Klein Forest High School
Transcription
Klein Forest High School
January/February/March 2013 Fine Arts Klein ISD newsletter Fine Arts Klein ISD newsletter what’s inside... calendar.....3 this month’s feature.....4 band.....12 orchestra.....12 dance.....12 choir.....13 theatre.....14 Fine Arts Contact Information Monte Mast Director of Fine Arts 832-249-4305 mmast@kleinisd.net visual arts...16 art winners...17 on the scene...20 Karri Clark Fine Arts Coordinator 832-249-4366 kclark@kleinisd.net Kimberly Johnson Fine Arts Secretary 832-249-4306 kjohnson3@kleinisd.net An online version of this newsletter can be found on kleinisd.net/ finearts/newsletter on the cover... The art featured on the cover of this month’s newsletter was created by Klein Collins’ student Jennifer Padilla. The piece won a Scholastic Gold Key as part of Padilla’s portfolio submission. what’s coming up... Klein ISD voted... March 8 25 26 Region Jazz Concert KOHS Band Concert KFHS Band Concert Krimmel Choir Cluster Concert April Theiss Fifth Grade Copper Art Exhibition 6 9 10 11 15 16 27 29 Int. Orchestra Galveston Isle Festival All Region HS Orchestra UIL All Region HS Orchestra UIL Int. Orchestra UIL Concert & Sight Reading Contest Int. Choir 6th Gr Choir Festival Krimmel Symphonic Band UIL UIL Band Concert & Senior Contest KFHS Choir Concert Doerre to South Coast Music Festival Wunderlich Spring Concert Ongoing March 2 -29 Theiss Elementary 5th Grade Copper Art Exhibit at the Barbara Bush Library March 2 - 29 Barbara Bush Librabry 3 Two names to keep an eye on... Director of Fine Arts Monte Mast sat down with two students who he thinks may join the people on the surrounding pages. Seniors Ryne Nardecchia and Morgan Starr recently finished their run as Sweeney Todd and Mrs. Lovett in Klein Oak High School’s production of Sweeney Todd. If you were fortunate to see the production, you know how strong their performances were, but it would come as no surprise to anyone involved in Klein Oak’s theatre department. See how some of Klein’s finest aspire to become Broadway’s finest. Monte Mast: When did you come to Klein ISD or are you lifelong Klein residents? Ryne Nardecchia: I technically came to Klein midway through Kindergarten. I started in the Heights and moved to Hassler and eventually Doerre. Morgan Starr: I’ve always lived in Klein. I started at Haude Elementary and moved to Strack and because of the International Baccalaureate (IB) program, I transferred to Klein Oak instead of attending Klein Collins. MM: What was your first theatrical experience? 4 RN: I did a fifteen minute adaptation of Annie where I was the only boy in the entire show. I played Rooster and there was a Mama Warbucks instead of a Daddy Warbucks at Applause Theatre. I think I was twelve at the time. I saw my sister in a production of You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown and thought “This looks like fun so I’ll try that.” I had also seen some comedy sketches on a cruise ship. I got pulled up on stage for one of the bits and thought it was fun being in front of an audience. MS: My start was a little different. My start came from my elementary music teacher Joan Howey at Haude. She told me that I should audition at Klein Collins as they were looking for an elementary-aged girl to fill the role of the young Cosette in their production of Les Miserables. She always saw me taking everything in my music class so seriously and told me to go for it. She came back to see me in Sweeney Todd and that was the first time I had seen her in a really long time. She reminded me of how I took my solfege so seriously in the third grade. I got the role as young Cosette and I haven’t stopped doing shows since. MM: Tying into that, when did it click to you that this was something you wanted to do as a career?” RN: When I was younger, I wanted to do everything. At one time I wanted to be a baseball catcher and another time I wanted to be a ski bum. My dad always said it was because I wanted to “wear the gear.” That was a cool thing and it’s kind of cool because my mom is a costumer so if I became an actor I would get to wear all of the gear she made. But the first time I really knew was when I went down and performed in The Sound of Music at the Hobby Center. That was the biggest stage I ever performed on. It was one of the scariest experiences, but also one of the most rewarding because I was performing with all of the professionals. That’s when it clicked for me. MS: My experience was similar. I always woke up wanting to be something or someone different. I guess performing is just my medium to do that and to do that for the rest of my life. I remember when I was in seventh grade, I played Peter Pan in Peter Pan at Miller Outdoor Theatre. I was flying above the stage and looking down on the crowd and hearing them clapping for me, and that became that pinnacle moment that this is the only thing I can do for the rest of my life. There’s something about being on stage and being in front of people that is indescribable as an artist. It fuels you. The audience fuels you and you feel like you are giving back to them. MM: I can relate. In my former position as a band director here at Klein Oak, I would have those times where everything falls into place and that synthesis creates a clarity where everything either falls or is pushed away so that you can go for something even better. RN: Like when you get going show after show and you get tired so you take a break and two days later you are like, lets do another show. MS: Exactly. continued on page 6 Notable Klein Oak High School Actors Alumni..... Jim Parsons Actor Big Bang Theory Graduated in 1991. Jim is best known for his role of Sheldon Cooper in the CBS sitcom The Big Bang Theory. He has won two consecutive Emmy Awards for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series and a Golden Globe. 