VIOLET UpstageGuide PDF
VIOLET UpstageGuide PDF
A publication of
UPSTAGE CALLBOARD
Violet
With a score of show-stopping anthems ranging from American-roots to folk to
gospel, Violet tells the story of a young woman’s quest for beauty amidst
the image-obsessed landscape of the 1960s. Facially disfigured in a childhood
accident, Violet dreams of a miraculous transformation through the power of
faith. Convinced that a televangelist in Oklahoma can heal her, she hops a
Greyhound bus and starts the journey of a lifetime. Along the way, Violet forms
unlikely friendships with her fellow riders, who teach her about beauty, love,
courage and what it means to be an outsider.
when 1964
who where
Violet- Caucasia
n woman,
late 20s Spruce Pine, Nort
h Carolina
Flick- African-Am Kingsport, Tennes
er
solider, late 20 ican see
s Nashville, Tennes
Monty- Caucasian see
solider, Memphis, Tennesse
mid 20s e
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Young Violet- Ea
rly teens Fort Smith, Arka
Father- Caucasia nsas
n man,
late 30s
About Roundabout.........................................................................................................................Page 23
UPSTAGE CONTRIBUTORS
Managing Editors: Writers: Interviews: Contributors:
Kim Oria Jason Jacobs Ted Sod Jennifer DiBella
Education Program Teaching Artist Education Dramaturg Director of Education
Manager Leah Reddy Mitch Mattson
Jill Rafson Teaching Artist Graphic Designer: Assistant Director of
Literary Manager Amy Ashton Education
Darren Melchiorre
Artistic Associate Manager, Design and Paul Brewster
Olivia O’Connor Production Education Program
Artistic Apprentice Manager
Ted Sod: Will you start by giving us some information about yourself?
Leigh Silverman: I was born in Rockville, Maryland, went to High
School in Washington, D.C., and I went to college at Carnegie
Mellon University. I was an undergrad in directing and a grad student
in playwriting. I did those degrees simultaneously because I was
really interested in working on new plays and there were no clear
opportunities for me to get in a room with a playwright while I was in
the directing program, and so the only way to really learn was to be
a writer myself. I moved to New York 18 years ago and have been
directing mostly new plays ever since.
TS: Because you’ve been directing new plays, what was it like to make
the decision to direct this revival of a musical?
LS: Last summer Jeanine Tesori, the composer, called me and asked me
to do a concert reading of her first musical, Violet, for the new Encores!
summer program. She said, “I really want you to reinvent Violet. I want
to see what your ideas might be.” She and Brian [Crawley, librettist
and lyricist] were both open to my thoughts and my suggestions. I met
with Sutton and she said, “Oh, I love this music so much, but I don’t
know if this is the right part for me.” I told her, “No problem! This is
just a one-night-only concert for Encores!” After the concert it was clear
we had all fallen in love with the material, and we began the process
of trying to bring the piece to Broadway. Happily, the Roundabout was
the perfect home for us.
TS: How will the one-act version differ from the two-act version?
One of the really amazing things about this production, although it is a LS: I think what’s exciting in the one-act version is that Violet’s whole
revival, is that after 17 years Jeanine and Brian are going back to work journey is streamlined and the dramatic arc feels more urgent.
on it. There are rewrites. We’re reinventing the form and condensing
the whole thing into a one-act. I think the heart and the guts of the piece
are what’s being revived, and what’s being reexamined is the form. It TS: Can you remember your emotional response to Violet when you first
certainly doesn’t feel like a revival in the strictest sense of the word. encountered it?
LS: I had heard different people sing songs from the score in auditions
and loved them. A couple years ago, I was at a benefit for Playwrights
Horizons and there was an excerpt from the father’s song. I was in
the middle of eating a piece of fish or something, and I just started
crying. I had always been a super fan of Jeanine’s—I love Caroline or
Change and can sing every word from that amazing score. So when
Jeanine asked me to do the Encores! concert version this summer,
I went to Lincoln Center Performing Arts Library and watched the
original production. I really responded to this story of a woman trying
to find herself and learning to be brave. I think it’s also a piece about
acceptance and forgiveness. Violet is about going through hell and
finding yourself on the other side. It is a profound story, an important
story, a moving and poignant piece of theatre. It is a gorgeous, lyrical
score, and I am so honored to hear that music every day.
TS: What kind of research did you have to do to enter the world of this
play? Did you watch the movie version or read the short story?
