Bert Scott Archives | 麻豆原创 News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Wed, 25 Jun 2025 15:14:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Bert Scott Archives | 麻豆原创 News 32 32 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts 2024: What You Don鈥檛 See Behind the Scenes /news/ucf-celebrates-the-arts-2024-what-you-dont-see-behind-the-scenes/ Mon, 08 Apr 2024 14:57:37 +0000 /news/?p=140617 Without hundreds of students working in the background, 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts wouldn鈥檛 be able to bring its dozens of events and exhibits 鈥 which are ongoing through April 14 鈥 to life.

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David Jackson takes a few choreographed steps upon arriving for load-in at the beginning of 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts (CTA). When no one is watching, Jackson walks onto the empty stage in the grandness of 1,770-seat Steinmetz Hall at Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts and simply stands there with eyes wide open.

鈥淚 spend 30 seconds looking around and taking it all in,鈥 says Jackson, a senior theatre major with a track in design and technology. 鈥淚t鈥檚 probably like a young baseball player going onto the field at Yankee Stadium for the first time. You鈥檙e in awe.鈥

After a brief time on the stage, Jackson goes behind it. A year鈥檚 worth of work has built up to this: more than 40 shows over the course of 10 days. Jackson is one of 1,700 participants from 麻豆原创 involved in bringing CTA to this point. Many of them will not be taking bows in front of an audience. They are stage managers, company managers, props crew, show crew, light technicians, audio technicians, set designers, costume designers, hair stylists, makeup stylists, and every kind of backstage operative who makes it possible to pull open the curtains for professional-level performances on these world-class stages.

鈥淭his is unique,鈥 says Bert Scott, theater professor and director of production. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know of any other university with a program where students work backstage in a setting like Dr. Phillips Center. It鈥檚 invaluable.鈥

麻豆原创 has a special arrangement with Dr. Phillips Center that started when the center opened its doors 10 years ago, where students are allowed to work alongside union workers during the festival. None of the backstage work is scripted. It is as real and raw as it is in the world of theater.

鈥淎nywhere else, you would have to choose between working a job in theater or earning a degree,鈥 says Claudia Lynch, associate professor of stage management. 鈥淔or 麻豆原创 students, this is their curriculum. The experience at 麻豆原创 Celebrate the Arts and the classwork go together.鈥

B Antonetty transferred to 麻豆原创 three years ago after making two discoveries. One, there are a multitude of careers in stage management. And two, 麻豆原创 is the only public university in Florida that offers a theatre Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) with a track in stage management.

鈥淭his is why I came to 麻豆原创,鈥 Antonetty says from a backstage area at Dr. Phillips Center. 鈥淪o much of working backstage is knowing the language and being able to collaborate with people in every facet of theater. We cover as much as possible on campus, and then we come here and have our hands on everything. We work with union workers and find actual solutions as actual problems come up.鈥

To be clear, 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts is not a 10-day theater lesson. The work on the 2024 event started more than a year ago. Dozens of Scott鈥檚 design and technology students have been creating scenery, costumes, and set pieces for nine months. For every week the onstage cast rehearses, the backstage crew puts in two weeks.

鈥淭he barber chair in Sweeney Todd is one example,鈥 Scott says.

The audiences at the four performances of Sweeney Todd will see the centerpiece barber chair transform into a chute, over and over, with actors sliding out of sight. What they won鈥檛 see are the 182 hours Jackson spent researching, designing, constructing, testing, re-constructing, and re-researching how to build the chair to ensure it鈥檚 safe and durable enough to withstand a week of shows.

鈥淲e learn a lot of multidisciplinary skills in the program,鈥 Jackson says. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned electronics, welding, construction and how to research. In this field you have to constantly come up with new ideas, and research is the best way to add to my toolbox and be marketable.鈥

Networking is another powerful tool for anyone pursuing a career in theater. Lynch energizes 麻豆原创鈥檚 network, having spent 20 years working in New York City.

