Welcome

Welcome
John William Tuohy lives in Washington DC

*** OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS ***

 


June Bingham New Playwright Commission ~ This commission opportunity provides resources and support toward the creation and development of a new play by early-career women/femme and/or non-binary storytellers. The opportunity will culminate in a 60-minute 2-person play that will be workshopped and presented as a reading for an audience at L&IC’s Fall Retreat in September of 2023.

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FRESH WORDS 5 MINUTE PLAYS ANTHOLOGY ~ We are open for submissions for our Special 5 Minute Play Anthology 'CONTEMPORARY NEW YORK PLAYS-2022' .

1. The 5 Minute Play can be about:


a) Social,/cultural/ economic life in New York.

b) Literary trends in New york.

c) New York theatre life.

d) Migrants in New York.

e) New York and American Dream

f) Individual and New York city.

g) New York & human values

h) New York and broken dreams

i) New York and writers/artists

j) Any other topic of interest that is not covered above but deals with New York.

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Musical Theatre: Live & In Color is looking for playwrights, composers, and lyricists of color and/or other underrepresented communities interested in developing their new musical.
The selected musical submission will have a two-week workshop in the fall at The Bingham Camp in Salem, Connecticut culminating in a staged presentation to an invited audience.


*** FOR MORE INFORMATION about these and other opportunities see the web site at https://www.nycplaywrights.org ***


*** IN THE PIT ***

The number of musicians in a Broadway pit orchestra has always been a point of contention between the American Federation of Musicians, Local 802 and the League of American Theatres and Producers. These two organizations have had many collective bargaining agreements that have helped dictate and alter the size of orchestras on Broadway. On one side you have the musicians, who are concerned with preserving jobs and the musical integrity of a show, and on the other you have the producers who are trying to ensure the overall and financial success of the show. This thesis examines these orchestral changes through a technological, economic, and societal lens to help understand the basis for these change

More...
https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/stu_dist/87/


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A PEEK AT THE ORCHESTRA PIT: Not only does The Producers have the largest orchestra (21 members including the conductor!) since our very first Broadway show, My Fair Lady, it's also the largest orchestra currently performing in the Chicagoland area. No small feat. Get a peek inside the orchestra pit in this video hosted by Producers Music Director and Conductor Tom Vendafreddo. It's a rare look into a small space that's home to some huge sounds! 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9O9Ao9NuhdE


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Audiences rarely see one of the most memorable parts of a live production.
Most theater and dance performances feature live musicians tucked in a sub-stage orchestra pit, blasting and crooning melodies that enhance the show without audiences often realizing it.
But this wasn’t always so.
As part of The Smith Center’s ongoing blog series exploring the history of theater magic, discover below how the orchestra pit originated.
 
A CROWDED STAGE
When the advent of opera in the late 1500s transformed live performances, it led to an unexpected dilemma: a crowded stage.
Orchestras accompanying the performances were often placed on stage alongside the actors, with as many as 50 musicians sharing the spotlight.
“Monteverdi's ‘L'Orfeo’ probably had 40 or so musicians sitting on the stage in a hall that had an audience of about 200,” says theater writer Brad Hathaway.
By the late 1700s, some theaters seated orchestras in front of the stage — which led to referring to a theater’s main level as the Orchestra Level.
But this only proved dangerous for musicians.
“Patrons could be quite demanding and threatening,” Hathaway says. “Musicians in Boston printed a notice asking the ‘thoughtless or ill-disposed not to throw apples, stones and other missiles into the orchestra.’"

More...
https://thesmithcenter.com/explore/smith-center-blog/the-invention-of-the-orchestra-pit/


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Getting work as a musician on Broadway (1996), either as a regular or as a substitute, is not easy. As is the case with many job searches, it is often knowing someone that counts. "The whole business is set up on a referral and networking basis," Mr. Russo said. "But often musicians go on the road first to break in."

That's exactly what Mary Stephenson of Greenwich is doing. In July she joined the Raoul Company for a one-year national tour with "Phantom of the Opera." She moves every six to nine weeks, recently having left California for Arizona.

More...
https://www.nytimes.com/1996/01/14/nyregion/it-s-a-long-trip-to-the-orchestra-pit.html


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Broadway, looking to regain its prepandemic audiences, is relying on boldface names such as Hugh Jackman, Daniel Craig, Sarah Jessica Parker…and Mike Boschen.

Mr. Boschen is in the current revival of “The Music Man.” He is a trombonist, and they are having a moment.

In “Hadestown,” trombonist Brian Drye appears on stage and interacts with the cast. (As one theater observer noted on Twitter: “Phenomenal cast and all, but the trombone is the real star.”) In “Chicago,” trombonists Bruce Bonvissuto and James Burton III have coveted places on stage with the rest of the orchestra. “We can feel very viscerally the energy coming from the audience,” says Mr. Bonvissuto.

Then, there’s Mr. Boschen in “The Music Man.” “This is probably the coolest trombone part I’ve ever gotten to play” on Broadway, says the 48-year-old journeyman, who has performed with about 40 productions in a career that includes shows both familiar (“Cats”) and forgotten (a musical adaptation of Aristophanes’ “The Frogs”).

More...
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/whos-sliding-into-a-big-role-on-broadway-trombonists-11647802145


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Seymour Red Press remembers the days when Broadway shows were bankrolled by mobsters, when marijuana was a staple of the pit, and when brilliant maniacs like Jerome Robbins, Jule Styne, and Charles Strouse were creating the world’s greatest musicals. Theater may be ephemeral, but Red’s woodwind lines will live forever on the original cast albums of shows like Gypsy, Mame, Chicago, and Dreamgirls. In Mack & Mabel, he played the melancholy saxophone solo in “Time Heals Everything”; in the 1992 revival of Guys and Dolls, he played the sublime, bluesy riff at the beginning of “My Time of Day.” Now 93, Red shows no signs of slowing down. He has hired the musicians for every Encores! show since the series’ inception and is an unparalleled source of musical theater lore. “He’s like Yoda,” says Encores! artistic director Jack Viertel. “When Yoda talks, you listen.” On a recent afternoon, we did just that.

CITY CENTER: How did you get your first Broadway gig?
SEYMOUR RED PRESS: I grew up in the era of the big bands. When I was 13, Benny Goodman was like Elvis Presley; it was the best music I’d ever heard in my life. As soon as I put a saxophone in my mouth, I knew that it was what I wanted to do. My dream was to play with Benny Goodman—and I did, in 1957 at the Waldorf Astoria. That same year, I got married and got my first Broadway show, The Body Beautiful. It was a flop, but it was the beginning of a career I couldn’t have imagined.

More...
https://www.nycitycenter.org/About/Blog/2017/Yoda-of-the-Orchestra-Pit/


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TIPS FOR THE PIT

Have all of your equipment with you in an easily accessible place. This includes instrument stands, pad blotting paper or cigarette paper (very important – I cannot tell you how many times I’ve used my music to wipe off condensation from my pads in a pit-related emergency), a set of tiny screwdrivers (you can pick these up from the dollar store), ear plugs, pencils, and small bottles of water. You likely will not have a lot of space to store these things so try to bring a small bag that can be draped over the back of your chair for essentials. I really like to use a simple drawstring backpack for this purpose.

More...
https://racheltaylorgeier.org/2018/08/03/tips-for-the-pit/

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