LS: I did read the short story. I looked at pictures from the early ‘60s in
the South. I’m not familiar with that part of the country; I’m not familiar
with the world of televised church healings. I’ve spent a lot of time with
my designers delving into that world and figuring out which parts we
want to put on stage. I feel like it has been my task to simultaneously
understand everything about where Violet goes on her trip and then
find the most theatrical and exciting ways to represent those places. I
am trying to understand the politics, the place, and the people. We’re
not looking to have a lot of scenery, we’re not looking to literally
represent the bus, but instead to allude to most everything—to find the
clearest and most theatrical choices.
TS: Can you tell us what you were looking for in casting the show?
LS: I was looking to cast people who felt authentic to both time and
place and could inhabit Violet’s world. But most importantly we needed
people who could sing their guts out. Jeanine’s music is so complicated
and beautiful. We really wanted the group to find the right sound.
There’s a lot of big group numbers, and so it was about being able to
find people who have not only the right sound but the right soul.
TS: How hard was it to find an actor to play the younger Sutton Foster?
Was that difficult?
LS: We auditioned many, many young girls and when Emerson Steele
walked in, we thought, “Oh my God, she’s a young Sutton Foster!” She
just looks and sounds so much like her. Of course Sutton is Emerson’s
idol, so it’s an incredible fit.
TS: What do you make of the relationships between Violet and Flick
and between Violet and Monty? Do you see it as a love triangle, or is it
something different?
LS: I think in its most simplistic form it is a love triangle, but I also feel
the two men are each looking to get their needs met in different ways,
and Violet is looking to get her needs met, too. I think that they are
negotiating their own anxieties as well as trying to negotiate with each
other. They find that they need each other and how that changes during
the course of the evening is where the drama comes from. They don’t LS: I think directing takes a huge amount of patience and is very
realize how much they all have to learn from each other, and they’re all rigorous. You need a really thick skin, and you need to be willing to
at very high-stakes places in their lives. work really hard and juggle many projects, many personalities, and
many different elements all at once. But I think the most important thing
TS: They seem to bond over playing poker. Are you a poker player? about being a director is you have to make your own opportunities
and be able to be proactive. Particularly when you’re starting out as
LS: I have played poker. I’m not very good at it. We have started
a young director, no one’s going to just hand it to you. You have to
playing in rehearsal, and Emerson is a real card shark.
work really hard to show people that you’re smart, that you can be in
charge, and that you can be a good leader. It takes a huge amount of
TS: I love the flashbacks to Violet’s younger self and her father. How do determination and ambition and energy to do that.
you view that aspect of the show?
LS: The relationship between a young girl who’s lost her mother and a TS: Are you finding that things are changing for women who direct, or
father who wants the best for her but doesn’t quite know how to do it do you feel like gender doesn’t have anything to do with it?
hits very close to home for me. Young Vi and her father are struggling
LS: When I directed my first Broadway show, which was in 2006,
to understand each other. They are trying their best, but they have
there was an article that came out about how I was only the seventh
many missed connections. We watch those two characters struggle with
woman to have ever directed a Broadway play. And it was shocking to
blame and guilt. This is what makes Violet so universal—we all struggle
me that there had been so few. And last year alone, more than seven
with wanting to be understood, wanting to be seen, and forgiven for
women directed on Broadway, so there has already been a massive
our mistakes.
shift. I think the place where it’s shifted the most is off-Broadway. Off-
Broadway is ruled by incredible women directors. It’s changing on
TS: Do you have any advice for young people who might want to have Broadway, slowly but surely. People are starting to consider gender
a career as a director in the theatre? parity a real priority.•
Ted Sod: Will you tell us where you were born, where you were
educated, and how you came to be a composer?
Jeanine Tesori: I was born on Long Island in Manhasset and grew up
in Port Washington. I went to the public school system there. I started
playing piano at three and started writing songs at five. I played
classically until age 14 and then I gave it up for a while and played
sports during high school. I went to Barnard College and started
studying premed. I switched over to the music course at Columbia
because Barnard didn’t have a music major, and I graduated in 1983.
During that time, I rediscovered music and theatre, which I really knew
very little about. I started conducting, did some dance arrangements
and played for dance rehearsals and auditions. I pretty much left
conducting in order to write Violet. This is the first show that I wrote as
a full-time writer.
TS: How many people will be playing in the orchestra, and what is
the instrumentation?
JT: It’s keyboard players, guitarists, bass, drums, violin and cello. So
there are nine players.
