|
Kearran
Giovanni |
So, here it was for 12 young hopefuls: The culmination of four
years of working hard at the College of Cincinnati-Conservatory
of Music. Each year, the seniors who will be graduating start in
the fall to develop their own musical revue based on a specific
idea and buttress it with songs that support it. "It's
their own creation," says Aubrey Berg, chairman of the
musical theater department. "They not only choose the
material but direct and choreograph the show, too."
This is not just a musical theater exercise. Come April,
ready or not, the dozen come to New York to perform this
showcase -- twice -- for an assembled group of parents and
well-wishers, yes, but first and foremost, for agents. Everyone
knows that if he or she snags someone to represent him or her,
having a life upon the stage won't be as wickedly difficult.
The kids come to New York with varying degrees of Cincinnati
success. Some have starred in the school's mainstage
productions, such as Kearran Giovanni, who'd played Kate in the
Lippa Wild Party. Others had appeared in the second stage
productions, such as Jackie Vanderbeck, who'd been in Promenade.
Others still had been in the university's summer offerings, such
as Blake Ginther, who portrayed Schroeder in You're a Good
Man, Charlie Brown.
But, to use a sports analogy, that was the regular season and
these are the playoffs, where everyone starts from scratch. A
few years back, there was a CCM student whose only mainstage
credit was "Gentleman from Japan" in The Hot Mikado.
But when he did the showcase, casting agents from Queer as
Folk were there, desperate to find their Justin for the
upcoming Showtime series. They decided they had him as soon as
Randy Harrison emerged and sang a song from Floyd Collins.
So one never knows, do one?
This was the 11th consecutive year that Berg has brought his
graduating class to the city. For the past few, he's booked the
Westside Theatre, where I Love You, You're Perfect, Now
Change has been playing. "It has a perfect set for a
revue," Berg says. "I hope this show never, ever
closes."
|
Melissa
Bohon |
Now the day that was once years away has finally arrived. The
lobby is filled and Berg is pleased to find that many of his
former students are there to support the Class of '03. Tobi
Foster, who played Cosette in the Broadway company of Les
Misérables, is there to cheer on her boyfriend Blake
Ginther. Justin Bohon, who was Will Parker in the recent Oklahoma!
-- and has both a Theatre World Award and an Astaire Award to
prove it -- is there for his sister, Melissa. "I'm more
nervous for her now than I was for myself when I did this
showcase," he says with a smile that's undercut by
brotherly concern.
Best of all, Berg tells me, more agents than ever before are
in attendance. Each is given 12 eight-by-ten glossies with
résumés stapled on the back, on which these kids list
everything they've done from master classes to local
commercials. There's a program that tells what each kid will
perform and, more to the point, a slice of paper that says,
"I would like to interview the following auditionees,"
followed by the names of Nathan Paul Allen, Melissa Bohon, Josh
Dazel, Sarah Jane Everman, Blake Ginther, Kearran Giovanni, Leo
Nouhan, Will Ray, Angel Reda, Neal Shrader, Jackie Vanderbeck,
and Kristi Villani. Each kid is hoping that at least one agent
will be impressed and circle his or her name, and all are
praying that many will. (Will anyone break the record set by
Matt Bogart several years ago, when 16 agents expressed their
interest?)
The theme for this year's revue is Mars and Venus, and
its songs stress the differences between men and women. I revel
in the fact that virtually all of them are show songs and even
most of those that aren't have been adopted into the fold.
"Trouble," the kids say, comes from Smokey Joe's
Cafe, and "Just the Way You Are" is from Movin'
Out. Well, why shouldn't pop songs benefit from this
greatness by association? A few years ago, the students did a
revue dedicated to Off-Broadway, so imagine my surprise when I
heard an Ethel Merman standard. Wait a minute, The Merm never
played Off-Broadway! But then I checked the program and saw that
the kids credited the song to Rita McKenzie's Off-Broadway show Ethel
Merman's Broadway. Nice use of a loophole, no?
|
Blake
Ginther |
Today, they start with a song from the movie Anastasia.
All 12 brightly sing, "Life is a road, and I want to keep
going; Love is a river I wanna keep flowing; Life is a road, now
and forever; Wonderful journey." Here's hoping they're
right. The men then sing "We Are the Boys" from Big
River, followed by the women doing "All Girl Band"
from A ... My Name Is Alice. Then they break into smaller
groups; a trio of men give a first-rate rendition of
"Second Grade" from Personals, then Reda and
Vanderbeck sharply perform "Best Friend" from the
LaChiusa Wild Party. (Later, to show they don't play
favorites, Ginther hauntingly offers "What Is It abut
Her?" from Lippa's version.)
It's a 50-minute look at musical theater through the ages.
Bohon scores with "I Cain't Say No" from that '40s
musical and "If" from a '50s one. Vanderbeck does the
'60s song "He Touched Me" without a scintilla of
Streisand, making it a comic number, and getting laughs in the
process. Villani does that '70s song "Men" from So
Long, 174th Street and nails it before Ginther and
Vanderbeck render an '80s song, "Two People in Love"
from Baby, and do it so splendidly that I hope they get
the chance to audition for the revival that just might happen at
the Paper Mill next season. Will Ray takes us into the '90s with
the title tune of Kiss of the Spider Woman on the precise
same stage where Bob Cuccioli debuted the song in New York (via And
the World Goes 'Round), and matches that now well known
performer's achievement. Similarly, Shrader and Villani do
"A Stud and a Babe" from I Love You, You're
Perfect, Now Change and look right at home on the set,
making me hope that someone connected with the long-run hit just
might be hanging around and will sign them up as the next
replacements. (Stranger things have happened in show business.)
And so it goes, slickly and superbly. No one makes an error
(nor will anyone in the second show), as Dazel dazzles with
"Proud of Your Boy" from Aladdin and Everman
shines with "Running in Place" from Steel Pier.
I adore that Nathan Paul Allen does "Floozies" from my
beloved The Grass Harp and afterwards, when I see him in
the crowded lobby where so many huddle around the kids, I go to
shake his hand for finding and choosing the song and for
delivering it with the perfect insouciance. He confesses that
Neal Shrader -- "who has every original cast album ever
made" -- recommended it to him. Now I want to shake
Shrader's hand (well, I would have anyway for his nifty
rendition of "The Marriage Proposal" from Falsettos),
but he's surrounded by people, and I hope that every one of them
is an agent. Instead, I talk to Leo Nouhan's parents and tell
them something I firmly believe: The kid has a masculine
presence that's going to serve him well in musical theater. What
a right-on job he did with "A Miracle Would Happen"
from The Last Five Years. I hope to see him in that show
and many more.
|
Will
Ray |
After an hour of lobby love, Berg calls the 12 into the theater
where he delivers the news. Five agents are interested in you,
three in you, six in you, and, alas, none at all for three of
the kids. Kearran Giovanni ties Bogart's record of 16 and Will
Ray is only a whit behind with 15. While that's wonderful, all
the kids have to be reminded -- to use another sports analogy --
that this is just the first inning of the professional game.
Scoring now is nothing to sneeze at, but there are plenty of
frames in which the other kids will have the chance to score.
We'll see how talent, perseverance, and the most important thing
of all -- being in the right place at the right time -- affects
the College of Cincinnati-Conservatory of Music Class of '03.
********************
[To contact Peter Filichia directly, e-mail him at pfilichia@aol.com]