Monday, November 25, 2013

Aubrey Berg



Sometimes people have to travel the world to follow their dreams. CCM Musical Theatre Chair, Aubrey Berg began the journey for his education in Cape Town, South Africa, where he was born and raised. After getting his undergrad, he moved to England to get a master’s degree at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School and then started his professional career as a director and teacher. He directed in England until he felt the need to get an advanced degree. In 1975 he finally moved to the states and attended The University of Illinois to get a masters and a PhD in Theatre.

There’s nothing like your first. Upon asking about Aubrey’s first directing project, he was filled with giggles and smirks. The project was at 16 years old and it was an experimental piece called Corks for the Brownings. He remembers it being edgy and contemporary for the time and if he knew then what he knows now, he probably wouldn’t have done it.  A poet who does most of the talking in the piece sets the scene of the play. The main character, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, is in the middle of a battlefield in Vietnam where she is then saved by the swans of Swan Lake. Aubrey said, “There must have been a deeper meaning, I’m sure, but I don’t remember it.” It was entered in a theatre competition and actually won first prize. Aubrey, or Bubba as we call him in school, said this project really gave him the experience to think outside the box at a young age. He doesn’t think it was a very good piece by today’s standards but he is thankful for the lessons he learned while working on it.

It was this lesson that he had to bring with him to the States to bring the musical theatre program of CCM to life. His predecessor left two years before Bubba got the job as chair of the musical theatre program. So for two years the theatre department went without a head. As imagined, there was chaos. It was basically a voice program with requirements like one year of Ballet and two years of Acting. It was in no way the triple threat program it is today. His interview for the job included a few questions and a teaching assessment. Before Corbett Auditorium there was Wilson Auditorium. It was in the basement of Wilson that he directed students in two separate scenes: one dramatic and one comedic. He was hired and then he had the crazy responsibility to reshape a shapeless program.
His first decree as head of the program was appointing a resident choreographer/dance teacher. He insisted that the program be better rounded. He could see that Broadway was evolving and that the program had to get with the times. Bubba actually made equal emphasis on voice, acting, and dance, which is what the students desperately needed. Now students take a healthy mix of classes including: 4 years of acting, 4 years of jazz technique, 4 years of vocal training,, Pilates, audition techniques, musical theatre history, and music theory. Although his curriculum has changed over the years, it’s not due to lack of success. Rather because of the changing times in the Broadway scene. Whereas 25 years ago they focused theatre around an amazing voice or excellent dance technique, nowadays the emphasis is on acting. “Although a student may be a brilliant dancer and singer, without strong acting training the student will not be as successful in today’s theatre.”

When I asked Aubrey when he became aware that CCM had turned into a triple threat program, he replied, “You know, I just woke up one morning and decided it was.” This really shows his positive thinking approach to his teaching style. If someone sees himself or herself as a great actor, director, or person, eventually it will happen. He went on by saying that the success of the program is evident in it’s alumni. There is a CCM grad in almost every show on Broadway and in Tours around America. And since our school is very selective, only accepting about every 1 in 80 students when hundreds audition, we are able to provide the individual attention that a student needs to perfect their skills. Other top musical theatre schools such as Boston Conservatory and University of Michigan accept about 80 freshmen a year compared to our 20. With so many students it’s easy to get lost in the crowd. Bubba really wanted to make an elite program with many opportunities for his “babies”.

This selective, small group nature is also brought into his directing work. Ironically, he really loves very small casts of people. I say ironically because he’s normally set up to direct the Corbett Main stage shows. Bubba said, “When I have a huge cast of people, I feel more like a traffic cop.” This makes so much sense because when you’re trying to make formations onstage with 40 people having separate conversations, you just need to be almost militaristic to get to the desired goal. Another one of his directing tips includes looking at visual images or art of the period that the play or musical takes place. He’s really moved and inspired by the artwork of the time. He says it informs a lot about what was going on socially and it can be great inspiration for a scenic designer as well.
When asked about his favorite show to direct since coming to CCM, he didn’t give a straight answer. He talked about having the amazing opportunity to direct shows twice in his career. Evita was the first show he directed at CCM and my freshman year he revived it in Corbett Auditorium. Along with Evita he’s done Into the Woods and Hair twice. Bubba is really looking forward to directing Les Miserables in Patricia Corbett Theatre this spring. He’s waited a long time to do this show.