Doris Betts, born Doris June Waugh in Statesville, North Of these tales, a short story titled “The Ugliest Pilgrim”
Carolina in 1932, was a celebrated author, professor, is Betts’s best-known work, thanks to its adaptation as
and lifelong southerner. She started writing as a teenager, an Academy Award®-winning 1982 short film and, of
reporting for Statesville’s local paper, and began writing course, a 1997 musical, both titled Violet. The story, like
fiction while attending the University of North Carolina much of Betts’s work, is imbued with the sensory world
at Greensboro. She won the prestigious Mademoiselle of the south and the literary hallmarks of Southern Gothic
College Fiction Contest (other winners include Sylvia Plath writing: ambiguous morality and lost innocence, deadpan
and Joyce Carol Oates) for one of her student pieces. The observations, offbeat humor, grotesque events, and
award would prove to be the first of many for Betts, who outcast characters.
went on to become a Guggenheim Fellow and a finalist for
the National Book Award and to win, among other prizes, Doris Betts’s writing is commonly categorized as Southern
the North Carolina Award for Literature and the American Gothic. Author Flannery O’Connor, another Southern
Academy of Arts and Letters Medal of Merit. After working Gothic-style writer, explains that this type of writing is
as both a fiction writer and a journalist, Betts took up a post often categorized by faith-driven storylines. Betts’s own
at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, where she relationship to faith does pervade her work. Her first impulse
remained a beloved professor for 32 years. to write, she said, came from Biblical stories, which “[make]
you feel that the ordinary is not ordinary.” In Betts’s fiction,
In her April 2012 obituary, the New York Times described the ordinary is also hopeful, and this optimism is richly
Betts as a writer “whose characters grappled with religious maintained in Violet.•
faith, freedom, captivity and original sin in tales steeped in
the Southern literary tradition.”
From “The Ugliest Pilgrim” by Doris Betts Violet turns to glower at the man; he avoids eye contact. Perhaps, as Violet turns, a
shaft of sunlight cuts across her face. Young Vi has disappeared. Instead of answering
“I sit in the bus station, nipping chocolate peel off a
the man, Violet takes a lollipop out of her mouth, then sticks her tongue out at the
Mounds candy bar with my teeth, then pasting the coconut
man when he turns to pursue his dog. She looks at her luggage and sings sarcastically:
filling to the roof of my mouth. The lump will dissolve there
slowly and seep into me the way dew seeps into flowers.
VIOLET
Is this a suitcase—is it mine?
I like to separate flavors that way. Always I lick the salt off
Am I sittin’ by the candy stand,
cracker tops before taking my first bite. Somebody sees
Beneath the Greyhound Station sign?
me with my suitcase, paper sack, and a ticket in my lap.
Have I got a ticket in my hand?
‘You going someplace, Violet?’ Stupid. People in Spruce
Stupid.
Pine are dumb and, since I look dumb, say dumb things to
The people of Spruce Pine are stupid.
me. I turn up my face as if to count those dead flies piled
under the light bulb. He walks away—a fat man, could
Lord, I’ll call the whole trip off
be anybody. I stick out my tongue at his back; the candy
If Leroy Evans looks me in the face
oozes down. If I could stop swallowing, it would drip into
Nope, I win, he’s terrorized
my lung and I could breathe vanilla.
This town is a superstitious place—
Points at Leroy Evans’ disappearing form.
Whoever it was, he won’t glance back. People in Spruce
Next week, won’t they be surprised
Pine don’t like to look at me, full face.”
Ted Sod: When and where were you born? Where were you educated?
When did you decide to write for the musical theatre and why?
Brian Crawley: I was born in Iowa City in 1962. I was so little when
I left Iowa that I remember nothing about it. I was raised for the most
part in a suburb of Cincinnati, but for three years lived in England, in
the equivalent of the 7th, 8th, and 9th grades. This was to be a very
useful experience in reading and explaining the Harry Potter series to
my children.
I loved the rigor of the English school I attended and looked for
something to match it in a college. I chose Yale over other possibilities
for trivial reasons—the architecture reminded me of my grammar
school in England—but instinct in this case served me well. A diverse
group of talented theatre artists happened to choose the same school
at about the same time. Most of us tried our hands at everything, too;
most of us acted; most of us directed; many of us wrote. I did five
shows a year, played rugby in the fall and spring, and somehow kept
my grades up. I wish I had that kind of energy now!
drive 6 hours to Detroit to my grandmother’s place every Thanksgiving. out in the writing of the book; that was what I had to work on most.
