Showing posts with label The Sound of Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Sound of Music. Show all posts

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Playhouse marks 30th year with special 'Sound'

When the Stained Glass Playhouse presents "The Sound of Music" beginning Friday, the occasion will mark the organization's 30th season in the old sanctuary of Marvin United Methodist Church on Indiana Avenue.
By KEN KEUFFEL
Published: July 17, 2011
Photo Credit: BRUCE CHAPMAN/JOURNAL
The Stained Glass Playhouse cast rehearses for "The Sound of Music." This is the playhouse's 30th year. The director credits the affordability and community appeal as factors in the group's success.

          Patrons can count on seeing four shows a year in a 90-seat venue, most being revivals of tried-and-true musicals and plays. What accounts for such staying power?
Alvin Tyndall, Stained Glass' artistic director, provided intriguing answers. "We're very inexpensive," he said. "We have the lowest ticket prices anywhere: $15 for adults, $10 for seniors and students. … We want everybody to be able to come. We want to get more people to enjoy theater. It's not a matter of restriction by pocket book."
           Remarkably, Stained Glass relies on ticket sales for most of its operating income, keeping costs down by paying virtually no one — directors sometimes receive a modest honorarium — and by recycling sets and costumes. Many materials are loaned or donated rather than purchased.
            The company got started when church members wanted to present concerts and youth productions in a venue other than the church sanctuary. The church's current sanctuary is next door to its old one, which was converted into a performance venue.
             Stained Glass Playhouse benefited from an unusual set of theater-related talents and connections in its founding members, several of whom are still active with the company.
             It started out as a part of Marvin United Methodist. It then became a separate entity. In return, Stained Glass donates a portion of profit from ticket sales to the church. When refreshments are served during intermission, they are free. But patrons can make a donation to a church cause. A desire to be inclusive has contributed to Stained Glass' longevity. Stained Glass gets no financial support from Marvin United Methodist, but it uses the church's old sanctuary for free.
             "We think we involve a large part of the community, all kinds of people, not just a certain clique of people, not just a certain economic level of the community," Tyndall said.
             Tyndall, who is directing "The Sound of Music," said that a homeless person has appeared in Stained Glassshows and worked behind the scenes. The homeless person worked with the likes of Cameron Williams, a physician from Lewisville. Williams, a veteran of community-theater shows in the area, will play Capt. Georg von Trapp in "The Sound of Music."
             Numerous neophyte actors try out for Stained Glass productions, having likely been encouraged by whatTyndall calls an "open" audition process that keeps the playing field as even as possible. Kate Kellum, a rising junior at Reagan High School, will make her acting debut as Liesl in "The Sound of Music.""I love singing and acting," she said. "I'm a huge 'Sound of Music' person. I thought, why not? I work in the mornings and then I come here. I love it."Until the opportunity to perform in "The Sound of Music" came along, Kellum had only taken drama classes at Reagan. Now she will "definitely do" school shows as well.
            The repertory of Stained Glass likely has something to do with its enduring appeal. Each February, for example, the company presents a show in celebration of Black History Month. This year's show will be "A Raisin in the Sun," Langston Hughes' classic. Other Black History Month shows have included "Miss Evers' Boys" and "Mahalia."
           "It's an opportunity to involve a group in the community who kind of felt left out," Tyndall said. "We really appeal to that community. We've been delighted at the number of people who've become a part of it."