Directing is definitely a perk of the job but there are also some parts that aren’t all sunshine and rainbows. He isn’t very fond of the paperwork that comes along with the job. Also sitting through hundreds of auditions a year has its ups and downs as well. Sometimes a prospective student will give a questionable audition and then their mother will find Aubrey in the lobby, send him an email, mail him a gift, or a combination of all three. This gets to be overwhelming when it comes to the amount of people seen in one day of auditioning. Most of the auditions are videotaped for further viewing by other faculty not present at the audition. These videos are also a teaching tool in Bubba’s audition techniques class. Some of the tapes go back as much as 20 years and are excellent bases for hysterical horror stories in the class. Bubba lists them as some of his favorite memories at the school.
The school and its students have been his family for so many years. He refers to his students as his babies because they really are. He is truly our wise old grandfather her at school. His wisdom and advice are so precious to us as students because he has lived through so many eras of theatre. Not many instructors have so many years under their belt. Although sometimes this wisdom is stubborn when it comes to adjusting with the ever-changing times, it’s ultimately an asset. He is retiring soon and it will be interesting to see how CCM with react to a different director once he’s gone. Maybe the program will undergo another transformation like with Aubrey’s entrance. Only time will tell. 

Saturday, November 9, 2013

You Are My Sunshine



“You are my sunshine; my only sunshine. You make me happy when skies are grey. You’ll never know dear how much I love you. Please don’t take my sunshine away.”

Over 200 people met on a cloudy February afternoon in southern Louisiana in 2011 to celebrate the life of Barbara Claire Bourgeois Schexnaydre, my grandmother. We chose to celebrate instead of morn because for all the years of her life Barbara always chose to be uplifting. She always focused upward and out and she did that through the power of music.

            Although she was never quite classically trained in any instrument or harbored any prodigy-like voice, she always spread the most important part of music; love. From early in her childhood she was addicted to the joy that music and dancing could bring to life. She was one of thirteen children. Growing up in the 1930’s with thirteen siblings wasn’t exactly a cakewalk, but Maw Maw would tell me stories of her childhood that would turn even the most fortunate child green with envy. Her brothers and sisters would gather in the family room around the record player and pair up into “couples”. The most popular dance in the south at the time was the jitterbug. It’s a mix between swing dance and the shag of North Carolina. Now with thirteen kids it’s obviously not even. The odd one out would get the opportunity to dance with the doorknob. Yes, the doorknob of the front door. I asked, “Well, who had to dance with the doorknob?” She replied, “Me! I didn’t care because when I closed my eyes the music was still there and I was never terribly tall so the knob was the perfect partner for me.” It’s amazing that she was so content to “take one for the team” and it didn’t seem to bother her. Her love for the beat and her siblings made her kind enough to choose the option that most deemed undesirable. When she grew a little older she began working in her father’s local grocery store. This is where she met Vernon “Coon” Schexnaydre and the rest is history. 
                
              Barbara and Coon at Holy Rosary Church

(Front Left to Right then Back Right to left)
Angela, Ellen, Lorna, Verna, Iris, Larry, Lamar, Kent, and James

A courtship, a marriage, and 9 children later, the music in her veins was still pulsing stronger than ever. My father, Larry, is the youngest. He vividly remembers putting on living room shows for his mother. The kids would all get together and perform a 10-minute version of the Sound of Music. The crazy thing was they actually had the perfect amount of cast members for the job living under one roof. Maw Maw would sit on the couch in awe and at the end of the performance, no matter how brilliant or horrible, she would give them a standing ovation and shuffle them into the kitchen for her famous chocolate peanut butter oatmeal cookies. 