Another grandmother lived in Florida, a 15-hour drive. Even longer Some I made up as needed. Flick, Monty, the Father, the Preacher all
drives took us on vacation to a lake we loved in Minnesota, or to the feature in the story, but a lot of who they are now comes from work I
mountains in Colorado. My first Greyhound trips were in high school, had to do.
to Georgia, to go deer hunting with my uncle. And what passed the
time, for my family? Conversation, and the radio. We’d take turns on
I’m always delighted by things that almost write themselves. There is
who got to set the station. For me, travel is intimately bound up with the
a little scene-change number, “M&Ms,” whose lyric wrote itself in my
musical tastes that shift through space.
head while I was riding a stationary cycle at the gym. The challenge
there was getting home in time to write it down before forgetting it.
TS: What kind of research did you have to do in order to write this I had to shush my wife when I came in the door, which she wasn’t
musical? Will you give us some insight into your process? pleased with, at the time, although she laughs about it now.
BC: A wonderful book came out as we were beginning, Autobiograpy
of a Face, by Lucy Grealy. In it the writer talks about the challenges she TS: What advice would you give to a young person who wants to write
faced as a young woman coming to terms with her disfiguring bout with for the musical theatre?
cancer of the jaw. A book like that relays an emotional experience,
BC: It’s hard work to finish a bad musical, let alone write a good one.
which gave us as writers insight into our character.
Nothing is more useful than knowing the literature. Get yourself into
musicals. Even in a small role, you’ll absorb how the piece is written
In the story Violet never gets to meet the Preacher (whom I believe Doris through repeatedly listening to it rehearsed and performed. Start writing
Betts modeled on Oral Roberts). For the first year we were writing, we by finding a song you love and trying to equal it. Everybody does it,
did not plan to portray the Preacher. Once we decided we wanted to so there’s no shame in it. What you write by imitation will eventually
include him, we watched a lot of videos of different televangelists and embarrass you and be hidden away in the attic, but while you’re doing
went to see some modern healers. The most useful thing for me was an it, your skills and taste will be honed, and you’ll get an inkling of what
audio tape found by Jeanine’s business partner, Buryl Red. you might be capable of doing. Write every day. And good luck!•
But many things in the piece come from our personal experience, too.
Here are a few examples. One thing important to me was that the
Preacher not be an outright fraud. He’s a showman, but he believes.
My mother’s foster parents were part of an Ohio fundamentalist church,
whose values are not mine, but which I knew to be sincere. The uncle
I deer-hunted with had moved to Georgia years before to race Norton
motorcycles professionally, so he deepened my understanding of
Monty’s character. When my father served, his drill sergeant was an
African-American man who was battlefield promoted to captain in
Korea and busted back to sergeant on his return to the U.S., because of
the lack of a college education. My father was deeply impressed by this
man, and that had a profound impact on his politics and beliefs.
TS: What was the most challenging part of writing the book and lyrics
for Violet? What part was the most fun?
BC: What is challenging is what is fun, so I’m not sure the two parts
of the question are separate for me. The original story is a first-person
narrative. When you read it, you have a very strong impression of who
Violet is. All the other characters who appear onstage had to be filled
Ted Sod: Where were you born? Where were you educated? When did
you decide you wanted to become an actor?
Joshua Henry: I was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba in Canada. I left
when I was three. My parents went to Miami, and that’s where I
grew up. I attended the University of Miami, where I studied musical
theatre—it was the only school I auditioned for, which probably
wasn’t the smartest thing, but I got in, and I knew after the first day
of being there that this is what I could do until I was old and gray. I
was obsessed with acting, singing, and dancing. It’s funny that I’m
doing this production now because the first school production I was
involved in was Violet. Michael McElroy, who was the original Flick
off-Broadway back in ’97, directed me in the role that he played years
earlier. That was my first real performing experience in college. That
experience gave me many tools. Michael, who I look up to, showed
me what it took to be a professional in musical theatre.
TS: I’m curious about what you make of Flick and the relationship
he has with Violet. For a story set in the South in 1964, it’s
rather fascinating.
JH: I think Flick is a man of character. We find out that his mother
bestowed on him some great qualities. Qualities like: even when it’s
not popular, you can be yourself; you can have a voice; what you
have to offer is very important. Those are the things that Flick is built on
that were contrary thoughts to many concerning African-Americans in deep burn for Flick because Violet has piqued his interest at this point.
the south in the 1960s. For him to be advising a white woman, whom It’s a big moment where Flick has to swallow his pride and really go
he finds an attraction to, takes bravery. He decides he’s going to give back to what his mother told him: “It doesn’t matter what people say.
advice to this girl, and he ends up seeing things in her that he truly You are very important. It doesn’t matter what people think about you.
admires. It’s such a unique relationship, and I think we don’t know what You are a unique individual.” It’s a moment for him to count from one to
happens after the piece is over. But we do see that they are willing to ten, so to speak. We do see him actually get back in the fold quickly—
take a very courageous stand at that time. which is a testament to how thick-skinned he (like Violet) has had to be.
