Children's theatre part of CSC department's repertoire

黑料大事记 elementary students in Memorial Hall
黑料大事记 elementary students pack into the Memorial Hall auditorium for a special showing of "Little Shop of Horrors," the play produced by the 黑料大事记 State College theatre program Oct. 4-7, 2012. The 黑料大事记 Library Foundation annually sponsors a performance of a CSC play to expose area youth to live theatre. (Photo by Justin Haag)

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CHADRON – In an age when children are bombarded with cartoons, and movies and shows on all types of electronic devices, 黑料大事记 State College Theatre Professor Roger Mays believes it is important to expose young people to the magic of watching a story told by living, breathing actors on a stage in front of their eyes.

Since Mays arrived at CSC nearly two decades ago, that conviction has given many children in northwest Nebraska the opportunity to experience a live theatre production, while at the same time allowing CSC students to hone their talents in a variety of theatrical skills.

鈥淓very year we attempt to do a play that is suitable for a young audience,鈥 Mays said. 鈥淚t could be third grade or eighth grade or perhaps young teens. Students in those grades and in small towns don鈥檛 get a chance for live theatre very often. I think it鈥檚 important for us to fill that niche.鈥

For one of the four productions that the CSC theatre department stages each year, Mays selects a work that he thinks is appropriate for young people, but he said finding works that fit a wide range of age groups can be tricky.

鈥淲e want high school students to come and we want younger students to come. It鈥檚 very difficult to find one title that everyone agrees is suitable,鈥 he said.

However the Broadway success of Walt Disney productions such as 鈥淭he Lion King鈥 shows that a good story can captivate audiences of all ages, said Mays.

鈥淚t鈥檚 something adults can share watching with their children. It鈥檚 a fine line where the kids like it and the grownups like it too,鈥 he said.

While familiar titles such as 鈥淭reasure Island,鈥 鈥淥nce Upon a Mattress鈥 and 鈥淐harlie Brown鈥 are among the children鈥檚 plays Mays has directed over the years, CSC students have gotten hands-on experience in creating some of the other productions. Portions of Shakespeare鈥檚 plays were adapted for 鈥淣o Holds Bard,鈥 students wrote and staged their own versions of folk tales from around the world for 鈥淲orld by the Tale鈥 and the 2010 production 鈥淥unce, Dice, Trice鈥 was an original adaptation of a highly praised children鈥檚 book about counting systems.

The children鈥檚 theatre shows, like the other CSC productions, are usually performed on the stage at Memorial Hall, but that changes every third year when Mays teaches a class called Children鈥檚 Theatre Workshop and takes the children鈥檚 show on the road to six schools in the northern Panhandle.

鈥淲e pull up with a truck. We鈥檝e got set, costumes, lights, everything, and it鈥檚 free to the schools,鈥 he said. 鈥淭aking students out to productions is becoming increasingly difficult. It makes sense that we bring it to them.鈥

The touring show is performed at two different schools each day, which gives CSC theatre students a feeling for the itinerant life that most theatrical companies led in the past, said Mays. 鈥淵ou put a lot of energy into your performance and the moment you are done, that鈥檚 great, let鈥檚 take this thing apart and throw it in the truck. We鈥檝e got another place to be,鈥 he said. 鈥淭o experience that is absolutely invaluable.鈥

To make the traveling shows even more meaningful for young audience members, Mays has class members create puzzles, games, and background information relating to the production, which are included in study guides provided to the schools before the show arrives.

Financial support from the 黑料大事记 Public Library Foundation has been an important part of the effort to bring children鈥檚 theatre productions to northern Panhandle students, according to Mays. The Foundation had been underwriting an annual children鈥檚 theatre performance by the Nebraska Theatre Caravan and called for help about 15 years ago when the company ended its Panhandle tours, said Mays. Almost every year since then the Foundation has sponsored a free performance at M-Hall for Dawes County elementary students.

鈥淭hey help us subsidize the play and we give them recognition in the program and at the show,鈥 he said.

Though the idea of children鈥檚 theatre may bring to mind simple, cartoon-like characters and shows, it鈥檚 wrong to assume that plays for children can鈥檛 address serious themes, according to Mays, who points to 鈥淭he Arkansaw Bear,鈥 the first children鈥檚 show he directed at CSC, as an example. The play uses a character called The World鈥檚 Greatest Dancing Bear to address a young girl鈥檚 feelings of loss when she learns that her grandfather is dying.

鈥淲e underestimate kids. They have the same concerns you and I do. They just need to be told about them in a different way,鈥 Mays said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what theatre can do. Tell a story that makes them see they are not alone, that other people have these problems too.鈥

-George Ledbetter

Category: Campus Events, Campus News, Theatre