5 Eddie Steeples Actor My Name is Earl Graduated in 1992. Played the dancing office supply delivery person in the OfficeMax “Rubberband Man” commercial, which received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Commercial in 2004 and as Darnell “Crabman” Turner on the NBC sitcom My Name Is Earl. going to be sick for the first show. My director came up to me and said, “Hey buddy. This is what life is in the theatre. Some nights your going to have it and some nights you’re going to be faking it, but you have to make it happen every night.” That was very eye opening. If I can make it through something like this, nothing is going to get me down. I do love it and that was what got me through it. My mom was running back and forth between the local corner store getting me tea and stuff to help me get through it physically. TWO Continued from page 5 MM: Did both of you go through your Intermediate school theater programs? RN: I didn’t go into a theatre program in my middle school but I did outside theatre. Actually I played oboe for three years in my middle school band. MS: I went through my middle school theatre program at Strack. There was a teacher there; Robin Welch and she put all she could into that program. We did the speech tournaments where we went to the high schools and competed. That was so much fun. MS: To me that is what part of the draw is. No matter what is happening in life, you have to step on stage and leave it all behind. It strips you down. Doing all of the high school theatre Ryan and I have done with all of the outside theatre productions, it can get crazy. As young actors, we have had to juggle not just academic school but school theatre on top of doing things outside. MM: Both of you have talked about other experiences like the Hobby Center and Miller Outdoor Theatre. What are some of the other experiences you have had outside of Klein ISD? MM: The amount of time involved in theatre is immense. When you have outside projects in addition it becomes a matter of how many plates can you keep spinning in the air. It really is a challenge. RN: The first full-length show I did was Beauty and the Beast. I was a small, kind of goofy kid and I was Lefou and had the ponytail and everything. Being with those older kids was an inspiration. I always wanted to be like them. There was always someone I was looking up to in every show I did, and somewhere along the way there were kids telling me they wanted to be like me. That was kind of weird. MS: I agree RN: My mom says that she has no worries about me going to college and managing time and my own schedule. That is something that this experience has taught me. MS: I did lessons at Theatre Under the Stars (TUTS). Both Ryan and I are alumni of the Humphreys School of Musical Theatre (TUTS continuing education program) and I remember doing that and meeting all of those people. Through that, you hear about all of the events that are going on in Houston as far as theatre. I did a lot at HITS Theatre where I did Little Women and gained experience. Through that connection was where I got my role as Peter in Peter Pan. MM: Its funny you say that. In my experience as a band director, we had more eligibility issues in the six weeks we didn’t ask as much time from the students and our fewest issues in the six weeks when marching band was in full production. You don’t develop the ability to manage your own time unless you are forced to do it. MS: Exactly MM: Speaking of college, when people hear the phrase college and career readiness, they usually think of doctors, lawyers and business professions leaving out the arts. What is the next step for each of you and how did your experience at Klein Oak help you toward that goal? RN: Two summers ago I got to be part of this show called Kissless, which was written by Houstonian Chance McClain. I was part of the creation of it in the original form where I was recording demos in the studio. Eventually I got to audition for the role I had been preparing for. It was very interesting to be part of a project from the ground up. I got the role I wanted when the show was entered into a contest called NYMF (New York Musical Theatre Festival). Shows are selected to perform in New York in an off-Broadway theatre. We were getting closer and closer to the performances and we were about to fly up there and I began showing signs of laryngitis. I was so stressed from putting in all of the time and effort. I was so connected to the part. It looked like I was RN: Mr. Robinson, when teaching us, he always emphasizes the process and how to make choices. He is very aware that not all of us are going to go into theatre as a career. He calls it