She was their number one fan. My dad told me that Maw Maw was the reason he decided to start doing theatre in high school. He continued to pursue theatre in college, and then he met my mom in a performing group, married her, had three children, and ultimately started a performing arts academy when no such academy ever existed in south Louisiana. The seed of this idea to spread music to the minds and hearts of children was planted at age 4 while singing, “so long, fair well…” in the living room of a shotgun house, south of Baton Rouge. My dad’s life, as it is, wouldn’t be a reality without the love and encouragement for music that Barbara Claire provided in his childhood.
                                      
 Larry (third from the left, in the back) Linda (on the Floor)
This was the Jamabalaya Singers, a musical group that toured around Louisiana performing at fairs.
 
 Linda and Larry today
Center Stage Performing Arts Academy began in 2000 with 14 students. Today we have over 500 students and some alumni on Broadway and in National tours.


            My time with Maw Maw seems pretty short compared to the time span of her life, but the memories and lessons I learned from her are something I wouldn’t trade for the world. I only wish I had comprehended she was sick sooner so I could’ve held on to everything she said. Barbara was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease a few years after I entered elementary school. I could strain to recall important quotes that she once said and I could also make up some meaningful things to drive my point home, but honestly all that’s coming to me is a video I have of my first birthday. My dad wrote a lullaby, Little Emily, and performed it as I crawled around the red brick floor of Maw Maw Barbara’s house. The camera is focused on my dad for most of the video and sometimes it would scan the floor in the attempt to find me paying attention. Then finally, towards the end of the video, the view is on my dad and in the corner of the frame Maw Maw is standing on the steps watching him sing to his child. Watching it brings me to tears because I know how much that meant to her to see her son share the music he created with his first daughter.

            Home videos show Maw Maw holding me and calling me by name. She would sing You Are My Sunshine to me all the time. It was her favorite song. She would sing it note for note, word for word, without missing a beat. Flash forward ten years and I’m outside swinging with her on the porch on a windy November afternoon. She asks me if I am there to sit with her. At this time in her life she had frequent sitters since her short-term memory was gone and her long-term memory was fading. I decided to play along as to not embarrass her by correcting her mistake. She looked slightly distant for a while and then began to tell me about her wonderful son, Larry. She informed me that he is married to the most wonderful woman, Linda, and they have a studio where little kids come to sing and dance. As she described the story that I knew as my own life, I began to appreciate hearing my story from her perspective. She described three children that Larry and Linda had and ultimately how proud she was of her son. As the “sitter” I felt honored to hear such a story and as a part of the story I felt the need to tell her that I was one of those children. The only problem is that she wouldn’t remember that fact in about 5 minutes after me telling her. Then something amazing happened. She began to sing You Are My Sunshine while staring off into the yard. She sang it note for note, word for word, without missing a beat. As she slipped more and more into the abyss of her own mind throughout the years there was one thing she never let slip and that was music. It’s amazing what the body is capable of doing when the passion for it is so deeply imbedded.


            At her funeral there were many tears and many words shared between loved ones. Quite a few stories made their way around the room of the funeral home. I traveled from group to group to distract myself from the loss. Every single story had a theme. It was all about some time that Barbara entered their life and music followed. Sometimes it was actual music and sometimes it wasn’t so literal. Maybe it was just a sense of harmony that entered their lives after meeting her. I began to think about my life and the impact she’s had on me. I discovered that if it weren’t for her I wouldn’t be doing musical theatre today. My dad would have never met my performing mother and the love of music would’ve never been instilled in me. That was a lot for me to take in. At that moment we were summoned to the funeral grounds to bring her to her final resting place. As we walked I held the hands of loved ones and I started to sing subconsciously. “You are my sunshine; my only sunshine. You make me happy when skies are grey. You’ll never know dear how much I love you. Please don’t take my sunshine away.” I only got through a few words when a group of my cousins joined in with the tune. Within seconds the entire congregation of about 200 people were singing the song as a tribute to the life of Barbara Claire Bourgeois Schexnaydre. She touched me with the love and passion for music and I am confident that with 200 strong voices, we touched her back in heaven.


“Please don’t take my sunshine away…”



                           

Monday, October 28, 2013

Sugar High

 Just like you can't play Flight of the Bumblebee at your first piano lesson, you aren't going to be perfect the first time you bake. There are many things that have to go very right to make a baking session successful.

