skygiants: the Phantom of the Opera, reaching out (creeper of the opera)
[personal profile] skygiants
I picked up The Wilder Plot after reading [personal profile] rachelmanija's review of it - it's a middle-grade book by Stephen Krensky about a high-school production of Midsummer Night's Dream, which protagonist Charlie Wilder has been volunteered for very much against his will. A heated battle for the seat of school president also ends up intersecting with the machinations around the play, thus providing plenty of opportunity for Stephen Krensky to run some mild middle-grade political satire.

It's definitely a funny book, and the Midsummer Night's Dream riffs are extremely cute, although I had a hard time getting over the premise, central to many of the characters' activities, that acting in a school play generates valuable political capital among one's peers. Some theater kids were popular, sure -- I have fond memories of the resident Theater Dreamboat, a sweet lad who received love notes on a regular basis, came out in junior year, and concluded his high school career by forming one-half of our high school's first gay power couple -- but I don't think anyone I knew ever tried out for a play on the assumption that it would yield social dividends.

(OK, I lie: we did have one kid in my high school who thought that having made an appearance on an episode of Law and Order was a good argument for his qualifications as a prospective school president. He attempted to make this argument in his campaign speech. We were unconvinced.)

But, I mean, other thing about the The Wilder Plot is that it's the kind of screwball comedy in which all the characters are colliding in entertaining ways due to their own wacky priorities, but nobody is actually friends with each other or acting in the play for fun, and that makes for an entertaining plot but also does not accord at all with my memories of high school theater.

Date: 2019-08-31 04:09 am (UTC)
sovay: (Morell: quizzical)
From: [personal profile] sovay
(OK, I lie: we did have one kid in my high school who thought that having made an appearance on an episode of Law and Order was a good argument for his qualifications as a prospective school president. He attempted to make this argument in his campaign speech. We were unconvinced.)

I would read that YA novel.

Date: 2019-08-31 04:20 am (UTC)
sovay: (Claude Rains)
From: [personal profile] sovay
"THE VOICE OF THE ACES!" I declared, loudly and involuntarily, to my assembled friends and family, so I guess he did achieve some measure of the fame he wanted in the end.

Reader, I LOL'd.

(He is never going to live that down.)

Date: 2019-08-31 05:07 am (UTC)
kore: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kore
Far in the future, his obituary: "[Firstname Middlename Lastname], known as Voice of the Aces...."

Date: 2019-09-03 07:57 pm (UTC)
larryhammer: Yotsuba Koiwai running, label: "enjoy everything" (enjoy everything)
From: [personal profile] larryhammer
I would read the hell out of that YA novel.

Date: 2019-09-03 08:56 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Cho Hakkai: intelligence)
From: [personal profile] sovay
I would read the hell out of that YA novel.

[personal profile] skygiants, WRITE A YA NOVEL.

Date: 2019-08-31 06:20 am (UTC)
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
From: [personal profile] rydra_wong
we did have one kid in my high school who thought that having made an appearance on an episode of Law and Order was a good argument for his qualifications as a prospective school president.

Given current politics: clearly he was just ahead of his time.

Date: 2019-08-31 12:35 pm (UTC)
aamcnamara: (Default)
From: [personal profile] aamcnamara
Theater was a (weirdly) Big Deal at my high school, so I can kinda see that premise, BUT that being said, the theater kids were all also friends and most of them were Very Intense About Their Art, so. (The theater kids WERE the popular / cool kids, at my school. It was extremely peculiar.)

Anyway, I might need to read this book.

Date: 2019-08-31 02:55 pm (UTC)
melannen: Commander Valentine of Alpha Squad Seven, a red-haired female Nick Fury in space, smoking contemplatively (Default)
From: [personal profile] melannen
Same here - theater was THE source of social capital at my high school, at least among the college-bound set, and yes, being a lead in the spring musical = being A Popular Kid.

(I think this is partly because, while the theater kids were at school all the time during the run-up to a play, they actually did have time to do stuff other than that most of the year, and the theater kids were involved in, on average, three or four other clubs or activities each. Whereas band kids were actually forbidden by the band director to do any other extracurriculars, and while the sports kids did have seasons, most of the ones who took it seriously did enough sports that they always had a practice for something. But also theater really was bigger than both band and sports at my school and I don't really know why, except that the theater director was very good at social engineering.)

Date: 2019-08-31 04:34 pm (UTC)
melannen: Commander Valentine of Alpha Squad Seven, a red-haired female Nick Fury in space, smoking contemplatively (Default)
From: [personal profile] melannen
We did three! A fall play (almost always a comedy) in late October, a children's play in February or so, and a spring musical usually in mid-May, IIRC. But for actors it was usually just a month or so of twice weekly afternoon rehearsals, and then one or two weeks of intense crunch time (I forget what we called it, it wasn't hell week, but similar), and then a couple weekends of performances.

And the children's play was kind of JV - minimal sets and staging, only about an hour long, and by tradition the people being cast as leads in the other two plays didn't audition; it was usually underclassmen and understudies. And we took it on tour of the elementary schools, so all but one of the performances were during the school day.

So other than those crunch periods twice a year, it didn't really take up any more time than other extracurriculars.

It probably helped that there were a lot of support people too - set construction, technical crew, stage crew, costumes, musical director, and student directors were all different people from the actors. I understand that in some schools the actors also have to build the sets, but at ours they only acted.

There was a pretty strict popularity gradient, too - leads/speaking parts; then student directors/choreographers/solo dancers; chorus/extras; costumers; band (who were not The Band Kids because the band director wouldn't let them skip marching practice, they were kids who played instruments but didn't want to commit to Real Band.) And then it started over again with the coolest counterculture kids (punks and goths mostly) as the set/lighting designers; then light crew; sound crew; stage crew; set construction. The set construction were the kids who played 1st edition D&D in their offtime and/or drew their own manga, and they rarely interacted with the lead actors. I made it as high as sound crew at my zenith!

(Note: [personal profile] stellar_dust, who made it as high as student director, would probably claim she was never a Popular Kid, and that there was no social hierarchy, but she would be wrong. There were plenty of actor kids who would help out with the crew when needed or when not cast, it is true - they weren't the bad kind of popular kid, generally. And there was the occasional kid whose sheer talent - especially if they could sing bass parts - got them a lead role despite not being a standard-issue Popular Kid, or a gothy tech person was given a minor speaking role in the children's play, but even they got that popular kid status for the duration of the play.)

Date: 2019-08-31 04:45 pm (UTC)
melannen: Commander Valentine of Alpha Squad Seven, a red-haired female Nick Fury in space, smoking contemplatively (Default)
From: [personal profile] melannen
Although I should note that theater was not a stepping stone to being class president or SGA president, but this was not because they couldn't have won, it was because class office and SGA were both way too uncool for theater kids to care much about.

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