@@pokiandi5228 ru-vid.comq12DwtQDC9M?si=AT4BDVu2wRHaYrSm idk if it'll work but the comment is reason #57 why I wish I could play a character of the opposite gender
My girlfriend sent me this. I am not a theatre kid. She is the theatre kid. But whatever she likes, I must like. I have been in multiple musicals because of her. Sometimes, it's a hassle to be gay for a theatre kid
you guys i have an audition for addams family in two days!! this is my 6th musical (ive done other productions like plays, etc) and im going for lucas or gomez. even after all these years auditioning is still scary 😭😭 edit/update: i got uncle fester lol
does anybody have any advice for high school theater? rehearsals for the school musical are on the first day of school and i don’t know what to expect.
@@OliviaWilson-ww9jr that’s awesome!! i hope you have so much fun! our school did lion king not too long ago and the kid who was simba missed the opening song so the ensemble had to sing his part 💀
It's one of the stock words/phrases actors say to each other when they're in the background of a scene because it looks a lot more convincing to an audience in terms of "people having a conversation" than if they just mime talking and it's not obtrusive enough that it will distract from the main dialogue in the scene (which can be a problem if they try and improvise an actual conversation). Other examples of words/phrases used for this which I've come across: "watermelon", "toy boat", "pig in a blanket", and (possibly my all-time favourite) "llama left doughnuts on the mat". Ideally, you want a word or phrase with a lot of vowels and very few hard consonants and some degree of dynamic mouth movement.