Is the batter supposed to resemble soup?

Does you batter look like soup? Yes? Ok, toss it. Let's start over.

When I first started baking, I made so many mistakes. I thought I could just jump into projects without reading and following instructions. As it turns out, fine print is pretty freaking important. So my first tip is to follow the instructions/recipe to the best of your ability. If you don't understand a term or direction, look it up. Don't take it upon yourself to improvise. Baking is a very delicate procedure and it needs everything to be exact for the correct results. Here are some of my best tips:

A. Remember to preheat your oven! Don't insert the batter into the oven until it is fully preheated. Reason: the temperature of the oven will be constantly rising working to get to the desired heat and the batter will cook unevenly because the oven's temperature is not right.

B. Gluten free, whole wheat, and cake flour are not the same animal. Don't think you can just switch them out. Reason: Each flour is made up of different components and react differently to ingredients added. If substitutions are wanted, simply look up how to compensate for the different flour.

C. Room temperature means room temperature. This is a big one! When the recipe calls for room temperature butter, please do not put cold butter into the mix. Reason: When the butter is chilled, it doesn't want to blend easily and evenly into the mix. It will end up chunky and lumpy. Not cool.

D. Set out all of the ingredients, tools, and towels before you begin. Reason: Searching around for ingredients and bowls isn't fun. If everything is laid out, then it's very easy to see if you missed an ingredient.

Prepare, Bake, then Decorate!

I always connect to the creative part of baking. My left brain rules my life.

When I start a project I always want to raise the bar from my previous piece of work. Sometimes that's really hard. I get carried away often and usually break my budget. My first project was inspired by The Black Plague. Doesn't death just scream icing and sprinkles?! I thought so. My lack of work done in the class also pushed me to really go out of the box to get an A. So I themed the cake around the song Ring Around the Rosie which is about the Black Plague. I littered the cake with shaved chocolate (dirt/ashes), a gummy hand (Walmart), plastic mice (also Walmart), and some bright red posies. To this day, this is my very favorite project. 

I then got addicted to food dyes. If something could be dyed, I definitely dyed it. Not one of my confections comes out a normal color because normal colors are boring. Here's a picture from my LSU GameDay cake. GEAUX TIGERS! The second one is from my mosaic cake that I'll mention again later. 
Then my infatuation with cupcakes began. They were adorable mini versions of my large cake projects. The only problem I faced was making 24 exact replicas of the same design. That took a little practice, but I think I got the hang of it. These cupcakes are Shirley Temple inspired. I wanted to give the essence of the popular drink while not getting too literal. So I topped the cupcakes with a bendy straw and a sugared cherry.
Then I got very interested in chocolate. Not just the bar but the things I could create with it. I discovered I could manipulate it just like icing and it would stay more rigid. In these next designs you'll see the outside of the previously mentioned LSU GameDay cake and Mosaic cake. For the GameDay cake I piped the chocolate on a sheet of parchment paper, let it dry, and then placed it onto the cake. With the Mosaic cake, I spread melted chocolate on parchment paper and proceeded to break it into little chunks. Then I placed it around the outside of the cake in a mosaic-like pattern. The top of the cake is also solid chocolate.

Here comes my last (for this blog) and most sentimental project. My parents recently renewed their vows and my dad asked me to recreate their wedding cake. I thought it was a rather tall order but with the help of my grandmother, we did a full replica of the original cake. We added some chocolate covered strawberries to the cake because they are my mother's favorite. They were not in the original design. Here's a picture of the bottom tier of the cake and also a shot of the entire cake. 

                       

What is a baking blog without a little recipe sharing? Here is my favorite cream cheese icing recipe.


Cream Cheese Icing

1  8oz package of cream cheese
1 stick of butter (room temperature)
1 tsp of vanilla extract
1 lb of confectioners sugar

Beat cream cheese, butter, and vanilla in a mixing bowl until light and fluffy. Then gradually add in confectioners sugar, mixing well between adds. Enjoy!