cross-curricular teaching. He jokes about it but he takes what we learn in our theatre classes and shows us how it relates to non-theatre things we would do in the real world. Many of the theatre students worked on the Relay for Life and we were the ones who 6 Other Notable Klein ISD Acting Alumni.... stayed to clean up after the event because that is what is expected in our class. The other teachers in the school know that they can rely on us to finish the job. He talks with us about being a good person before you can become a good actor. I got off on a tangent there, what was the original question? MS: What are your college plans? Matt Bomer Actor KHS graduate in 1996. Matt Bomer can currently be seen playing Neal Caffrey on the series White Collar. He has also worked on Guiding Light, North Shore, Chuck and Magic Mike. He was a classmate of actor Lee Pace. RN: Oh yes. I am going to Texas State. I got accepted into their musical theatre program with Kaitlin Hopkins. Then I assume that I will go off to New York and work with some band of actors of some sort. I would like to write a show with somebody but I’m going to focus on acting in college before I go off and chase that. MS: Next year I will be attending the University of Texas at Austin in their BFA Acting Program headed by Dr. Lucien Douglas. What is really interesting is that our UIL One Act plays always have a clinician. I met Dr. Douglas when I was a freshman and he cliniced our production. Ryan and I have been eating, sleeping and breathing college since we were freshmen because the programs are so highly competitive. We have been flying all over the country auditioning. This fall semester was awful because we were always auditioning and not performing as much. I had always liked Dr. Douglas and what he had to say and it just so happened that they started a BFA program at UT starting the fall of 2013 so I get to be part of the inaugural program. MM: That is very cool. What did your parents say when you wanted to go into acting as a career? RN: My parents never forced anything onto me. My dad is a huge baseball fan and I’m actually named after a famous baseball player, Ryne Sandberg. He never forced baseball onto me. He was always like “Whatever you want to do, Lynn Collins Actress KHS graduate in 1995. Lynn Collins starred along Hugh Jackman in X-Men Origins: Wolverine and Taylor Kitsch in John Carter. She was also seen in The Number 23, The Lake House, 13 Going On 30, Law and Order: SVU, True Blood, 50 FIrst Dates and many others. Lee Pace Actor KHS graduate in 1996. Lee Pace’s breakthrough role was Ned on the ABC Series Pushing Dasies. He has appeared as Garrett in Twilight:Breaking Dawn and Fernando Wood in Lincoln. He is currently filming the role of Thranduil in The Hobbit. Kristolyn Lloyd Actress KHS graduate in 1995. Kristolyn graduated from Klein High school where she ran track and was an active member of the Drama Dept. She studied at Carnegie Mellon University where she received her Bachelor’s Degree in Drama. She was in 112 episodes of The Bold and the Beautiful between 2010-2012. Shane Coffey Actor KCHS graduate in 2005. Shane can currently be seen in the ABC Family Series, Pretty Little Liars. He has written, directed and produced several works. Coffey is set to star in a short film called Exiles with fellow Pretty Little Liars actor Troian Bellisario. continued on page 8 7 Other Notable Klein ISD Acting Alumni.... TWO Continued from page 7 Sherry Stringfield Actress KHS graduate in 1985. Sherry Stringfield is best known as “Dr. Susan Lewis” on NBC’s hit medical drama, ER , a role which has garnered her three Emmy nominations for Outstanding Lead Actress on a Drama Series, a Golden Globe nomination and a People’s Choice Award nomination for Favorite Female Performer. Guru Singh Actor KFHS graduate in 1998. After he graduatef from high school, Guru SIngh graduated with a Bachelors of Arts in Acting and a Bachelors in Business Administration in MIS from the University of Houston. He was seen on the NBC show Outsourced with Klein High School graduate Ben Rappaport. Alison Luff Actress KCHS graduate in 2007. Allison won a Tommy Tune award her junior year for her role as Annabel Glick in Lucky Stiff. Alison has appeared on Broadway in Mamma Mia, Ghost The Musical and Scandalous. Rayn Doom Actor KHS graduate in 1998. In 2005, Ryan made the jump to Los Angeles where he found work, appearing in many popular TV shows such as CSI: Miami, Castle and 90210. In 2010, Ryan landed the recurring role of “Wyatt” on Greg Garcia’s hit comedy, Raising Hope for Fox. Tracy Jai Edwards Actress KFHS graduate in 1997. Tracy Jai Edwards went to Sam Houston State University where she studied Musical Theater with an emphasis in Dance. She later was seen in such shows as Law and Order: SVU, Curb Your Enthusiasm and White Collar. She has also been seen on stage in Legally Blonde The Musical: The Search For Elle Woods. 