Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Guys and Dolls Reprise

BFS Commencement 2014
Our "Nathan Detroit" of 1980, Fisher Stevens '81
[Head of School Larry Weiss and Fisher Stevens '81]
This week's Middle and Upper School musical production of Guys and Dolls reminds your friendly historian that this great classic musical has been mounted at BFS on at least two other occasions (the school is interested in memories of other Guys and Dolls at BFS, come forward please!)

The first known BFS production of Guys and Dolls was in May, 1980. Its performances were dedicated to a great moment in BFS history that same month: celebrating the burning of the Pearl Street mortgage. Read more about the 1980 performance of Guys and Dolls in The Life, May 1980, page 3. Of note, Fisher Stevens '81 played Nathan Detroit; the recipient of the BFS George Fox Distinguished Alumnus Award last year at Commencement, Fisher Stevens' shared memories and words of wisdom for the Class of 2014.

The second known production of Guys and Dolls was in November, 2006. Both casts were terrific - saw it twice! No reviews of the 2006 production seem to survive, but a great article previewing the show and wonderful photos do!
2006: Luck, Be a Lady
2006: Sit Down, You're Rocking the Boat

2006: Marry the Man Today
2006: Guys and Dolls - Finale/Reprise

Thursday, October 23, 2014

30 Years of BFS's Eeriest Tradition

In the distance... 
It can only be the Lower School Halloween Dance! In 1984, Marna Herrity was our dance teacher and she conceived of the Halloween Dance for the entirety of the Lower School's oldest grade. It immediately became a BFS tradition, a rite of passage of Lower School learning. The Halloween Dance has been directed by Margaret Bary for the last ten years. Margaret reports that this year will be our largest Halloween Dance, with a record number of 55 4th grade student performers.

Many aspects of the Halloween Dance are unchanged, most importantly that students still choreograph the work each year, guided by their director. It is an important early opportunity for BFS students to learn general aspects of theater such as listening and waiting for their cues, entrances and exits. Our students continue to design their own fabulous skeletal costumes using fluorescent tape on black clothing. The music, of course, remains selections from the "scary" album first excerpted in 1984, though those selections vary with the years. 

the sound of bones...
There have been few changes. The performance space has gone from the Lower Gym to the Meeting House Theater and then back to the Lower Gym, where it remains today so that all performers may appear on stage simultaneously. When the Halloween Dance was directed by Dori Dietz, our LS dance teacher for many years, 9th grade "buddies" helped 4th graders create their individual papier mâché masks, while today our 4th graders's smiling faces are covered in make-up also of their own design, applied by parent volunteers. The largest change is that the Halloween Dance was first performed by the 5th grade, yet it's been a 4th grade tradition since the Fall of 1986, when the 5th grade joined the Middle School. And one change is also a first: lighting will be used this year in the Gym! 

As photos from recent years show, the Halloween Dance is an exciting learning experience treasured by BFS students. 

skeletons rising... 
slowly from their graves...


night falls...
the forest holds its breath...
everything is still...
suddenly, the wind blows.

Thursday, September 25, 2014

BFS history, the video

"This Is Our Quiet Time"
BFS ordinarily shares brief clips in its Video Archives, but we make an exception this week with the full version of the original BFS musical, Forward to the Past. Written and performed by the BFS community in 1989, Forward to the Past: the Historical Hysterical Follies of Brooklyn Friends School, relates our school's history as uncovered by an extra-terrestrial cultural anthropologist visiting the Planet Earth in his search for "friendly peoples." And he just happened to land at BFS. Of course, there are many familiar faces among the cast of teachers, parents, students, and friends, including Cheryl Foote, Don Knies, Jack Ramey, Martin Norregaard, Lawrence Gibson and many others. A clip of just the hip-hop finale was posted almost a year ago, yet today the beautiful solo, "This Is Our Quiet Time," beginning at 49:30, merits a listen.



Thursday, June 5, 2014

A truly phenomenal woman

A Truly Phenomenal Woman
BFS Dance Concert 1989
With Maya Angelou's passing last week, let's go back 25 years to 1989, the year which saw the creation and first performance of "A Truly Phenomenal Woman" at the BFS Dance Concert. This short dance was set to Maya Angelou's poem "Phenomenal Woman." Choreographed by Monique N. Brown '89 and first performed by Ming Lou Rosado '90, "A Truly Phenomenal Woman" has since been performed by other BFS students at later BFS Dance Concerts over the years as it became an important dance for the BFS Dance Concert repertoire. Maya Angelou's words continue to positively impact our world, and this dance has also positively impacted generations at BFS. Maya Angelou remains in our grateful thoughts for many reasons, and one is the empowerment her words gave our students which inspired them to create and perform this dance.