kkeuffel@wsjournal.com (336) 727-7337

Friday, July 15, 2011

Stained Glass Playhouse celebrates 30th season

Breaking ‘glass’: Stained Glass Playhouse celebrates 30th season
This year marks a milestone in Piedmont Triad theater circles, as Winston- Salem’s Stained Glass Playhouse celebrates its 30th anniversary season, kicking off with the July 22 opening of the Rodgers & Hammerstein classic, The Sound of Music under the direction of Alvin Tyndall, the artistic director of the Stained Glass Playhouse.
So named for its production venue — shows are staged in the old sanctuary Marvin United Methodist Church (4401 Indiana Ave., Winston-Salem) — the Stained Glass Playhouse does not confine itself to religiousthemed productions, encompassing every genre in the spectrum: comedy, drama, musical, mystery.
“Our productions have grown from amateur original scripts to professional ‘Broadway’ productions,” noted Tyndall. “Our actors have grown from children and a few adults to a large group of community actors who are involved in multiple shows throughout the community.”
There were eight founders of the playhouse, which was formed “in an effort to expand on the performances of a musical group at Marvin United Methodist Church called ‘Resurrection Joy’ — a musical group of guitars and drums with vocalists,” recalled Tyndall.
Although Tyndall is not one of the original founders, David Webster, the Stained Glass Playhouse’s current board chairman, was. “I’ve not quite been with the playhouse for the entire 30 years, but almost,” Tyndall said.
Since its humble beginnings, “direction has improved, costumes are outstanding, properties are specifically chosen and appropriate for the historical era, equipment has expanded and rates with other production companies in the area,” he said. “We’re still a ‘black box theater,’ unique to most audiences who don’t know what to expect when actors are directly in front of them as part of the production.”
Having directed over two dozen Stained Glass productions and overseen countless others, Tyndall counts among his personal favorites 1776, Jesus Christ Superstar, Brigadoon and A Raisin in the Sun (which will be revived later this season). Of course, not every show went smoothly.
“I remember that during 1776 one of our actors — who must not have been awake — came to me just before the end of our first weekend and said ‘Goodbye, I’m off for Los Angeles.’ In a panic, I reminded him that we still had two weekends to go. He apologized, but was still leaving. We were fortunate to find another actor, who turned out to be a direct descendant of the character. The replacement was a better actor!” Other mishaps weren’t so humorous, including the time a lead actor suffered a heart attack, or the time that a lead actress came down with laryngitis and has to be replaced by the show’s stage manager.
To describe the Stained Glass Playhouse as a labor of love would not be an understatement, and after 30 years the accent would still be on both “labor” and “love.”
“Some of our productions were quite simple, but we involved a large number of community volunteers,” said Tyndall. “That was one of our original goals and still remains a chief function of the playhouse.”
The playhouse’s 30 th season will include such classics as Arsenic and Old Lace, A Raisin in the Sun and The Miracle Worker.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Stained Glass Playhouse "The Sound of Music" Cast


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Stained Glass Playhouse
Director: Alvin Tyndall 
Performance Dates:
July 22, 23, 24, 29, 30 & 31 & August 5, 6 & 7, 2011 Fridays and Saturdays at 8 pm Sundays at 3 pm.
     
"The Sound of Music", Book by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse: The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. When a postulant proves too high-spirited for the religious life, she is dispatched to serve as governess for the seven children of a widowed naval Captain. Her growing rapport with the youngsters, coupled with her generosity of spirit, gradually captures the heart of the stern Captain, and they marry. Upon returning from their honeymoon, they discover that Austria has been invaded by the Nazis, who demand the Captain’s immediate service in their navy. The family’s narrow escape over the mountains to Switzerland on the eve of World War II provides one of the most thrilling and inspirational finales ever presented in the theatre. The motion picture version remains the most popular movie musical of all time.

Maria - Hannah Rivers
Sister Bethea - Kelli Flick
Sister Margaretta - Angela Hodges
Mother Abbess - Steffanie Vaugan
Sister Sophia - Marilyn Bledsoe
Captain Von Trapp - Cameron Williams
Franz - Jere Dailey
Frau Schmidt - Meredith Whitworth
Liesl - Kate Kellum
Friedrich -  Patrick Burke
Louisa - Caroline Hale
Kurt - Elijah Short
Brigitta - Maggie Booz
Marta - Riley Cullen
Gretl - Amanda Burke
Rolf - Matt Smitherman
Elsa Schrader - Mary Lea Williams
Ursula - Heather Osterer
Max Detweiler - Roberts Bass
Herr Zeller - Mark Walek
Baron Elberfeld - Mickey Hyland
Admiral Von Schreiber
Nuns - Gina Belmont, Holly Bostick, Kelli Letner, and Heather Osterer
Postulants - Michaela Cockerham, Rachel Hale, and Symone Thompson
Guards - Matt kellum, Julian Thompson, Guideo Villaba Portel, and Kenny Gaylord
Neighbors - Jolanta & Scott Kellum, Kay Smitherman, and Jennifer Robinson Short