Just stop. As someone who has been involved in community theatre in this area for decades, with casts and crews that include children, teens, and adults, not once has a show ever had “most” of its males be gay. A higher percentage than in the typical population? Yes. Far below 50% however. And quite a few lesbian and bi women as well. Your overgeneralizations are gross and perpetuate stereotypes that are harmful to all men in theatre, whether gay, straight, bi, or anything else. Stop commenting on your perceptions of people’s sexuality, especially school theatre participants. |
| GDS |
Oneness Family School in Bethesda has an annual musical theater program. It is excellent and kids get to perform in a real theater. |
| I would suggest looking at Field in DC. |
| Thread is almost 2 years old. |
That’s a weird take. Their choral program is excellent. |
| Sssas has a robust theater and musical performance program. Perfect fit for our starfish boy. But rude to say that theater boys are generally gay. Not true and you aren’t helping because it makes the not gay boys feel like they will be pigeon holed if they do theater. But I’m sure you think you are in opened minded. The gay boys from our school are headed to St Albans and SWOW and gay girls are headed to Madiera. |
| Starfish was meant to say straight. lol!! |
| Bullis has a terrific theater program....and is not religious They are taking one of their plays to the Edinburgh Fringe festival this summer. |
| Holton has a great program too. |
I imagined a kid standing like a starfish onstage receiving applause. It worked, but I guess the opposite of what you intended. As the parent of a serious theater kid, I agree that publics are a good option, but whether a kid is in private or public school, most kids do "outside" theater. OP mentions Bethesda, and there is a conservatory at Imagination Stage that is quite good and tends to put on classic works. The pre-professional program at Round House is also great, and more focused on contemporary theater. Traveling Players at Tyson's has a high quality Shakespeare program, as does Lumina in Silver Spring. For musical theater, Adventure Theater or the Imagination Stage musical theater programs are very strong. Basically, I would not spend that much time worrying about the theater programs at individual MS and HS, because that's not where kids are getting their training. A small private will have more opportunities for every kid to get a role. A big public will be able to put on giant spectacles and typically have more opportunities for kids who want to explore the production/technical theater sides. |
There may be a reason fewer kids try out in the bigger schools -- they know they won't get a chance. If you want to see or be in a show with pre-professional talent, there are programs for that around here. I think school programs should be about educating everyone, letting kids try and encouraging reluctant kids to step outside of their comfort zones. As for size, where there is a will, there is a way. SAAS, one of the tiniest private boys' schools in the area (like 30 boys per grade), had a cast of 85 students for "Newsies" this year. They have an open summer stock program that helps build a community of actors to fill out the roles. I am all for theater as an inclusive experience, not having only the best and most talented children on stage. In our public school, no way would my kids get roles -- some really talented friends got cut and stopped doing theater entirely. I think that is awful. But in a more inclusive program, my less talented kid did get roles and so had a chance to be trained, improved every year, and now is doing theater in college. That opportunity would have been lost in a bigger program or in one focused exclusively on putting the best talent forward. That said, I do love to see a great high school show! So much talent around here. Let's keep supporting the arts! |
Is the Holton theater person leaving? I hope not. |
Isn’t the Holton tech theater person moving to Bullis? |
| In this area there are the Cappy Awards and the Brandon Victor Dixon Awards for teenagers. Looking into which schools send student as finalists to these events = making it to "states" in sports. |