TS: What do you think he sees in Violet? TS: What do you make of the relationship between Flick and Monty?
JH: He sees somebody who’s not happy with herself and is seeking JH: It’s such a big brother/little brother dynamic because Monty is just
outside sources to find happiness. I think what Flick has learned reckless. Monty is literally a kid who Flick cares about. They’re both
throughout his life as an African-American in the sixties is that if you soldiers, and that relationship is also unique because as black and
always look outside of yourself to find happiness, you’re in for a world white soldiers, they’re in this thing together. They need each other, and
of trouble. That’s something that I happen to believe. Happiness is all of a sudden they end up competing over this girl, Violet. So when
important, but I think Flick knows happiness is something you find you have a big brother/little brother relationship and there’s a little bit
inside of yourself. There’s a beautiful lyric that he sings: “You have of a rivalry in there as well, it’s a very touchy thing. Because you get
to give yourself a reason to rejoice. The music you make counts for the whole “guy” code being messed around with.
everything.” I think he sees in Violet someone who has not really gotten
ahold of that. What’s attractive about her is that she doesn’t seem to
care who he is. I think he is overwhelmed by her passion later on, TS: What kind of research do you do as an actor to enter the world of
and he realizes the strength that she has. And I think that really the play?
piques his interest. JH: I’ve researched a lot of the Civil Rights Movement. I just did a
reading of My Dream, which is the story of Martin Luther King, and I
TS: There’s a moment in the two-act version where Violet casually uses played Dr. King, so I had to research a lot of that time period. That’s a
the n-word and Flick moves away from her and Monty. What do you time period that is very important to me. It’s filled with people who had
sense is going on there? so much hope. I think that’s what I take from that moment—hope. And I
don’t know if the people at that time knew how big it was going to be. I
JH: I’m not sure it’s Violet that uses that word in this version, but there is think about, what is Flick sitting on? How much is he aware of that time
definitely a moment where she offends him racially. I think that’s a very period which he’s in? How does he have the confidence to approach
14 ROUNDABOUT THEATRE COMPANY
someone like Violet in the be professional, and be on time. I always wanted to take on big roles,
way that he does? so even when I was in the ensemble, I thought I should treat my part
as if there were 1500 people watching me. It doesn’t matter if you are
way upstage and three levels up. Treat it like all eyes are on you. You
TS: Can you tell us what
have to realize when you’re approaching work and auditions that there
it was like doing the
are so many people who want to do what you’re doing. There are
reading at Encores! this
people who would literally bleed to do it. So when you get a job, give
past summer?
it your all. Because I think that less than two percent of all actors are
JH: It was like a rock working at any one time. And there are a lot of actors.
concert. It felt like it
was the return of a cult
classic. And that was a TS: Is there a question you wish I had asked you that I didn’t?
great thing to be a part JH: I have to talk about Sutton Foster because I’ve been a big fan of
of. We only did two hers since I began studying theatre. I came up to New York to do The
performances of it, but Wiz, and after that production, she Facebooked me, and I was like:
the audience’s response “What? Sutton Foster Facebooking me? Let me just relax and read
was tremendous. I’ve this message.” She wrote: “You really were incredible on that stage;
never experienced I couldn’t get my eyes off of you.” Sutton’s so sweet. And you know,
anything like it in I joke around all the time with my wife because I’ve always had a
my seven years of crush on her. She’s just one of those actresses that a lot of great things
performing onstage in happen to, and you feel like she deserves it. She’s so talented, and
New York. The subject matter deals with things that we all have to this role is going to show audiences Sutton Foster in a way that they’ve
deal with at some point. The themes in Violet are universal: accepting never seen her before. I really have a lot of respect for her, and I’m
yourself with all of your flaws, moving on, and the forgiveness and thrilled to be working with her again on Violet.•
freedom that comes along with that. You know, we all have issues in
our lives that need to be addressed and that we have to move past, and
I think audiences really connect with that. And when you have that with
a phenomenal score as well, I think you’ve got yourself a great musical.
TS: Did you find major differences between the two-act and
one-act versions?