8 we are behind you.” For example when I was very young I told my mom I wanted to be in ballet. I was 2. My dad walked up to my mom and said, “When he turns 4 and he still wants to be in ballet, we’ll put him in ballet.” So eventually we did that. My mom is more excited than me about it sometimes. She schedules auditions for me and finds interesting projects. My dad always has tears in his eyes at the end of shows and is telling me how proud he is of what I’ve done and that is such a cool feeling. I’ve always had the most support I could have possibly had from my parents. And from Morgan’s parents. I call Morgan’s mom “Other Mother” or “OME.” MS: Mine is exactly the same. I started out in competitive gymnastics when I was little. Then I switched to ballet, tap and jazz. I tried to juggle gymnastics and dance at the same time and then I wanted to do theatre too. My mom said to slow down and we needed to pick what I really wanted to do. I shifted into theatre. My parents are the same as Ryne’s where they could not possibly be more supportive. Especially in high school where I can’t begin to thank my parents enough for what they have done to support my aspirations. MM: I feel fortunate that my parents were the same way. Every new thing I wanted to join, my dad would ask the same questions, “Can you add this and still fulfill your obligations to everything else you are already doing? If not, who will you let down by not being there?” Two pretty powerful questions I still think about today. RN: You are right. Sometimes we have had to make choices. My mom was always letting me learn from my own mistakes. There was this one time I was doing three shows at once. She never said I couldn’t do them because I told her I wanted to do them but once I finished I don’t think I would ever try that again. MS: This is something really interesting. I’m really involved in school. I love learning. So when I told my mom I wanted to apply for the IB program she was like “That’s really cool but what about your theatre?” since she knew how much time it took and she knew the IB program was pretty intense as well. She said go ahead and see what happens and we’ll make it work. IB has been the most trying thing I’ve done in my life so far but it has made me manage time so well. Now that I’m coming out of the program from the other side can look back and realize how much I have learned from it. I am just so happy I am in a district where I am not only able to achieve performing excellence but academic excellence too. parts I’ll get to do. RN: Your want to do it is enough drive to push everything else aside. MM: I’m impressed that both of you have such a good grasp on the idea of networking. Especially in an industry like the arts where people are looking for intangibles, you are looking for any way to move your 8 ½” x 11” piece of paper from one stack to the next. MM: As if you would decline either, but if you had a choice would you rather win an Emmy or a Tony? MS: A Tony. MM: Making a career out of acting is like being an astronaut or an NBA player, there are a whole lot more people with that as a goal than will ever have the opportunity. How have you prepared for that challenge? RN: Wow that’s hard. MM: It’s two different worlds. RN: One thing I have been told and I think I heard it from Tommy Tune is “If you can see yourself doing anything else, do that.” I hear people saying that they have backup plans. Why do you have a backup plan? It just means that you are planning on not being successful. There is no guarantee that I’ll even get work but I got into a college that I very much wanted to get into. But that is a first step. It will give me the roots I need behind me. I’ll be able to meet a whole lot of really great people in college. They say it is such a small world so I plan on making as many connections as I can while I am there. My roommate might turn out to be the next great producer who casts me as the lead. I’m going to survive on my art. I’ll write and sell a show that will help me pay the rent. MS: That’s why I said the Tony because I haven’t explored the other world yet. That’s why I might want an Emmy but I don’t even know that world yet. RN: I don’t know about that world either. MS: Right now in my life I’m focused on theatre RN: I guess it depends on the project. If I’m super proud of the work and I was fortunate enough to be nominated, of course I would want to win but at this point in my life I would want to win a Tony. It would establish me in the world of musical theatre, which I’m majoring in. MM: Klein ISD has a strong legacy in both television and theatre with Klein Oak grad Jim Parsons winning an Emmy and Klein High graduate Kevin Adams winning a third Tony for lighting design. Does this strong heritage influence you in any way or does it mean you’ll have connections in NYC and LA once you move there? MS: I like to plan my future. I’m very methodical with things like that. At first I was scared to go into a career where you can’t map out a plan. Actors live project to project. College is the last big thing I can plan. After that I’ll be very excited to see where I’m going to end up. I know I’ll be standing in casting line waiting for my one or two minute audition where I get to beg someone to cast me in something. There is something so exciting about knowing I’m not going to have to sit behind a desk. I’m going to get to meet all of these different, creative people. My career choice involves interacting with people all of the time and human relationships. RN: Maybe we could become one of those people. I hope so. It is entirely possible that we will run into