β525,600 minutes - how do you measure, measure a year?β These lyrics will fill the E. Turner Stump Theatre this weekend as the run of βRentβ finishes up on Sun, Feb. 25.
Amy Fritsche, associate professor of acting and musical theater and director of βRentβ for ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ State, walked alongside students performing in the show from start to finish to ensure their first performance of the Spring semester was a hit.
For Fritsche and the School of Theater and Dance, choosing the pieces they will perform starts with the students, to verify the pieces they choose will fulfill the requirements the students need.
βWe have a couple different ways that we go about it,β Fritsche said. βWe go and see what the needs of the undergrad student body are, and we also look at what are the needs of the graduate student body.β
βRentβ is a musical set in the East Village of New York City in the early 1990s and follows a group of friends for a year as they live their lives and navigate the AIDS epidemic. The musical has won the Tony Award for Best Musical and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
For Fritsche, βRentβ holds a special place in her heart as the musical inspired her to take a left turn in her life and pursue an education in musical theater. Fritsche lived in New York in the β90s and could relate a lot to the musical when she first saw it.
βThe point of view of the individuals was something that really sparked my imagination, and it felt a little like home,β Fritsche said.
To prepare students for the show, Fritsche had the playβs dramaturg β someone who provides the cast with knowledge, research and interpretations about the work they are performing β dig up research on what the times were like in the β90s. She also brought in Steven Anderson, former artistic director of CATCO Theater, to talk with students.
βSteven Anderson came in over Zoom and talked to the students about what it was like to be a gay man in the middle of the AIDS epidemic,β Fritsche said. βAnd how he survived it and the friends who died, so that they could understand through someone who lived it, what it means to have gone through that era. That was incredibly important.β
The preparation time for the musical was short. Fritsche only had a few rehearsals with students before Christmas break and then only a month to rehearse and prepare before opening day, Feb. 16.
βWe had a month to put this show together. And everybody that I cast stepped up, was amazing, professional, did their work and were incredible to work with,β Fritsche said.
Other preparations for the show included explaining concepts and things from the period that students werenβt familiar with.
βI had to explain the difference between a hot plate and an answering machine to a student. I had to explain the fact that you could actually, back in the day, call a payphone,β Fritsche said. βThere were just the little things of the time period that the students of todayβs generation just don't know.β
As Fritsche and her performers prepare for their last weekend of performances, she hopes that they will be able to translate one of the playβs main points, living every day to the fullest, to the audience.
"I want the audience to leave with a sense of community, a sense of love and an understanding that we cannot take anything for granted,β Fritsche said.