JH: When we did the ninety-minute version, it felt so right. I didn’t
feel like I was missing anything because the action moved forward
naturally. There are a couple of differences, but nothing that I felt, “Oh,
wow, the audience is really going to miss that,” or “the audience won’t
get the point of the story if we don’t put this back in.”
TS: Do you have any advice for a young person who wants to enter the
profession of acting?
JH: I think you have to treat yourself like the actor you’d like to be. And
by that, I mean, if you are in the ensemble, and that’s where you want
to be, carry yourself like an amazing ensemble person. Be responsible,
Violet sings about wanting to look different, lusting for the facial features of various celebrities. She specifically mentions
several well-known pin-up models and actresses. Below is Violet’s desired self-portrait.
I’d like a pair of Gene Tierney eyes Give me just a minute though
And Ava Gardner’s eyebrows To pillage my portfolio
And anybody’s cheekbones Borrow Elke Sommers’ hair
A different mouth And Judy Garland’s pretty chin
Beneath a new Put Grace Kelly’s little nose
And better nose— With Rita Hayworth’s skin
And please, the eyes— But Ava Gardner for the eyebrows
But God, give me something! Bergman cheekbones
Something of my own, Under gypsy eyes
Something mine
So I won’t
Be ashamed
When I find a man
Ava Gardner’s
eyebrows: Known
Grace Kelly’s nose: for role in movie
Known for role in The Killers
To Catch a Thief
Ingrid Bergman’s Gene Tierney’s eyes:
cheekbones: Known for role in
Known for role Leave Her to Heaven
in Casablanca
Marilyn Monroe’s mouth:
Judy Garland’s chin:
Known for role in
Known for role in
Some Like it Hot
The Wizard of Oz
David Zinn – Setting very transparent, present, and rockin’ when it needs to be,
We wanted to make a space that did a bunch of things, but also subtle and nuanced.
hopefully seamlessly: we wanted to maintain the simplicity
of the past summer’s concert production at Encores! and, Mark Barton – Lighting
like that production, make a place for the music right in I have found it really helpful to think of Violet not as a
the middle of our world. We wanted a place that feels real musical, but as a play with music, or even more, a story
without being literal—that captures the textures of the many told through music. A tricky balance must be found and
places in the story and feels true to the spirit of all of them. held in the lighting: acknowledging that there is a physical,
And we wanted to make a place that could be permeated temporal space that the characters inhabit that affects their
and keep looping back to Violet’s memory and the woods actions, and simultaneously embracing the deep, emotional
of Spruce Pine. We looked at bus stations, at vernacular musical world that suffuses everything they do. It is exciting
architecture, places where people gather to wait or to hear as a lighting designer to attempt to maintain that balance.
music, and photographs of the era. It’s really a background
for Violet and the people on her journey, and it hopefully Part of my work involves making sure that the audience
makes the air around them feel, and sound, like they knows when and where we are onstage. These visual
fit together. cues change over time, mirroring and (I hope) supporting
the story of Violet’s changes as well. Music of course
Leon Rothenberg – Sound allows another visual vocabulary to enter, one that is more
One of the fun things about a musical is that the process immediate and expressive. At the same time, I don’t want
itself informs the design choices as you work through it. I to beat the audience over the head about what they should
always enjoy learning what the design is going to be by feel; we must draw our own emotional conclusions about the
listening to what the show is telling me. This show is no choices Violet makes.
different—it’s very exciting to have the band and ensemble
right there together. As such, the goal of the sound design Hopefully, what I can help create is an evocative visual
for Violet is to celebrate that energy. With the band center frame that helps the audience see these characters fully—
stage, I wanted the audience to feel connected to the music flawed, human, and thus beautiful.
and the people playing and singing it. The sound will be
Songs in musical theatre typically either move the action of the scene forward or reveal a character’s thoughts and emotions.
READ Read the scene between Violet, Monty, and Flick from early in the musical. How does each character feel?
What feelings are they hiding from each other?
Activate Choose one character. Write a six line song about this scene from that character’s point of view. Think
about writing a poem if writing lyrics feels too difficult.
REFLECT Read songs or poems out loud without revealing which character they were written for. Which character do
you think could sing this song? Why? When do librettists/composers/lyricists use song, and when do they
use dialogue? Why?
How do actors help the audience use their imaginations for the
nonliteral staging in Violet?
Key to the experience of Violet is the staging choice to NOT represent the lead character’s facial scar literally, with make-up.
This improvisation activity will help students prepare for the nonliteral staging of this production.