someone that knows the Klein programs or worked with someone that graduated from here. Since Jim Parsons graduated from here, it would be great if we could meet or even help with a connection. MS: The Klein name holds a lot of weight with a lot of people. Especially in the arts because people know that MM: In your work, no day will ever be the same. MS: That’s it. I’m excited for al of the odd jobs and bit continued on page 10 9 TWO Continued from page 9 in Klein ISD we choose to take the arts seriously. We are in a district where we care about the arts. At Klein Oak, the dance department, the theatre department and all of the music departments work together on so many collaborative projects throughout the year. It’s not just the musical. It’s great that all of our directors have such a great relationship around here so we benefit from their collective expertise. MM: Last year Ryne, you were nominated for Best Lead Actor and Morgan you won the Best Supporting Actress role at the Tommy Tune Awards. Talk about that experience. RN: It as the coolest on the first day when everyone walked in to do the rehearsal for the leading men’s medley where there definitely was a sizing up of everybody else. I was fun to see as time passed there was less of wondering who was going to win and more of seeing that people were really good. Complements were given that weren’t backhanded and I was thinking, “ I would be really happy if this person one or that person won.” When we were finished and everyone was congratulating Billy (Cohen of Episcopal High) who won, we were all very happy with the result. It was a blast to be up there with all of those guys. Ryne Nardecchia, senior, Klein Oak High School and hour and I wanted to talk faster. When you get up there you realize that yes, you won the award, but you are winning the award for so many more people. It was something a lot greater than just myself. MS: I remember walking in for the first rehearsal as well but with the supporting actors it was different. The supporting and leading actors do the opening number for the whole awards show. It was so interesting to see all of these other talented students who are heavily involved in their high school theatre programs and to work with Shay Rodgers who teaches dance at the Humphreys School and has choreographed so many things. She really taught me how to dance because before that I was lost without her. RN: You were representing everyone out there. You were doing it for them. MS: Exactly. All of my teachers and anyone who ever spent any time trying to help me or influenced me. That’s why I got emotional when I was up there. I realized the weight that it held was more than the award. It was about everyone and everything that impacted me. Mr. Robinson had us submit a speech in case we won. I didn’t think I was going to win but I would submit my speech anyway. So I wrote it and submitted it and he printed it out the day of the awards. I read it again and thought I won’t be needing this. I’m sitting in the audience and they are reading off all of the names of the best supporting actresses that were nominated. I remember when they called my name, I was just sitting there and Alex Shrode, who was nominated for best supporting actor turned to me and said, “They called your name. They called your name. You need to get up and go.” I just walked onto the stage and started giving my speech and was already talking a hundred miles RN: I had to write a speech too in case I needed it and I realized I have a lot of people to thank and a lot of people to be grateful for. In my very first show ever I had this director Cathy Elder who made the simple comment, “Wow Ryan, you’re a good singer.” That gave me a little more confidence and I started to believe I could do it. She believed in me and there were many people like her along the way who were supportive including our parents. MM: That’s part of the art of teaching. You have to help 10 MS: There is such a beauty to it the way he writes with such rich lyrics. He makes a lot of character choices for you with the music and the lyrics. He really hands the actor a giant book but he gives it all to you. You get to make these discoveries in rehearsals. RN: You get to go through it in rehearsal and realize, “Oh. That’s what he meant.” MM: Is there a role that would be your dream role? RN: I have two. My first would be Frankie Valli in Jersey Boys. We just did the Mr. Debonair contest here at Klein Oak and I got to sing Dawn Go Away by Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. I’ve wanted to sing that since my freshman year. My second one is because I just love the show but I would have to learn how to play guitar a little better than I can but Guy from Once the Musical. It’s just the style of the show and how it’s told. It’s set in an Irish pub so it follows that storytelling tradition. It’s beautiful and that would probably be my number one if I could choose. MS: My number one would be Jo in Little Women. I’ve done Little Women at HITS where I played young Amy and Alison Luff was Jo. Alison is from Klein Collins and she is on Broadway now. I remember when she did Belle in Beauty and the Beast there. She was my mentor and seeing her in the role of Jo made me think that I wanted to be just