鈥淥ur faculty connections are strong,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut we also have an advisory board of working professionals and an influential alumni base in places where these students want to be someday.鈥

Lauren Koval 鈥21, an alum who majored in theatre with a track in stage management, working during a 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts 2021 event, which was held outside due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Lauren Koval 鈥21 is one of those graduates. Koval worked at 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts during all four years as a student in stage management. A few months after the final CTA performance of 2021, Koval moved to New York to work backstage on a musical. It became a steppingstone into jobs with HBO Max, a Broadway firm, Showtime, and Netflix. Along the way, Koval invited other 麻豆原创 students and alumni into the growing network.

For these 10 days, however, Koval has chosen to leave New York and come back to work as a production supervisor for CTA, unfazed by the 14-hour days.

鈥淣othing could stop me from contributing to this amazing experience,鈥 Koval says. Koval has worked in iconic Broadway theaters and yet is still in awe of the venues at Dr. Phillips Center.

鈥淭hese spaces are unlike any I鈥檝e seen during my time in New York. And then you add the notion of being hired back by the same people at 麻豆原创 who shaped me and my career, it鈥檚 hard to imagine anything more special than this.鈥

Students like Jackson and Antonetty are on the verge of starting their own backstage careers. The experience at CTA makes the transition less daunting.

鈥淲orking backstage at CTA makes me feel like I鈥檓 in a dream of where I want to be,鈥 Antonetty says. 鈥淭hese are high-stakes productions, and I鈥檓 working with mentors, classmates, and professionals who have my back to make sure I can鈥檛 fail.鈥

There will be a lot of emotion when Jackson steps behind the stages of CTA for the final time as a student. Anxiety about the future will not be one of them.

鈥淚鈥檓 excited,鈥 Jackson says. 鈥淭hese shows create the perfect space between being a college student and starting a career. I know I鈥檓 ready.鈥

Lynch listens to all of the conversations and appears very much at ease for someone with so many plates spinning at the moment.

鈥淭his event is a massive undertaking,鈥 Lynch says. 鈥淏ut every year when we walk in the door of this incredible Dr. Phillips Center, our faculty members look at the stages and we look at the faces of our students. And we say, 鈥榊eah, this is why we do this.鈥欌

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Lauren Koval
Theatre 麻豆原创 Breaks New Ground with 鈥淣icholas Nickleby鈥 Stage (with video) /news/theatre-ucf-breaks-new-ground-nicholas-nickleby-stage/ Thu, 06 Mar 2014 15:56:49 +0000 /news/?p=57746 It took more than 2,000 man-hours to develop one of the most dynamic characters in 鈥淭he Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby鈥 鈥斕齮he stage. The 6.5-hour production by Theatre 麻豆原创 and (OST) is a massive undertaking, with a cast of 27 actors performing 听100 scenes that take place in 40 distinct locations, so set designer Bert Scott had to think big.

Scott, a Theatre 麻豆原创 associate professor, began brainstorming in March 2013 for ways to fit the expansive story inside the OST鈥檚 324-seat Margeson Theater.

鈥淭he play itself is so epic that it needed a large space, but also the practical necessity of fitting all 27 actors,鈥 Scott said.

The solution was to design a flexible set that had many entrances, exits and acting levels. And the actors use them all, from the platforms built into the seating area to the bridge set high above the audience鈥檚 heads and the traditionally 鈥渂ackstage鈥 space behind the proscenium wall, which was removed for the production.

鈥淭he action literally surrounds the audience and incorporates them into the world of the characters,鈥 Scott said.

Adding to the open space on the ground level, Scott included a rotating platform that he calls 鈥渢he doughnut.鈥 This automated feature allows the cast and crew to quickly move furniture 鈥 and actors 鈥 on and off stage. Computer-controlled to accelerate and decelerate, the turntable was one of the directors鈥 answers to rapid and tricky scene changes.