Begin by having a discussion of the differences between literal and nonliteral meaning. In theatre, it’s often more powerful to
represent an idea with a nonliteral choice. Students will have a chance to see this in Violet.
Activate Students work in pairs or trios. Start by deciding given circumstances for an improvisation: Who are the
characters, and what is their relationship? Where are they? What conflict are they experiencing? Next,
choose one member of each group and instruct that this character has a large scar across their face.
Challenge students to help the audience “see” the scar. They can discuss and refer to the scar without
saying the word “scar” and without any make-up effects. Allow each team a few minutes to improvise a
scene around this scenario.
REFLECT What did the actors do in this scene to help us imagine the scar (i.e., facial expressions, euphemisms,
questions, physical choices, etc.)? How do actors help us see something that isn’t literally on stage? Why
would a director and playwright choose to have the audience imagine the scar rather than showing it in a
literal way?
WRITE As a follow-up, students can write a short scene in which one character has a physical impediment and
talks to another character about it. Ask them to consider how actors could play the scene if this impediment
were not shown in a literal way.
In Violet, Flick’s skin color and Violet’s scar are repeatedly brought into comparison. What does that comparison reveal
about the themes of the musical?
REFLECT Lead an open class discussion. How are Flick’s skin color and Violet’s scar similar? How are they different?
Is it a fair comparison to make?
Write Give each student one of the following images. Ask students to imagine first that Flick walks into the room,
and write down a short conversation they imagine they would overhear. Repeat, imagining instead that
Violet walked in the room.
REFLECT Repeat the opening questions. How are Flick’s skin color and Violet’s scar similar? How are they different?
Is it a fair comparison to make? Did anyone change their mind? Why or why not? If Flick or Violet walked
in the room now and you’d never met them, how would the class react?
REFLECT The composer and lyricist of Violet carefully selected the songs and the musical styles to tell the story and
express characters’ feelings. What styles of music did you hear in Violet? Why do you think the composer
chose those styles? What did you know notice about how different characters sang in different styles of
music? (Compare Violet to the Preacher) For more insight into how songs can express character and tell a
story, students can read the interview with composer Jeanine Tesori on pages 8-9 and “Songs of the South”
on page 11 of this UPSTAGE Guide.
WRITE Follow these steps to create a score for a short play, using existing songs.
1. Start with a short story idea: Two characters are attracted to each other but are forbidden to be
together by an external obstacle. Who are the characters? How do they know each other? What
obstacle keeps them from being together? (For example, Violet and Flick have the obstacle of society’s
disapproval of interracial relationships in the early 1960s.)
2. Ask students to choose a distinct musical style for each of their characters (Pop, Rap, rock, folk, etc.).
3. Next, choose three songs, in the appropriate style(s), to tell a story about these characters and their
relationships. Each character gets one solo song to express themselves, and together the couple sings
one duet. These songs can go in any order, and students should consider how that order will impact
the story.
ACTIVATE Students share their story and songs in several ways: a simple “pitch” in which they tell the story, which
songs they would use, and why. Depending on the available technology in the class, students could
create a playlist on iTunes to play their songs to the class, and, with more time, create short performances
of their plays using the recorded music. Be sure to ask students to explain their choices of songs and styles
for this story.
VIOLET UPSTAGE GUIDE 21
GLOSSARY
Cleft palate A birth defect when there is a split in the roof of someone’s mouth; often associated with cleft lip.
The Old Lady tells Violet that her mailman has a cleft palate but even so, he couldn’t be any sweeter.
Ford To cross a river or stream.
The cast sings that the Jordan River is where you’ll find them and that Jordan River is not too wide to ford.
Hemlock A poisonous plant.
Violet offers to pick hemlock all day and do other such chores rather than attend school.
Galax An evergreen plant of the southeastern U.S.; also known as beetleweed.
Violet’s father asks Young Vi how much money she’s saved from picking galax.
A book that informs about Christianity through a series of questions and answers.
Catechism
When Violet’s father asks what she has in her hands, Violet tells him that it’s her mother’s catechism.
The wood of a tree said to be used to build Noah’s Ark.
Gopherwood
Violet writes about her idea to make dye from gopherwood in her journal.
Relatives.
Kinfolk
Flick asks Violet if her kinfolk even know she is coming to visit.
A plant cultivated for its aromatic seed.
Anise Monty asks Violet what that smell is, and she answers that it’s anise, to keep her dreams sweet.
