Youthful Expectations
By Bob Gariano
Two weeks ago a good friend of mine who lives in Dallas was
visiting Lake Forest. Her daughter is a boarding student at Lake Forest Academy
and the student had a leading role in this year’s LFA class play, a production
of Stephen Schwartz’s melodic play, Pippin.
My friend asked me if I would like to join her for the Saturday performance and
I was pleased to accept her invitation.
I was swept away by the quality and energy of this high
school production. Even though the LFA play was done on a small auditorium
stage with minimal accompaniment, the players sang and danced their parts with
an energy and expertise that belied the young age of the high school cast. I
have seen plays on Broadway that were not as well presented.
The quality of the production came through the intersection
of three happy attributes. The play itself has the hopeful, youthful lyrics and
melodies that perfectly fit the young actors. The actors themselves were
disciplined and skillful in both solo performance and in chorus. Finally, the
adroit management and coaching of the LFA teachers showed through. These
teachers got the best out of the young actors because they expected the best. This
theme of high expectations is one that runs through the LFA student experience.
Youthful energy
The character of Pippin accurately represents the
hopefulness and naiveté of youth. Right before intermission, Prince Pippin does
away with his father who had ruled his country with an iron hand in a war like
and feudal state. Pippin’s first act as ruler reflects his sense of justice and
egalitarianism. He issues a decree to redistribute land to the peasants. He
empties the treasury to redistribute wealth to the middle class and the poor.
He seeks to create utopian fairness in his country. No sooner were the decrees
issued than foreign invaders appear at the city gates. Pippin realizes that an
army requires funding and he reverses his utopian dreams to deal with the real politik of the world.
The poignancy of the lyrics, especially Pippin’s solo where
he sings “Gotta find my corner of the sky” is all the more touching when we
realize that the words were written by a young student composer about to begin
his career in the demanding world of the theater. These were words that came
from the heart.
Composer Stephen
Schwartz
The youthful exuberance of the play does not come by chance.
The lyrics and music for Pippin were
written by acclaimed American musical theater composer Stephen Lawrence
Schwartz. Schwartz wrote the play as a 19 year old undergraduate studying
musical theater at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. The play was
originally performed by CMU’s student actors’ workshop, “Scotch ‘n’ Soda.” I
remember seeing that student production when I was an undergraduate student at
CMU some 40 years ago.
Carnegie Mellon at that time, and for some decades since,
has emerged as the preeminent dramatic arts school in the country. Even though
this Midwestern technical school was the first college in the US to offer an
undergraduate in drama in 1917, it was not until the last 40 years that the
school has gained real prominence in the dramatic arts. Now the school’s
reputation in this field is well established. CMU alumni include Ted Danson of Cheers and Damages, Steven Bochco of NYPD
Blues, John Wells of ER, Paula
Kauffman Wagner of Mission Impossible,
Zachary Quinto of Star Trek, Tamara
Tunie of Law and Order, and Cherry
Jones of 24. Bud Yorkin, who won an
Emmy for All in the Family studied
engineering at CMU.
Stephen Schwartz graduated from Carnegie Mellon in 1968 with
a BFA in Drama. He had studied as a high school student in New York’s esteemed
Julliard pre college program. His career as a lyricist and composer for
Broadway and Hollywood spans four decades and includes such popular hits as Godspell, Pippin, Wicked, Pocahontas, The
Prince of Egypt, and Enchanted. Steven Schwartz has won the Drama Desk
Award for Outstanding Lyrics, three Grammy Awards, three Academy Awards, and he
has been nominated for six Tony Awards.
Great expectations
Such a career is launched with high expectations at an early
age. A well respected professor that I know at Northwestern once told me his
secret for teaching freshman engineering undergraduates. “I expect a lot form
them and they deliver.” This professor had carried an automatic weapon as a
squad leader in the Israeli militia when he was 19 years old, so he also
learned responsibility early. He went on, “We are in the habit of treating the
students as children when they are really adults. We should expect so much more
from our young people than fraternity parties and video games. If we expect
great things, they will live up to those expectations.”
High expectations are what created the marvelous performance
at LFA on that Saturday night. The brilliant singing and dancing on stage that
evening was a public example of the pride and energy that comes from young
people who are expected to perform and who live up to those high expectations
to be the best. High expectations is a theme that is a systemic part of the LFA
experience.
At LFA the students are expected to dress properly for
class. They are required to come prepared with homework completed so that they
can fully participate in class discussions. The boarding school and day
students at LFA are held to a high standard of behavior outside of the
classroom as well. Every student has a full schedule of extra curricular
activities including varsity sports and club activities. There is a zero
tolerance policy regarding alcohol use and other substance abuse by students.
Expectations are high and performance and student pride match the expectations.
I personally saw an example of that excellence on stage at Lake Forest Academy
on that Saturday evening two weeks ago.
Bob Gariano is
President of RGA, an executive search firm that recruits senior executives and
board members for public and private companies. Bob can be reached at
rgariano@robertgariano.com
No comments:
Post a Comment