like her. She was always so gracious and nice to me. I love the show Little Women and the original story behind it with the journey that Jo takes from the beginning to the end of the show. And also Elphaba in Wicked but that is a little cliché but it is definitely on my list because I would love to fly again. Morgan Starr, senior, Klein Oak High School students be able to do things they don’t think are possible and you do that by building up students step by step along the way. MS: Ryan and I had a lot of those moments in Sweeney Todd. We just kept rehearsing. The music of Sondheim is incredibly difficult. Speaking of people who helped us out, Mr. Goede the choir director and Mr. Clearwater who conducted us, they spent hours with us, going over that music, and encouraging us to keep going. MM: When you come back for your 10th high school reunion in 2023, what do you have hoped to accomplish? RN: The life would be in a perfect world that I would have moved to New York and I would have been in at least one Broadway show of some sort and maybe even had a show of my own. I want to be a part of original works because they are so interesting to me. I did Kissless and I got to write a show with playwright Hunter Bell who did Title of Show. I did a summer camp with him and ever since then it has become something I would like to do. I’m excited for next year because I’ll be in a new community of actors but many of my friends will still only be a drive away so I think I’ll be able to keep in touch with a good many of them. I don’t think I’ll be going in cold to the reunion and saying, “Wow, you lost your hair” or those type of things you get to be RN: There became a thing where we were afraid for a while that when we would sing it we would have to come to the front of the stage get help on the cues and pitches. But the kept running it enough with us that it became almost second nature. They wanted to make sure it was comfortable with us. MM: With Sondheim, there are so many times where you are picking up a pitch that is relatively buried in the texture of the music or its where you have to hear that one note and if you don’t its “Help!” That’s so different than Rogers and Hammerstein where somebody in the orchestra has your part so you can almost sing along. continued on page 15 11 BAND The Klein Collins Indoor Colorguard under the direction of Tiffany Quinones placed first and won the Scholastic A class at the Winter Guard International Regional contest held on March 2nd. Their winning score of 82.01 would place them among the top for groups nationally in their classification. Good luck to all of our colorguards at TCGC Championships. Congratulations to those Klein ISD All-State Participants Since 1977, 714 students from Klein ISD have been selected to one of the Texas Music Educators Association All-State Ensembles. Chris Clark - Trombone - KOHS Hayley Helton - Oboe - KHS Michael Hentrich - Jazz Drumset - KHS Reagan Hermsdorf - French Horn - KHS Andy Xu - Clarinet - KHS Andrew Ma - Cello - KHS Josh Thaver - Viola - KHS Rebecca Wang - Violin - KHS Kathy Wei - Violin - KHS Peter Yu - String Bass - KHS Ricky Tatum - String Bass - KCHS Kimberly Lai - Cello - KOHS Alanna Vollands - Violin - KOHS This year junior Chris Clark was first chair tenor trombone for the entire state of Texas. Congratulations Chris! 12 2013 All-State CHOIR The Krimmel Advanced Treble Choir, under the direction of Tescille Riser, is an invited performing choir for the 2013 convention of the Texas Music Educators Association. The group will perform on February 14 in San Antonio, TX at the TMEA Convention. A World of Song Students from Klein, Klein Collins & Klein Oak high schools joined to perform the 13th annual “A World of Song,” with conductor, Craig Jessop, Dean for the Caine College of the Arts at Utah State University. Dr. Craig Jessop, Professor of Music, is the founding Dean for the Caine College of the Arts at Utah State University. This appointment follows Dr. Jessop’s distinguished tenure as music director of the world famous Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Head of the Department of Music at Utah State. He is the founder and Music Director of the American Festival Chorus and Orchestra and has served as the music director of the Carnegie Hall National High School Choral Festival sponsored by the Weill Institute of Music at Carnegie Hall. Prior to his appointment with the Tabernacle Choir, Dr. Jessop was a Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Air Force music programs. The Krimmel Advanced Treble Choir got a special tour of the State Capitol and their picture on the House floor with State Representative Debbi Riddle. Congratulations to those Klein ISD Choir All-State Participants Jared Hardy - Bass - KCHS Nathaniel Eggen - Bass - KHS Gray Leiper - Bass - KHS Nathaniel Abuhamad - Bass - KOHS Natalia Alamdari - Soprano - KCHS Lauren Lestage - Soprano - KCHS Sarah Holevinski - Soprano - KOHS 13 THEATER KCHS presents “The Actor’s Nightmare”, A One-Act Play Contest Date: March 22, 2013, 4 p.m., Atascocita H.S. Synopsis: Having casually wandered onstage, George is informed that one of the actors, Eddie, has been in an auto accident and he must replace him immediately. Apparently no one is sure of what play is