A perfect fit
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Deirdre Newman
It’s the day before opening night of Kaiser Elementary School’s
production of “Cinderella,” and director Rachel Furman is running around
putting out fires with the actor and the sets.
Rachel handles the crises with a calm poise that belies her 16 years.
The Kaiser alum and student at Orange County High School of the Arts in
Santa Ana stepped in to direct the Costa Mesa school’s show after its
drama director left.
While she had directed a few summer shows, handling a cast of almost
200 youngsters was a new challenge. The school was used to mounting
top-notch productions, and parents did not want the quality of the next
show to suffer.
After four months of rehearsal, Kaiser parents say they are impressed
with the Newport Beach resident’s directorial savvy.
“She has a real gift for finding what [the students] are comfortable
doing and encouraging them in that,” said Jody Sherman, one of the three
producers. “Everyone came together, and the show has to go on.”
For the past seven years, Kaiser’s productions had been directed by
Cindy Branson-Waller, a teacher at the school with theatrical expertise.
When she left at the end of last year, it created a void that parents
weren’t sure how to fill.
Enter Rachel stage left.
The young director, who left Newport Harbor High School after the
first quarter of her junior year to attend the performing arts school,
had built up her director’s resume with two children’s plays over the
last two summers.
As some of the kids in her shows attended Kaiser, her reputation was
already known at the school. Sherman said choosing Rachel as a director
was as perfect a fit as the glass slipper on Cinderella.
“We just thought this could be so wonderful because all the kids love
Rachel,” Sherman said. “She’s so good with the kids. We thought rather
than hire someone else, let’s give this Kaiser alum a chance, and
everyone who knew her agreed.”
Rachel chose to do a musical version of “Cinderella” based on the
movie with Brandi and Whoopi Goldberg. She held auditions in February and
was flooded with hopefuls. She took all the third- through sixth-graders
who wanted to be in the show and ended up splitting the 180 actors into
two casts.
Her dedication as director meant that she had to leave her school
early to oversee the rehearsals. Although she had worked with kids
before, she said there were some new challenges in working with so many
kids at once.
“I have to teach them the basics,” Rachel said, “like don’t turn their
backs to the audience and how to project [their voices]. And for the big
scenes, just keeping them quiet.”
Parents assisted in Rachel’s production efforts with countless hours
of building and painting the sets. Like Ed Wilmes, who spent 30 hours
single-handedly building the colorful carts for the village scene and the
houses for the slipper-trying-on girls.
“Trying to go up against a movie set is really challenging, so I think
the children will be proud and appreciate the love and attention the
parents put into it,” Wilmes said.
And many of the student actors, including some who have never been
onstage before, have high praise for their young director.
“She’s like the coolest director ever,” said Chris Holton, a
sixth-grader who plays one of the prince characters. “She makes a lot of
sense to us.”
FYI
“Cinderella” will run Friday and Saturday nights in Loats Auditorium
at 7 p.m. at Newport Harbor High School, 600 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach.
General admission is $5.50, and reserved seating is $7.50.
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