parents also complain about their children not getting on the first rugby team. Yes, the best people get the big parts and places on the A team. That's how it works

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ColdFusion · 05/10/2013 07:11

If your DS is keen to be involved in the production, perhaps he could be a crew member?

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JGBMum · 05/10/2013 07:36

It is very frustrating though when your dc have been told that some parts will be cast with a particular age group, and then they're not.
Her school is putting on Oliver and Y8 were told that dodger could be male or female, but would be a Y8 student. In the event, they've given the part to a Y11 GCSE drama student. In fact all the main roles have gone to drama students.

In this case, I think expectations have been badly managed by the drama department.

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alpinemeadow · 05/10/2013 08:10

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englishteacher78 · 05/10/2013 08:26

It does take a lot of time yes.

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Chubfuddler · 05/10/2013 08:51

I joined a local community theatre group in order to mop up the parts other members were too old to play - at sixteen I got to play everything from 12 to 30. I deliberately avoided the youth theatre and school productions as there was so much competition!

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alpinemeadow · 05/10/2013 09:08

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Chubfuddler · 05/10/2013 09:12

It was fab. They can be as cliquey and political as school productions, but the one I belonged to had genuinely open auditions - you didn't even have to be a member to audition. They're usually ridiculously excited to have teenaged members IME.

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secretscwirrels · 05/10/2013 11:09

Schools take these things way too seriously and spend far too much time on them IMO. Rehearsals are OTT and take priority over everything else.
DS2 did it last year, he got a small crowd role which is all he wanted. They started rehearsing in September and he was there nearly every night until December. All other after school activities were cancelled in favour of the show.

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cory · 05/10/2013 18:55

What others said: open audition is normal, but there are ways round it: you can practise hard, join a youth theatre, join a community am dram group etc.

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mumofthemonsters808 · 05/10/2013 19:05

It's not just school productions where this happens, my DD is a member of a youth drama group and every production without fail the main parts are awarded to the same kids. Before the audition results were announced me and my OH guessed who would be successful and we were bang on. The Director's niece is a good one to put your money on. That's just the way it is.

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alpinemeadow · 05/10/2013 19:09

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Schmedz · 06/10/2013 00:07

Would people seriously prefer that those with greater merit at audition and better suitability for a part be overlooked in favour of giving someone less able 'a go'?
If OP's DS is keen and enjoying taking part then isn't that to be encouraged, regardless of whether he gets lead roles or not? Does he think it is unfair and demoralising if he is missing out of parts he auditions for, or is there more disappointment by the OP? Yes, lead roles are nice but actually performing in a great show, whatever role you have, is a huge buzz. If someone wants lead roles and is missing out, then feedback on how to improve can always be sought, and the more stage experience the better in improving skills. Sadly, sometimes it is not even a matter of ability per se, but who is more suitable for a certain role according to who else has been cast inthe other roles!
Having to cast school productions is a task I undertake several times a year. Every teacher I work with is acutely aware of the value for every child in taking part and the fact that a show only has a set number of principal roles - but also that every role is important in creating the story and show. Yes, children will be disappointed should they miss out on a part they wanted but rarely has there been a production when, by the end, there are children having taken part who have not thoroughly enjoyed it and learnt from it.
Frequently, however, there are parents fuelling disappointment and creating dissatisfaction by undervaluing the role their child has been chosen to play, especially when it is an ensemble role.
I have seen shows where those with merit have clearly been overlooked in the interests of 'fairness'. Sadly, it is hugely UNFAIR on the children of minimum ability when their performance is embarrassingly bad less than optimal. Or when they are upstaged entirely by a more talented individual in a stunning cameo and that is all the audience talks about afterwards!

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MoominMammasHandbag · 06/10/2013 00:16

Our local Youth Theatre does a kind of revue a few times a year where kids do sketches, songs and little plays, often stuff they have written themselves. Totally different set up to the very meritorial school productions. There is a place for both I think.

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mumofthemonsters808 · 06/10/2013 09:37

Alpine- yes if unsuccessful in the auditions for main parts and any speaking role, the children will appear in the chorus. I'm not disputing the important role of chorus because without it the show could not take place and the children also learn a lot from their role. I just wish it did that feel that the auditions were a waste of time and parts had already been allocated and for just one production the Director's niece would not have the lead and sing more songs than anyone else ( I don't want to put a kid down but she is not mind blowing, I'm probably just jealous that my sister is not the Director).

What I also find frustrating is that there are only 6 weeks of learned drama techniques between the two yearly productions. So the odds are if you do not have a role in the first production you will not have one in the second. Unless you have gained a lot from these few sessions. There is also no feedback from the auditions, if asked general statements are given "You were beaten to the post" rather than "You rushed the script, you were too quiet etc". Maybe I'm expecting too much, the group is run by volunteers who devote their time freely to enable the group to survive and devote countless hours to the group. It is not a performing arts school. These are my gripes not DD she just accepts it's the way things are.

Moonmin -DD attends another workshop and they do this type of sketch show and they are fabulous. The material the kids produce is amazing.

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emma2709 · 06/10/2013 09:54

Thanks for comments. Schmedz - yes he is disappointed and demoralised. And not because he doesnt get major parts: he's never given any part at all other than being in the ensemble, not even a tiny speaking part. To date he's not had a single line in any production. What is rather cruel about it is that each time he misses out he is told by the drama teacher that he probably will 'next time', so long as he agrees to remain in the ensemble. So he carries on but always misses out next time. I dont think its the case that he's useless at drama because he's done well in drama lessons if school reports mean anything, and at his previous school he had parts which he did well. School claims its all done scrupulously fairly but when you see who the parts go to every time you have to wonder.

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