RESOURCES
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http://www.crmvet.org/tim/timhis60.htm#1960nsm. February 27, 2014. Professor, Dies. N.p., n.d. Web. 11 March 2014. http://www.newsobserver.
com/2012/04/21/2015623/doris-betts-acclaimed-southern.html.
“1964.” pbs.org. American Experience: 1964. WGBH Educational Foundation, n.d.
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timeline/1964/ 1985. PBS Online. 1997-2007. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/eyesontheprize/
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“A Brief History of the Blues.” All About Jazz. N.p., n.d. Web. 11 Mar. 2014. http://
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e3-southern_music.html. “IBMA Home | International Bluegrass Music Association.”
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“Civil Rights in Nashville in 1964.” The Tennessean.
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man Library & Museum, n.d. Web. 23 February 2014. Kingsport. Reposted 2009 Web. http://kingsportarchives.wordpress.com/?s=School.
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DeSpain, S Matthew. “Tulsa Oklahoma.” Encyclopedia of the Great Plains. University “Southern Gothic Lit List.” Southern Living. N.p., n.d. Web. 11 March 2014.
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“History Official Site of Negro Spirituals, Antique Gospel Music.” History Official Site
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“June 10, 1964 Civil Rights Filibuster Ended.” senate.gov. United States Senate, n.d.
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February 27, 2014.
Founded in 1965, Roundabout Theatre Company has grown from a small 150-seat theatre in a converted supermarket basement to
become the nation’s most influential not-for-profit theatre company, as well as one of New York City’s leading cultural institutions. With five
stages on and off Broadway, Roundabout now reaches over 700,000 theatregoers, students, educators and artists across the country and
around the world every year.
We are committed to producing the highest quality theatre with the finest artists, sharing stories that endure, and providing accessibility to
all audiences. A not-for-profit company, Roundabout fulfills its mission each season through the production of classic plays and musicals;
development and production of new works by established and emerging writers; educational initiatives that enrich the lives of children
and adults; and a subscription model and audience outreach programs that cultivate and engage all audiences.
2013-2014 Season
THE
WINSLOW BOY
By Joshua Harmon By Terence Rattigan By Sophie Treadwell Book by Joe Masteroff By Donald Margulies Music by Jeanine Tesori Written and Performed
Music by John Kander Book and Lyrics by Jim Dale
Directed by Starring Starring Directed by
Lyrics by Fred Ebb
Daniel Aukin Michael Cumpsty, Mary Rebecca Hall Pam MacKinnon by Brian Crawley
Directed by
Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Starring Alan Cumming Starring Sutton Foster,
Directed by and Michelle Williams Richard Maltby Jr.
Alessandro Nivola, Lyndsey Turner Colin Donnell,
Roger Rees Co-directed and Alexander Gemignani
choreographed by and Joshua Henry
Directed by
Rob Marshall
Linsday Posner Directed by
Directed by Sam Mendes Leigh Silverman
Ted Sod: Who works in the casting office? How long have you been part CG: We typically start with a meeting with the creative team so that we
of the Roundabout staff? What made you decide to work in casting? can make sure that we understand what they are looking for in each
Carrie Gardner: Jim Carnahan, Stephen Kopel, Jillian Cimini, Lain role. We often go over lists of actors that we made and discuss whether
Kunin, Alexandre Bleau and myself. I always knew that I wanted to there is someone exciting that they know they want to offer the role to
work in theatre and that if I did it would be “behind the scenes.” In or if there are groups of people that they definitely want to audition.
high school I used to talk with my friend for hours on the phone about I think all the shows bring their own challenges, which keep the job
who we thought should be cast in our school plays. I also watched a exciting and us on our toes. Some of the challenges this season have
documentary that interviewed a casting director and decided then and been finding actors who can play specific instruments, finding actors
there that that was the job for me. I had no idea how unprepared I was who have a strong sense of the time period, putting together a group
for the job. I learned a lot in a short amount of time but loved every of actors who feel like a true ensemble together and can handle the
second of it. language of Sophie Treadwell. The challenges are always the most
rewarding though.
TS: What is the first thing the casting office has to do before casting Learn more at roundabouttheatre.org
a musical like Violet? What have been the most challenging casting
assignments this season? What has been the most fun? Find us on
8:00 PM
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Roundabout Theatre Company gratefully acknowledges the following for their generous support of Education at Roundabout during the
2013-2014 school year:
Education programs at Roundabout are supported, in part, with public funds from the New York City
Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and the New York State Council on
the Arts, celebrating 50 years of building strong, creative communities in New York’s 62 counties.
This program is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Art Works.