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We welcome new people!

Storefront Shakespeare is looking for a Stage Manager for their Summer production.

Please email letter of interest, resume and references to StorefrontShakespeare@gmail.com

Auditions will be in mid March. Performances will run through June.

The role of the stage manager is especially important to the director in rehearsals. Here the director and the stage manager work side by side, with the stage manager recording the director's decisions about blocking and notes for the actors, keeping track of logistical and scheduling details and communicating what goes on in rehearsals to the rest of the team. This enables the director to concentrate his or her full attention on directing.

Stage managers have several key responsibilities and tasks to perform in each phase of a production, including

*scheduling and running rehearsals
*communicating the director's wishes to designers and crafts people
*coordinating the work of the stage crew
*overseeing the entire show each time it is performed

In conjunction with the director, the stage manager determines the scheduling of all rehearsals and makes sure everyone involved is notified of rehearsal times, meetings, costume/wig fittings and coaching sessions. During the rehearsal phase, stage managers also

*mark out the dimensions of the set on the floor of the rehearsal hall
*make sure rehearsal props and furnishings are available for the actors
attend all rehearsals
*notify the designers and crafts people of changes made in rehearsal

In rehearsals the stage manager also records all blocking, plus all the light, sound and set change cues, in a master copy of the script called the prompt book. The information in the prompt book also allows the stage manager to run the technical rehearsals, calling each technical cue in turn to determine precisely how it needs to be timed to coordinate with the onstage action.

The stage manager and the technical director also work out a smooth and efficient plan for the stage crew to follow during set changes. Furniture and prop plans for complicated sets are drawn up by the stage manager and technical designer to show exactly where the furniture and props are to be positioned on stage at the beginning of each scene and sometimes in the wings.

Once the show opens, the director's work is essentially complete. Now it's the stage manager's job to make sure that every aspect of the production runs just as the director intended time after time, until the production closes.

Job description from: http://www.aact.org/people/stagemanager.html



We are looking for Running Crew and Office Helpers!
email StorefrontShakespeare@gmail.com

The Running Crew is a collective term used in theater to describe the members of the technical crew who supervise and operate ("run") the various technical aspects of the production during a performance.

Office Helpers will be given a cool sounding title and a great reference for help with emails, phone calls and paperwork!

For more information click here!


Internship opportunities available!
For more information email Jeni at storefrontshakespeare@gmail.com
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