being performed but George (costumed as Hamlet). As he fumbles through one missed cue after another the other actors shift to Hamlet, then a play by Samuel Beckett, and then a climactic scene from what might well be A Man for All Seasons—by which time the disconcerted George has lost all sense of contact with his fellow performers. Yet, in the closing moments of the play, he rises to the occasion and finally says the right lines, whereupon make-believe suddenly gives way to reality as the executioner’s axe (meant for Sir Thomas Moore) instead sends poor George to oblivion—denying him a well-earned curtain call. Krimmel Theater getting creative The Krimmel Advanced Theatre Arts Class recently performed Super Hero Monologues and made their own Masks and accessories… The Krimmel Theatre Department is in rehearsals for Peter Pan for the Klein Intermediate One Act Play Festival 14 RN: I did musical theatre and I am happy with my decision. TWO Continued from page 11 surprised about. I would also like to be in a place where I don’t have to worry about being an actor any more so I’m not coming home to my mom saying I don’t have an income. I think I would be in a group of people I know and am comfortable with. New York is a lonely place. It has one of the densest populations in the world but I would love to know that I have a home there. MS: Exactly MM: It reminds me of something that Sir Kenneth Robinson says. The happy people of the world are those people who are doing a job that they love. Everybody else is simply working as a way to provide a means for them to do what they really want in the evenings and weekends and on vacations. One of the great things about being in the arts is you get to do what you truly love. MS: I will be planning our ten-year reunion because I’m class president. I’ll have to keep up with all of these people and figure out where we are going to be. I don’t know if I want to live in LA or New York. I think I’m going to discover a lot about that because the program I’m entering into does a lot with stage and film. I’ll see where I find my niche. Right now I see my self in New York and see myself working with a steady income meaning that I will be able to move from project to project without to many gaps in between them. That’s the thing. I want to work and perfect my craft and put on art. That’s what makes me happy, not the money. I’m going to come back and see most of my friends who have become doctors and lawyers but … MS: We get to play every day and that is what I want to do. RN: We are reaping in all of the benefits of the work that we do. MM: It’s obvious that you have prepared yourselves well for the road ahead and I wish you luck with the remainder of the year and in college and beyond. RN & MS: Thank you so much for meeting with us. 15 ART Klein Art Students Win Golden Keys at HCDE Scholastic Art Competition T Artwork by Jennifer Padilla, Silence he Harris County Department of Education announced the 2012-2013 Scholastic Art Key Award Recipients. Klein ISD represented with more than 170 entries from across the district. Students from the district who won Gold Keys included: Erica Ables, Gina Frey, Kulsoom Syeda, Jennifer Padilla, Jeremy Hsu, Julia Gregory, Theresa Tram, Haylee Duke, Reshmi Joseph and Britney Reynolds. Students from the district who won Silver Keys included: Ryan Seto, Quratulain Shekoh, McKenna Pouwer, Jennifer Padilla, Jaylind Hamilton, Logan Wudi, Lynna Luu, Victoria Othold, Jordan Anderson, Arbee Arceo, Katri Clay, Samah Khan, Jessica Dennison, Maggie Shirley, Atrayia Montgomery, Meliya Leavitt and Megan Pham. Students who won at the regional level were honored at a local ceremony. Each fall, area schools and districts submit students’ best artwork and writing through www.artandwriting. org to compete at the regional level. These entries are judged by panels of highly qualified professionals who select Gold Key, Silver Key and Honorable Mention recipients. Gold Key works are included in national-level judging. Gold Key works are automatically entered into the National Judging. In New York City, panels of nationally renowned artists, art professionals, and arts educators review Gold Key works from across the country. The artwork is judged in the digital format. Jurors select work for national recognition based on three criteria, originality, technique, and emergence of a Personal Vision. 16 Artwork by Jaylind Hamilton, The Man with the Owl and Tatoos The Harris County Department of Education (HCDE) has served as a regional sponsor for The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards since 1993. Established by Maurice Robinson, founder of Scholastic Books Inc., it is the largest and most prestigious recognition program and source of scholarships for creative teens in the U.S. Art Contest Winners Approximately 600 Klein ISD students participated in the 2013 Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo School Art Competition. 