Although I know a lot more about baking than when I started, I realize that I have a lot more to learn. 

“You'll never know everything about anything, especially something you love.” 
-Julia Child




Friday, October 11, 2013

"Friending" Your Fate

"Friending" Your Fate

Are police spending most of their time on Facebook?

For years, Police have been catching criminals the old fashioned way: wire taps and car chases. Imagine their relief when social media made their job much easier with sites such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. The sites seems like meaningless fun to the general public, but to a police officer it's the perfect fishing spot of reckless criminals but it is also a double edged sword. When there are little to no laws protecting criminals, there are little to no laws protecting their privacy as well. Have our laws protecting our rights to privacy caught up to the ever-expanding social media? Not quite. It seems that there are still issues to be resolved when it comes to keeping people's information secure. 

Is this LEGAL?

Police have been using social media for clues into criminals' lives since they first hit the internet. And why not? It's the fastest way to from point A to point B with the click of a button. But what do Police need to do to legally obtain this information and have it stand up in court? Get a warrant? Not exactly. The Facebook Legal Terms of Statement of Rights and Responsibilities include not engaging in unlawful multi-level marketing, no bullying or harassing, and not posting anything that is a hate speech, threatening or pornographic. These rules, if broken, would raise flags and may be looked into but would still require a warrant to access messages, videos, wall posts, pictures, and location information. But even if no huge laws are broken, there's no warrant needed to access the basic information of the user such as the email and IP address.  

There was an instance "in September of 2011, a Manhattan Criminal Court judge upheld a prosecutor's subpoena for information from Twitter about an Occupy Wall Street protester arrested on the Brooklyn Bridge." Twitter says "non-public information about Twitter users is not released except as lawfully required by appropriate legal process such as a subpoena, court order, or other valid legal process." But in this case the judge let the Police get the information from Twitter without making them secure a warrant. This was the first time ever that a warrant wasn't required for such an action. This is because "courts haven't issued a definite ruling on social media." ProPublica


Who does this impact?

The obvious answer is that is it impacts criminals! There are thousands of cases nation wide that would remain unsolved if criminals weren't stupid enough to brag about their winnings on social media. From my research, I've found that more criminals are caught due to their own recklessness than the Police actively seeking them out on Facebook. It was very rare that I found a case where an older individual got caught over the internet. I've found that the average age of these careless people range from teens to about 30 years old. For instance, a young man named Chris Crego was arrested for assault in 2009. He didn't show up for his sentencing and authorities found out he had fled the state via Myspace. He posted that he was in Indiana, where he was working, and his work hours. As seen here, criminals often "dig their own grave" when they get too cocky about dodging their fate. Mashable 

Another way people give themselves away is by clicking that "like" button. This is one of the very common ways an officer can access personal information instantly. There was a registered sex offender in Maryland who was on the run with his girlfriend. The cops discovered she had "liked" their Facebook page (The Tazewell Police Department). This gave them full access to her page and information. They were tracked down and both arrested. No warrant was needed because with that one click of the "like" button, she gave them permission to all of her information. Mashable.com also wrote about a convicted thief in Oregon that was sick of the court ordered therapy to avoid prison. He fled the state and on his journey from Oregon to Alabama he documented his travels on Facebook. The Police were able to successfully locate him when his late status read, "In Alabama."


Although this highly impacts the people that commit crimes, it also has a big impact on the officers themselves. What happens when criminals find out that an officer has a daughter on Facebook? They find out where the officer's family lives, where they go to school, when they're having a party, then all of a sudden, there's a problem. Since Policemen are "public figures more than ever now, the barriers between their professional and personal lives have diminished." FBI If certain individuals really wanted to, they could destroy an officer's sense of security. People have the knowledge and tools to google the officer's home address and see a satellite map of their house, leave intimidating notes at their doorstep, or even threaten their families. The FBI writes a "call to action" article to help protect their officers. They say that although it may be more cost effective to wait to deal with it after a situation happens, it would be better to be safe than sorry and to take care of the people that risk their lives for our safety. 


Will this ever get better?

