Singing in the key of ‘Annie’
Michael Miller
In Andersen Elementary School’s production of “Annie,” Tiffany
Paladin played a poor orphan girl who unexpectedly enters the upper
class. During the course of the production, Tiffany discovered
something unexpected about herself.
“I’ve never really sung before,” said the sixth-grader, who
portrayed the title character in one of the play’s two casts. “I
didn’t know I could do it before this play. But I didn’t have to
practice much -- it just came naturally.”
For a first-time singer, though, Tiffany had a solid support team
behind her. The Andersen spring musical, which ran over the weekend
at Corona del Mar High School’s Little Theater, was the school’s most
elaborate production of the year, with period costumes and scenery,
live musicians, even corporate sponsorships. PacifiCare, Wells Fargo
and Bristol Farms were among the companies that helped fund the
musical by purchasing ads on the playbill.
“It’s really more than a play,” said parent volunteer Rose
Reynolds. “It’s a professional production. The talent that surrounds
the play is amazing.”
Reynolds had two daughters in the cast: sixth-grader Sarah
Reynolds, who played the tyrannical orphanage head, Miss Hannigan,
and fifth-grader Sophia, who had a triple role as a singer, a hobo
and a schoolgirl.
Sarah and Sophia were among the many fifth- and sixth-grade
students who had to learn about the clothes and manners of another
era. The musical is based on Harold Gray’s comic strip “Little Orphan
Annie” and takes place during the Great Depression of the 1930s, when
the gap between rich and poor widened in America as never before.
Even though the subject is poverty, the show still captures a time
when American society was more proper and refined.
“We’re not doing any accents,” said Katy Smith, the musical’s
director. “I don’t think people talked much differently then than
they do now. The costumes were harder. Girls want to wear their pants
around their hips instead of their waist, and that’s not how it was
done back then.”
“We gave them a mini-history lesson about the Depression,” added
Kim Gordon, a parent volunteer who co-produced the show. “We
explained about Miss Hannigan that she hates kids and hates her job,
but a lot of people were without jobs at that time and she couldn’t
give it up.”
Smith, an Irvine Valley College student, made her directorial
debut with “Annie.” During her days at the Musical Theater Academy of
Orange County, Smith had been a student of Margie King, the academy’s
founder, who later directed several Andersen musicals.
Before rehearsals started in December, King offered the job of
directing “Annie” to her former pupil.
The first-time director, who recently acted in Irvine Valley
College’s production of “The Impossible Years,” also served as
choreographer and voice coach for the musical -- often training
first-time singers and dancers, including Tiffany Paladin.
“I think everyone knows it [‘Annie’] who knows musical theater,”
Smith said. “I haven’t been in it, but I’ve seen it about a billion
times.”
In the course of rehearsals, Smith saw it a few times more, as the
cast and crew practiced three times a week for nearly three months.
By the time dress rehearsals finished Thursday, the school had sold
out all four performances.
“It’s one of those things where anticipation is the scariest
part,” Smith said.
* MICHAEL MILLER covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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