7 Best of Show, Gold Medal and Special Merit Award winning artworks will be showcased during the 2013 Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo in the Hayloft Gallery at Reliant Center. Qualified high school artworks are eligible for the School Art Auction. Participating seniors are eligible to apply for one of fifteen $16,000 college scholarships. Western Art Academy Scholarships are awarded to selected 9th-11th grade students through an interview process and portfolio review. Students in grades K-12th are eligible for a Glassell Junior School of Art Scholarship. Carissa Hecker, 8th Grade Ulrich Intermediate Margo DeHoyos, Instructor Rachel “R88-CHL”, Colored Pencil Drawing The Quick Draw contest is held at Reliant Center just prior to the Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo. Selected high school students draw from a live model. Junior high students draw from a still life. Four Klein ISD students qualified for the 2013 contest. Participants are Sara Kathryn Collier, Strack Intermediate; Jennifer Padilla, Klein Collins High School; Alternates Raimi Braun, Ulrich Intermediate; Ian Danna, Ulrich Intermediate. Best of Show Jennifer Padilla, 12th Grade Klein Collins Michael Hall, Instructor Cherokee Dancer, Colored Pencil Drawing 17 Special Merit Mario Castañon Klein Oak, 11th Grade Skull and Flowers, Pencil Drawing Melanie Leslie, Instructor Gold Medal Julia Gregory Klein High School, 12th grade Chickabee-Bar-Banjo, Watercolor Painting Dee Burgess, Instructor Gold Medal Marie Davidson Ehrhardt, 5th Grade A Bird’s Home, Mixed Media Catherine Loehr, Instructor Best of Show Michelle Danna Frank, 5th Grade Afternoon in the Desert, Mixed Media Tim Trammell, Instructor 18 STUDENT ARTSHOW WINNERS Gold Medal Megan Pham Doerre, 8th Grade Spring’s Blessing, Colored Pencil Drawing Lorraine Millican, Instructor Gold Medal Sampson Ma Klein Oak, 12th Grade These Boots Are Made For Walking, Pencil Drawing Jennifer Schiebel, Instructor Special Merit Samah Khan Klein High, 10th Grade The Chase, Colored Pencil Drawing Dee Burgess, Instructor 19 AROUND THE COMMUNITY The Pearl Fincher Museum of FIne Arts hosted the second exhibition featuring the work of art teachers in Klein Independent School District. The show included a wide variety of techniques, from printmaking to digital media to sculpture. The participating artists are Catalina Baez (Kaiser Elementary), Jessica Baust (Strack Intermediate), Amy Brawner (Klein Intermediate), Dee Burgess (Klein High School), Richard Cartaxo (Klein Forest High School), Laura Causer (Klein Forest High School), Karri Clark (Klein Instructional Center), Amy Creel (Mittelstadt Elementary), V. Denise Davis (Brill Elementary), Megan Dickerson (Lemm Elementary), Amy Dietrich (Roth Elementary), Mike Hall (Klein Collins High School), Chad Hardin (Klein Collins High School), Michael Ho (Kreinhop Elementary), Freddie Holman (Klein Forest High School), Antonio Hurtado (Klein Intermediate), Melinda Jahn (Strack Intermediate), Kimberly Johnson (Klein Instructional Center), Sarah Kelly (Mueller Elementary), Melanie Leslie (Klein Oak High School), Molly McFee (Nitsch Elementary ), Laura Menegaz (Klein High School), Lorraine Millican (Doerre Intermediate), Kay Munger (Schindewolf Intermediate), Marie Grace Nguyen (Kuehnle Elementary), Chau Nguyen (Klein High School),Leigh Peek (Hildebrandt Intermediate), Tu-Anh Pham (Klein Intermediate), Mario Rivera (Krimmel Intermediate), Sonia Rodriguez (Krahn Elementary), Michael Tucker (Hildebrandt/Kleb Intermediate), Meredith Waggoner (Schindewolf Intermediate), Dana Walton (Vistas High School Program), and Daniel Yager (Eiland Elementary). Amy Brawner (Klein Inter.) Kimberly Johnson (KIC) Dee Burgess (Klein High) Richard Cartaxo (Klein Forest) 20 Tu-Anh Pham (Klein Inter.) Antonio Hurtado (Klein Inter.) Leigh Peek (Hildebrandt Inter.) Marie Grace Nguyen (Kuehnle) Mike Hall (Klein Collins) Laura Menegaz (Klein High) Catalina Baez (Kaiser Elem.) Melinda Jahn (Strack Inter.) Karri Clark (KIC) Meredith Waggoner (Schindewolf) Michael Tucker (Hildebrandt Inter.) 21 AROUND THE COMMUNITY Molly McFee (Nitsch Elementary) Chad Hardin (Klein Collins) Freddie Holman (Klein Forest) Lorraine Millican (Doerre Inter.) Michael Ho (Kreinhop Elem.) Laura Causer (Klein Forest) Chau Nguyen (Klein High) Daniel Yager (Eiland Elementary) 22 V. Denise Davis (Brill Elementary) Strack Intermediate Student Kristis Marler Had The Winning Artwork For The Lions Club Kirstie Marler, a seventh grader at Strack Intermediate, created the 2012 winning artwork for the Klein Lions Club annual Peace Poster contest. This year’s theme was “Imagine Peace”. Kirstie was presented with a certificate and award by Mr. William R. Hughes in a special ceremony. Also present at the ceremony were other members of the Lions Club, Ms. Lynn Harrison and Ms. Kay Hughes, Kirstie’s art teacher, Ms. Melinda Jahn, Kirstie’s parents and the principal of Strack Intermediate, Mr. Steve Owen. Klein Collins’ Student Jennifer Padilla and Strack Student Sara Collier Win Big At Rodeo Jenn Padilla, senior at Klein Collins High School (pictured left), won the Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo Full Figure Class Champion. She received $750. Her instructor is Mike Hall. Strack Intermediate seventh grade student, Sara Collier (pictured right), won fourth place in Junior High Still Life Class. She received $100.00. Her instructor is Melinda Jahn. 23 Hurray! We are updating our website. Please visit the Fine Arts website on www.kleinisd.net Klein Fine Arts Department 4411 Louetta Road Spring, Texas 77388