Saturday, July 31, 2010 04:43

Posts Tagged ‘Children’

How to Make Your Children to Love Opera

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

If you often take your children to see the professional productions of opera’s famous works, you will most likely get them to love the opera eventually. This is what happens with my children. They have been exposed to the opera songs even from their infancy. I was learning theater and musicals and operas were the ones I have to deal with on daily basis. I spent hours to practice the complex runs, trills, and cadenzas of the songs from every works.

Growing up with the songs from all of the famous works in the opera world, my kids never find strange what most kids will find to be embarrassing. They can happily take their friends home while I am practicing “Think of Me” from the famous Phantom of the Opera. It is quite often that their friends would ask “What in the world is that?” and my kids would answer in their indifference that it was their mom trying to burst her lungs again.

They also come and see all my performance in excitement. When most children avoid such shows which they find weird and embarrassing, my children applause in the end of the show with big smiles. That includes the times when I am wearing a really weird costume and make up.

I was in a production of a dramatic opera composed by Richard Wagner. It was one of his opera which based on the Norse mythology. In this production, I had to put myself into a conical helmet made from what used to be an aluminum pie tin. A pair toilet paper tubes which bent artfully and covered in a massive amount of paper mache represented the Viking horns placed gloriously on my head. My ears got the parts as the holder of long braids of variegated orange which were woven to a plait. Madonna’s breast cones were the last part of the costume that I wore that night.

How were my children’s reactions? They were so pleased about it.

Up to this day, they can enjoy the opera genuinely from their heart. They do not consider it as a boring performance with some crazy disoriented people who screams at each other, mostly in foreign languages. They can appreciate the music, songs, and the stories emerge in it. Watching their mother practicing all their life make them understand the hard work and commitment it takes to produce a high quality opera performance.

The Importance of Introducing Theatres to Children

Friday, September 18th, 2009

Shakespeare once wrote that “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players”. No one ever stated the “The world is a science lab” or that “The world is a chemistry club”. The world is a stage for us all. It is for this reason theatres are important.

Shakespeare may be a little biased towards theatres as he is playwright, still, if we think about it, whatever we do is actually a story of ourselves with other people among us being the other characters with interact with. We write our own play whether we realize it or not.

I value the arts and had joined theatre during junior high, which continued to college where I had taken some theatre classes. When my son was three years old, I began taking her occasionally to theaters where I would work part time. He was enjoying himself a lot while all the staff in the theatre knew and loved him present. He loved observing light sets, costumes and decorations for each play. When he reached four, he could watch a full play and started a debut in the children chorus of Seussical.

After which, she has then gone to shows in various regional theaters, community theaters, and even to Broadway. Not everyone thinks that theatres are important for kids, they may think that the kids do not like theater. Well, although they may not be interested directly towards art or music, they will start to get interested to the fancy colors of the costumes and decorations on stage. Sooner or later, they will enjoy the music.

During my last position in the theater, I handled productions with children performances throughout the school year, notably 5 to 6 times a year. It was then, hundreds of students will come by bus to the theater to watch. It was a first time experience for some, and being able to see their eyes light up makes me create a production with children performances worth it.

Theatre and the arts are important in the long term only to some of us. Still, although we know that science shelter, feed, heal and keep us alive, it is arts, culture and humanities that are the reason we stay alive. They are passed on throughout centuries and across generations. It is these arts that make us human and humane, and because of this it is important to pass on as early as possible to our children these arts, by taking them to your local community theatre.


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