鈥淭he finished set really works well for the production,鈥 Scott says. 鈥淭he cast easily adapted to it and audiences have been quite complimentary.鈥

For all of the pieces to come together for this ambitious play, 鈥楴ickleby鈥 required an assembled cast and crew of more than 100 professionals, faculty, graduate and undergraduate students and interns from both the Orlando Shakespeare Theater and the 麻豆原创. The partnership, which celebrates its 25th anniversary this year, was key to pulling off one of the most challenging productions in the theater world, and something for which Scott is grateful.

鈥淭he level of 麻豆原创 student participation in the process has been crucial to its success,鈥 he says. 鈥淏y mounting this production in partnership with OST we have been able to provide valuable practical learning opportunities working on a professional level production for our students.鈥

鈥淭he Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby鈥 continues through March 9 at Orlando Shakespeare Theater in Orlando鈥檚 Loch Haven Park. For schedules and tickets, go to .

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Intricate Sets Bring Theatre 麻豆原创 to Life /news/intricate-sets-bring-theatre-ucf-to-life/ Mon, 19 Sep 2011 14:10:53 +0000 /news/?p=27396 When the 麻豆原创 kicks off its theatre season next week, audiences will feel dramatic tension, hear actors exchange dialogue and see a large set take over the tiny stage of the Black Box theatre.

But what audiences can鈥檛 see is one of the most interesting parts of the production: before each show, 麻豆原创 Theatre students work tirelessly behind-the-scenes.

As this year鈥檚 season kicks off with two shows instead of just one, students will be responsible for building and breaking down several different sets for the shows and making sure the parts fit together like a puzzle.

鈥淎s a repertory production, there are two shows enwrapped,鈥 said Associate Professor Bert Scott, who designed the sets for both shows. 鈥淭he big challenge is there are several very large pieces to move in a short amount of time. It鈥檚 like a game of Tetris.鈥

Savage in Limbo, a play about feisty young New Yorkers trying to find their ways, takes place in a bar. Nice People Dancing to Good Country Music, about the wacky patrons of a country bar, starts in an asphalt parking lot, and the set changes to a rooftop for act two.

Shaped like a house, the main set was designed to break in half and transform into the background each play calls for.

In addition to providing the stage for each show, the set and scenery hide props for whichever play is not being acted.

Of the largest props, Savage in Limbo calls for a pool table, and Nice People Dancing to Good Country Music features a pick-up truck. Students are responsible for successfully hiding and safely moving the props during intermission and between productions, relying on wheeled risers for transport.

Matt Pye, a junior Theatre Design student, is working as a carpenter, helping freshmen construct the set and teaching them how to move its elements.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 great about theatre is that we鈥檙e always challenged, and it鈥檚 constant problem-solving,鈥 Pye said. 鈥淪tudents have to work as a team and communicate, and there鈥檚 a time constraint. It鈥檚 all a great learning experience.鈥

The educational takeaway is one of the reasons 麻豆原创 has staged repertory productions for the past three years, said Scott, the theatre professor.

鈥淲e do repertory to give students an idea of something that is done a lot in professional theatre,鈥 Scott explained. 鈥淵ou have to think about not just what the stage looks like, but how things fit off the stage and how to make things mobile.鈥

Savage in Limbo and Nice People Dancing to Good Country Music will be performed at the Black Box Theatre, 4000 Central Florida Blvd., Orlando.

Performances of Savage in Limbo will begin at 8 p.m. Sept. 22-24 and Oct. 5 and 7. There will be a 2 p.m. performance Oct. 9.

Nice People Dancing to Good Country Music will be performed at 8 p.m. Sept. 29 and 30, Oct. 1 and Oct. 6 and 8. There will be a 2 p.m. show on Oct. 2.

Tickets are $17 for adults, $15 for seniors and $10 for students. Subscriptions to Black Box productions are available.

 

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