Not just going through the motions
Alex Coolman
“Excuse me. Excuse me. Let’s take that transition again, please. Ladies:
the first step is a cross step.”
Margie King was working out a tricky moment in a routine for a musical
number. The 51-year-old Tustin resident had just come up with a change to
the moves a few minutes before and was trying to get the dancers to
focus, to get them stepping cleanly through the pattern she had designed.
The only difficulty was that her students were all teenagers and had the
teenage genius for cramming impishness into every moment that wasn’t
perfectly structured. Given 10 seconds between dances, they managed to
crack private jokes with each other, make fun of the steps they were
doing, and slouch like balloons losing helium.
But King wasn’t giving her charges much slack.
“Listen, please. Listen,” she told them. And, to a degree that most
school teachers would probably envy, she got what she asked for. When she
spoke, when she moved, when she played the piano to illustrate a point,
the dancers paid attention.
King, the founding artistic director of The Musical Theater Academy of
Orange County, says the kids who come to her classes should expect to
work hard. She regards the programs that she and a handful of other
choreographers and directors have developed at the academy to be worth
the effort.
“Unless [young people] are really involved in the development and the
appreciation of these art forms,” King said, “they’re going to be dying
arts.”
More than television and movies, King said, the live performing arts need
an understanding audience. And whether the children who come to her
decide to make a career out of art, she feels that they take away from
their experience at the academy a sensitivity to music and theater that
they can’t get elsewhere.
“The schools aren’t doing much,” King said. “Their funds have been cut
back so badly, especially at the younger level.”
The result of these cutbacks, King said, is that a broad spectrum of
school-age children are not exposed with any depth to the performing
arts. While some youngsters with obvious talent are able to participate
in school musicals or plays, kids who show less initial skill sometimes
don’t get the chance to find out what the arts have to offer.
That’s an unfortunate situation, in King’s opinion, because exposure to
performances, even for children who won’t be the next Leonardo DiCaprio
or Kate Winslet, can be a valuable tool in developing young minds and
personalities.
“Kids always want to hide in a group,” King said. But through performance
they can learn some of the basic lessons of the theatrical existence:
that “it’s OK to make mistakes. That’s how we learn.”
Young performers can also come to realize that things that seem
terrifying -- appearing before an audience, for example -- might not
necessarily be so awful after all.
“There’s kids who can sing and dance at home, but they walk into a
[rehearsal] room and they freeze,” King said. “But you find as they get a
little accomplishment that they’re really anxious to do a little more.”
At a recent rehearsal, some of the most confident examples of King’s
students were strutting their stuff. The cabaret group, which is composed
of talented children age 12 to 18, was working on a variety of Broadway
tunes and holiday-oriented material. They ran through “All that Jazz,”
did a quick Christmas number, and segued without delay into the Hanukkah
routine whose steps were causing King so much consternation.
For kids going through the agonies of adolescence, the cabaret performers
were magnificently confident. The material they dealt with -- “All That
Jazz,” in particular -- required a kind of physical assurance and grace
that most adults would find challenging, but the dancers for the most
part seemed unruffled by the roles they had to play.
Vanessa Long, a 15-year-old Newport Harbor High student resident who has
been acting and performing since she was in second grade, had a theory to
explain the confidence of the performers.
“The group here is really close,” she said, “but none of us really have
feelings for each other. ... The hardest thing, but it was only at the
start, was to be confident with all the good people in this group.”
Long, who has already done quite a bit of print modeling, said she hoped
to go on to work in movie or television acting, as do many of the members
of the cabaret group. Chris Downey, a 13-year-old veteran of 10 plays and
a pair of music videos for the band Sugar Ray, says he aspires to be in a
show like “Dawson’s Creek,” and -- again, like many of the group -- has a
physical presence as a performer that suggests the goal is a reasonable
one.
But King is insistent that music and theater should not only be for the
kids with the all-star looks and the pop music voices, and she backs up
her beliefs with her approach toward auditioning.
“We don’t turn kids away,” she says. Instead, she tries to find roles for
children that they will be comfortable with.
King tries to keep costs down for the same reason, charging $85 a month
for her classes for older children and $55 for young kids. Ten percent of
her students attend the school on scholarships that she helps coordinate.
“It made a real impact on my life,” she said of the performing arts. “And
having been involved in it I can see what it can do for kids as well.”
For more information about The Musical Theater Academy of Orange County
classes and productions, call (949) 646-6624.
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