少女福利

Student directors learn, grow by staging scenes from famous plays

December 8, 2022
Faculty/staff report
A photo of Anna Paradis and Sarah Calvin acting in a scene from "Steel Magnolias."

Anna Paradis ’26 and Sarah Calvin ’25 in a (Christmas-themed) scene from “Steel Magnolias” directed by Ainsley Cook ’24.

Students in Professor Peter Harrigan鈥檚 鈥淒irecting鈥 class (Theatre 309) this Wednesday evening had a chance to present scenes from well-known plays on the McCarthy Theatre mainstage in order to show what they have learned.

Harrigan, a 1983 Saint Michael’s theater graduate, explained how it works. 鈥淲hen I teach the course, students choose a modern or contemporary play that interests them and spend the whole semester researching it. This involves a one-hour class presentation, a comprehensive analysis paper, and ultimately directing a 5鈥7-minute scene from the play, with other students acting. I think it is the only final exam on campus that requires an audience!鈥

The professor said he had had six students in the course this semester. 鈥淭hey chose a wide variety of plays to study,鈥 he said, 鈥渇rom Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead (Tom Stoppard – 1966) to The Legend of Georgia McBride (Matthew Lopez – 2014), held joint auditions, coordinated furniture, props, costumes, lighting, sound, schedules, and publicity to produce the evening of scenes. The night went swimmingly!

McKenzie 鈥淜enzie鈥 Rowbotham 鈥24 is a theatre and music major with Spanish and criminology minors who also is the campus Drama Club president and a Resident Assistant. She directed a scene from the play Deathtrap by Ira Levin for Harrigan’s class.

A photo of James Pacheco and Liam Ravan in a scene from "Deathtrap."

James Pacheco ’24 and Liam Ravan ’26 in a scene from “Deathtrap” directed by Kenzie Rowbotham ’24

鈥淐oming into this class, I had very little experience with directing, and so I was very excited to start working,鈥 Rowbotham said. 鈥淎t first, I let my actors play around with what they wanted to do. We read through the entire script and started to talk about what their characters’ motivations were for the scene. Then, once I was able to get some set pieces and props for them, the fun began. 鈥

Initially, she said, she threw out some ideas as to what they may want to do movement-wise and encouraged them to follow their instincts. 鈥淚 didn’t want to have a rigid set of movements because I felt that their input was important not only to the process, but to them understanding their characters and using their experiences to motivate them,鈥 the student-director said. 鈥淭hen, we started to use those impulses to roughly 鈥榖lock鈥 the scene.

After vacation, she said, Harrigan came to one of her group鈥檚 rehearsals 鈥渁nd gave me some great notes about how to improve our scene, and by the time we were at tech, it had really come together.鈥

鈥淢y actors were amazing throughout this entire process, and I cannot stress enough how delightful it was to work with them through this process,鈥 she said. 鈥淪itting in the auditorium last night was amazing. Everything came together wonderfully, and I honestly felt like a proud mother at her child’s first dance recital. A huge thank-you to Peter, Liam, and James for helping me in making this all come together!鈥

Other student-directed scenes came from the plays Steel Magnolias by Robert Harling, A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams, and Almost, Maine by John Cariani,

Elizabeth Murray

For all press inquiries contact Elizabeth Murray, Associate Director of Communications at 少女福利.