Students captured acting up
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Jeff Benson
The cameraman couldn’t ignore the children’s dissonant chirping, the
whirring of cars and the racket of clanking window shades while
rolling tape. But he didn’t mind getting it right -- the fifth time
through.
And the 20 middle and high school students who pitched their
products in front of him gained valuable experience and confidence
with each successive take.
Students enrolled in the Express Yourself summer arts program, a
youth program of Mika Community Development Corp., got the
opportunity to hone their on-camera skills when they acted out their
handwritten commercials Tuesday at the Costa Mesa Women’s Center.
South Coast Repertory Theater teacher Martin Noyes, who usually
helps coordinate action sequences, shot the students’ commercials and
gave them tips on their presentation.
Angie Chiguila, 16, was a natural in front of the camera, with a
bubbly voice and well-rehearsed lines.
“Where do you go to find the latest fashions?” she asked. “Where
do you go to save money on summer clothes? Go to Old Navy!”
It’s never a bad time for children to start in television, even
for those stage veterans such as Angie, Noyes said.
“I think it’s fun,” Angie said of her debut in commercials. “I’ve
always been interested in drama. It wasn’t my script because I wasn’t
here when they told us about the project, but I like Old Navy, I
guess.”
Other students, such as Nancy Rodriguez, 13, weren’t expected to
catch on as quickly because of their shyness, Noyes said, but they
surprised him during the taping with their eagerness to participate.
“Sometimes it’s like pulling teeth to get kids to do anything,”
Noyes said. “Especially Nancy. She’s normally quiet, but put a camera
in front of her, and she brightens up. She was really good. I see
tremendous potential in at least half of the people who tried it.”
Nancy, a student at Ensign Intermediate School, said she spent
hours writing and rehearsing her commercial promoting tourism to
Michoacan, Mexico. By the time she got in front of the camera, she
didn’t even need to look at her lines.
“I have always felt like Michoacan, Mexico, is like my home away
from home,” she said. “I can fall asleep at night visiting this
beautiful country without worrying about anything. It is a paradise
for my mind and body.”
Youth Development Director Lindsy Pike said the four-week summer
program ends tomorrow, but it has been such a hit that Mika is
tentatively planning to run it again Monday and Wednesday nights for
Costa Mesa students during the upcoming school year.
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