There are certain steps to insure that privacy is secure. Make sure to visit the privacy settings on every social media site. Set them to your liking. Also the only people that can control what other users see are the people themselves. Don't post anything that would be incriminating. That is the biggest mistake among users. The careless posting of pictures, statuses, and comments, get criminals in trouble and then they get heated over their dumb mistake. Stop it before it even begins. This issue may never be completely solved. Now that Police have found a way to successfully beat criminals at their own game, they will not likely quit just because some feeble laws prevent them from accessing certain information. The laws around social media privacy are very weak and sooner or later they will be more defined: for good or for bad.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

What It Costs To Be Hairless

Laser Hair Removal is the Rolls Royce of all hair removal techniques. 

Shaving, plucking, and waxing have nothing on lasers. The word "laser" might scare some people that grew up watching sci-fi films, but these lasers are saving the galaxy from follicles not aliens.  The general public is blind to the awesomeness that is laser hair removal. This is only because lasers are a new technology in the hair removal field and hasn't yet reached the popular status of the razor and tweezers


WHAT IS A LASER?



 
          See! The laser doesn't look that scary. This laser gun is connected to a larger machine and a controlled by hand by a doctor. Basically, the orange tip of the laser gun has the circumference of a quarter. It can treat a quarter sized patch of skin per second. That means if you're just going in to get the upper lip done, you can leave the office in about a minute. This is attractive to business men and women who need procedures done in their lunch break.

WILL IT HURT?!


           The nurses at Ideal Image Hair Removal informed that the laser feels like a rubber band snapping against the skin. This sensation happens because the laser is literally synging the hair at its root. They also added that numbing cream was administered to patients with a sensitivity to pain. After the 1st procedure, the skin may turn reddish and look sun burnt. This is normal for patients with lighter skin. Lotions are recommended for such conditions. Some reviews show that certain clinics have burned patients' skin with these procedures, but no such claims have been made towards the Ideal Image facility. Most reviews are raving about how freeing it is to not have to shave and constantly worry about excess body hair. 

AM I TREATABLE? 

           Believe it or not, some people aren't allowed into this exclusive, hair-free club. It all depends on the color of the hair. In my consultation at Ideal Image, the nurse had to check my hair and compare it to samples to determine whether I could proceed. If hair is too light, the laser won't be able to permanently kill it. One treatment would keep the hair away for about 3 to 4 weeks but it would all eventually grow back. Darker hair is needed to be eligible to be treated. 

ONE AND DONE?!
         Unfortunately this isn't a "one and done" situation. At Ideal Image, they recommend 9 sessions of treatments to insure the hair will never grow back. Ideal Image gives a life long guarantee to their patients. If, at the end of the treatments, a patient has a baby or undergoes some other hormonal imbalance and starts to grow hair back, the clinic will remove that hair free of charge.Upon further research, I discovered that other clinics around Cincinnati generally stand by a guarantee with only 4 treatments. The reason multiple treatments are needed is because hair grows in cycles.  


          The laser can only permanently remove about 15% of the hair per session. Sessions are spaced out between several months to allow the hair to grow back so more can be treated. The Anagen Phase is the only phase in which the hair can be completely removed for good. While the hairs in the catagen and telogen phase will disappear, they will eventually grow back because the root of the hair is still embedded and not attached yet to the actual hair. For this reason, multiple sessions are advised but not required. 


THEN COMES THE PAIN...
         The pain of this procedure doesn't come while you're under the laser, it's when you have to pay the bill. A typical session for the upper lip may only cost $150. That doesn't seem too bad, but when you need 9 treatments it adds up quickly. You'd be staring at a $1,350 bill with an immaculately smooth upper lip. At Ideal Image, the prices were pretty steep. Checking the competition, I was surprised that their prices were about $125 cheaper than Ideal Image. When taking into account that the competition also only recommends 4 sessions, then there's a lot of money that can be saved. So when considering laser hair removal, I would recommend checking around for pricing. Also arrange consultations to view the facilities and meet the doctors. You can gather a lot of personalized information about the treatment process and feel more comfortable with lasers. 

Results


 
   


How much are you willing to spend for a life free of hair?!