Thursday, January 30, 2014

A shy princess from BFS's Once Upon A Mattress, 1988

1988 Once Upon A Mattress - Shy
From the 1988 BFS musical production of Once Upon A Mattress comes the song "Shy" in which Princess Winnifred the Woebegone expresses her true nature as she tries to find Prince Dauntless the Drab for the very first time. And this after she swam the moat to get to the castle, much to everyone's dismay. I think Carol Burnett would be proud.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Feeling your Blue Pride? Make that Indigo

It's a throwback this fine Thursday to the "Mood Indigo" scene from the 1989 BFS original musical A Small Cabaret. A Small Cabaret was a departure from the traditional BFS musical: this ensemble production featured standards like Duke Ellington's "Mood Indigo" and "It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)," yet it also included more contemporary songs like "Miss Celie's Blues" from the film The Color Purple.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

A bolt from the blue, it's true, it's you...

1987 Dames At Sea
Take two minutes to enjoy a charming duet in the BFS Middle School's 1987 production of Dames at Sea, capturing the moment when our romantic leads Dick and Ruby first meet, she swoons into his arms and they both know it's true love.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Stretching ourselves once upon the Natchez Trace

1987's The Robber Bridegroom, Upper School Musical
Scanning a 1920s scrapbook by hand can be monotonous, so I've been multi-tasking by going to my family's collection of BFS videos once again since I know video did not always survive in the school's collections over the years. My own home was the source of last week's Forward to the Past clip. Today we share a short scene from 1987's Upper School musical, The Robber Bridegroom which is followed by some quick insights from director Phil Bratnober at the cast party. Phil's words about "stretching ourselves to the limit" are worth hearing no matter when BFS was a part of your life. In case you did not notice, the band for this production is in the hayloft above the stage and the whole set is a carpentry feat that just goes to show "where there's a will, there's a way."

Now, what BFS gems do you have lying around your homes?

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Video archives return with Forward to the Past, 1989

Forward to the Past - Finale - 1989
Do you remember Forward to the Past: Historical Hysterical Follies of Brooklyn Friends School? That was the 1989 musical about BFS - written and produced by BFS community members who also starred in the production. Forward to the Past was about an alien named T.E. from the far-distant future. T.E. was a budding cultural anthropologist visiting the planet Earth in the great search for "friendly" peoples. The actual site of T.E.'s visit just happened to be 375 Pearl Street in Brooklyn where he stumbled upon a trunk of memorabilia and shared its contents with his superiors in outer space. They learned a bit of Brooklyn Friends School's history and learned it has always been a friendly place. This rainy Thursday, let's look at the finale of Forward to the Past which features our first principal Mary Haviland leading the cast in song.


Thursday, September 19, 2013

A BFS Tradition, Learning through Service

1995 - Service at the "Park"
(now known as the Marriott)
Certainly, there are myriad ways in which we all contribute to the greater good of our world, but BFS has a long tradition of encouraging its students and families to learn through giving their time, energy and monies to non-profit organizations, including to BFS. Last year's article about BFS students helping families overseas after World War II is just one of many examples of our school's long-standing commitment to community service. BFS has just engaged a new Director of Service Learning, Natania Kremer, who is profiled in a recent article at the BFS website, and states "...it's wonderful to be looking at service learning schoolwide starting at age 2." Also wonderful is that Natania joins us right in time to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the beginning of the service learning graduation requirement at BFS.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

New to the Digital Archives

This week, we have a few additions to the Digital Archives.
  • Two new items in Playbills: the 1980 Middle School production of Gilbert and Sullivan's Patience or Bunthorne's Bride and the 1982 Intergenerational Chorus performance at the CUNY NYC College of Technology's Klitgord Auditorium on Jay Street. 

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Video killed the archivist's mind...


Interesting issues emerge with video in the BFS Archives, particularly that VHS quality sure does not stand the test of time. I've now learned that 25 years is a pretty accurate VHS lifespan. Transferring Dance Concert VHS has been the major focus in the archives recently. There are often multiple copies of each Dance Concert, so listening to the same songs over and over can drive one to the brink.

Monday, January 7, 2013

Close Harmony, of course!

It is a musical time in the Archives. A faculty member's recent request to see the highly-acclaimed Academy Award winning documentary Close Harmony sparked nice memories. Filmed at BFS during the 1979-80 school year, Close Harmony was directed by alum parent Nigel Noble and chronicles the Intergenerational Chorus, which was the brainchild of our Lower School music teacher of the time, Arlene Symons. The Intergenerational Chorus was comprised of BFS 4th and 5th graders and their senior citizen pen pals from another choral group Arlene led, from the Council Center for Senior Citizens of the National Council for Jewish Women's Brooklyn Section. This wonderful collaboration brought joy, friendship and music into the lives of both groups