Learning The Ropes From the Pros

Rules for auditions: No one is too young to know them. First, don’t sing “Summertime,� or “Tomorrow.� Overdone, says actor/musician Michael Berkeley, TriArts’ artistic director. He and casting consultant Kelly Briggs, running a workshop for pre-teens before the theater’s “Oklahoma� tryouts later this week, gave youngsters the word on how to wow the judges.

   And how to sidestep some blunders.

   Avoid songs with difficult piano accompaniment; signature songs like “Over the Rainbow;â€�  and avoid songs that are not age appropriate. After all, how believable is an 8-year-old singing  “Big Spenderâ€� or “I Hate Menâ€�?

   Also bring sheet music, select the right key for your voice, know your tempo, know the words. Know what they mean.

   And most important, Berkeley told his class, perform something that shows auditioners who you are.

   For a second year, now, Berkeley and Briggs ran this workshop in Sharon Playhouse’s Bok Gallery. The room is warm, woody, mirrored. And the two of them are funny, upbeat.

   “You’ve got It, if you really want it,â€� Briggs tells Ashley Coon, a ten-year-old from Sharon after her song.

   “Good. Good,â€� he tells ten-year-old Tony Harkin after he muffs the words to “Consider Yourself.â€� Briggs sends him to the john to read the words out loud and come back for a second try.  

   “Of course you can always make up words if you forget them,â€� Briggs tells the kids. “Judy Garland did it all the time.â€�

   Tony’s better the second time around. More confident.

   Some youngsters, though, start out pretty confident, even at age 8. Like Callie Carter, who sang a big, gestured, clear-voiced rendition of “Oklahoma.â€� Callie started life in the spotlight when her mother, actor/writer Betsy Howie, wrote “Callie’s Tally: An Accounting of Baby’s First Year (Or What My Daughter Owes Me).â€�

   Now Callie has the right stuff to put herself on stage.

   After everyone performed their number, Berkeley and Briggs added a little more advice about auditioning and about musical theater, too.

   Choose a song that shows you off best, Briggs said. Not one from the show for which you are auditioning.

   Give every word in the song its due.

   “Remember,â€� Berkeley said, “you’re not singing the notes. You’re singing the words. You’re telling a story.â€�

   Dress in comfortable clothes that you can move around in, they advised.

   And if you want a career in this kind of theater, learn to dance and act, too. Singing isn’t always enough.

   One auditioner wanted to know how many parts were available for kids.

   “As many as the stage will hold,â€� Berkeley said.

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