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 The free panel was presented by the Office of
Film, Theatre and Broadcasting, the Apollo Theater Education Program and The
Broadway League. Photo courtesy of OFTB.
By Krystal
Bowden
November 10, 2010 - The bright lights of
Broadway came to the Apollo Theater on Monday, November 8, 2010, thanks to the
combined efforts of the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment, the Apollo
Theater Education Program, and the Broadway League. Behind the Scenes:
Careers On and Off Broadway featured six talented backstage
professionals who have built successful careers on Broadway and other theatrical
venues in creative roles such as set, lighting and costume design, choreography
and music composition.
 Highlights of the panelists' work were on
display to illustrate their careers. Photo courtesy of OFTB. |
The panel was moderated by NY1 anchor and theater critic Roma Torre,
who began the event by introducing short videos that gave the audience a
glimpse of the panelists’ career highlights.
Kevin Adams, a
lighting designer whose stage credits include Spring Awakening,
American Idiot and Next to Normal, got his start in the
business by studying set design. He developed an interest in lighting
after observing ways in which artists used light to enhance museum
exhibits. He then asked a director if he could try lighting a set he had
designed (pro-bono of course), and gradually began developing a reputation
in the industry as a talented lighting designer. “I started getting more
and more phone calls,” he recalled. “The city was very kind to
me.”
Micki Grant, a veteran composer/lyricist,
playwright/librettist and actress who has been involved in the creation of
at least eighteen | theatrical productions, always
knew she was going to have a career in theater and music. “I feel
extraordinarily blessed to have spent the majority of my life doing what I had
always wanted to do since I was eight years old. You have to love it so much
that you can’t imagine ever doing anything else.”
The panel also
included composer, pianist and musical director Kenny Seymour, who is currently
working as the conductor and musical director for Memphis – A New
Musical, now in its second year on Broadway and the winner of the 2010 Tony
Award for Best Musical. He stressed the importance of education in pursuing a
career in theater. “You need to not only have a creative vision, but also the
technical background to be able to realize that vision.”
 Kevin Adams, Marion J. Caffey and Micki Grant
discuss their careers. Photo courtesy of OFTB.
Marion Caffey,
writer, director and choreographer of such hits as 3 Mo’ Tenors and
3 Mo’ Divas, agreed with Seymour’s assessment. “I make sure I surround
myself with people who are extremely educated in their field when I direct a
show.”
When asked what a playwright can do to jumpstart their career,
panelists recommended numerous collaborative organizations throughout the city
that allow young artists to experiment and try out new ideas. Going to the River
(GTTR) provides a New York City forum for professional African-American female
playwrights to develop, refine and present their work. The Harlem-based Frank
Silvera Writer’s Workshop continues to deliver on its mission of reading,
developing and showcasing exciting work from playwrights of all colors and
backgrounds. There are also numerous mentoring programs available for aspiring
playwrights and theater professionals, such as the Obie Award-winning Mentor
Project with Cherry Lane Theater, which engages leading dramatists in one-on-one
mentoring relationships with emerging playwrights for an entire theater season.
It’s about getting your work in front of someone, the panelists emphasized.
 Audience members were able to ask the panliests
questions about career advice. Photo courtesy of OFTB.
Torre
commented to the panelists that success in the theater industry can usually be
boiled down to three main factors: talent, luck, and hard work. When asked which
of those three were the most important, the panelists unanimously agreed. “Hard
work is definitely the most important,” Grant declared.
Seymour pointed
out that “You start with talent, but you have to take the time to turn that
talent into true craftsmanship.” Adams commented that you have to make your own
luck in the theater.
Ann Hould-Ward, the costume designer behind such
Tony Award-winning productions as Into the Woods and Beauty and the
Beast, was a testament to the idea of making your own luck in the business.
“My entire life has been about tenacity,” she told the audience. When she was a
young aspiring designer living in Montana, she decided to write to Patricia
Zipprodt, the costume designer behind Fiddler on the Roof. As luck
would have it, Zipprodt wrote back. A correspondence followed, and Hould-Ward’s
persistence, which included sending a memorable package to Zipprodt with a
cowboy hat and a note begging to come to New York to learn the craft, eventually
earned her an unpaid internship with the designer. She told the audience how
important it was for her to have a creative mentor at the beginning of her
career. “You have to be willing to fight for what you want.”
 From left to right: Kevin Adams, Ruthlyn
Salomons, Marion J. Caffey, Micki Grant and Kenny J. Seymour. Photo courtesy
of OFTB.
The panelists also discussed the frequency of rejection
in the business, and the fact that it was just part of the territory. “You have
to be like a bouncing ball,” Grant advised. “People in the theater world are
unique in that their career is always looking for the next job. Rejection should
not bring on dejection.”
Ruthlyn Salomons, resident dance supervisor of
Broadway’s The Lion King, added, “You have to have an incredible amount
of confidence in what you want to do.” Salomons has also worked as the associate
choreographer of The Color Purple and has performed and traveled
worldwide with dance companies including the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater,
the White Oak Dance Project and Donald Byrd/The Group. “If you work hard, keep
your focus and leave yourself open to new possibilities, amazing opportunities
can present themselves to you.”
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