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King Island Christmas looks like it’s
expensive to produce. Is it?
- No! King Island Christmas has
all the qualities of a “mega musical” but none of the costs. The music can be sung by amateur singers and choral groups
"on book". And because it’s performed
“oratorio-style” it doesn’t require expensive sets and production
elements.
Production Checklist
How
many singers are required to present King Island Christmas?
Even so, King Island Christmas requires a minimum of 16
singers. How is it possible to do a cost-effective production with such a
large cast?
-
Using an amateur chorus or amateur singers from your
community is the key. Because
the chorus performs "on-book", their rehearsal time is greatly reduced. The use of
amateur singers does not impact the musical quality of the show
whatsoever. Even the NYC commercial producers of King Island Christmas
brought in amateur choristers to sing with leading Broadway soloists.
Is it possible to perform King Island Christmas without
a full orchestra?
What is the running time for King Island Christmas?
-
If you present a fully-staged version of the show,
the running time is 1 hour and 20 minutes, with no intermission.
Concert presentations tend to be shorter, averaging 1 hour and 12
minutes.
We’re a professional theatre operating under a contract with
Actor’s Equity. How does that impact the costs of producing King Island
Christmas?
-
It doesn’t. Because King Island Christmas is
an oratorio and not a musical it does not fall under the jurisdiction of
Actor’s Equity. Professional theatres with Equity contracts can mount the
show with the nonunion musical talent in their community. If you wish to
employ professional soloists, King Island Christmas falls under the
jurisdiction of AGMA, the union governing legit singers. AGMA allows
professional soloists to perform with amateur choirs.
Is it economical to produce King Island Christmas with
other organizations?
-
Yes! In fact, this is the most cost-effective way to
produce the show. Numerous theatre companies have co-produced King
Island Christmas in collaboration with their local symphony
orchestras, libraries, university music departments and school or church
choirs.
The more singers you have on stage, and
the more organizations you involve in the production, the more profitable
King Island Christmas tends to be for everyone involved.
Perseverance Theatre in Alaska did the show with 120 singers, and in
collaboration with three other organizations including the local
university. They turned the production into a “one weekend only” holiday
event--and performed it in Juneau’s largest performing venue. They reached
more audience members in one weekend in that facility then they would have
in a one-month sold-out run in their 140-seat black-box theatre. Because
there was so much musical power on stage in the chorus, they only had to
hire (and rehearse full-time) a handful of professional actors for the
leading roles.
Technically, how do these kinds of co-productions work?
-
Generally, each
producing organization is responsible for the costs associated with
preparing and rehearsing their part of the show (such as the orchestra, or
the choral sections or the actors). They are also responsible for
promoting the show in their season brochures and with their supporters and
subscribers. General overhead producing costs, such as performing space
rentals, box office personnel, microphones, advertising, etc., are shared.
Box office receipts--which tend to be significantly larger because of the
huge audience base created by having multiple co-producers--are shared as
well.
What’s an oratorio anyway? And what does “oratorio-style”
mean?
-
Admittedly, the word “oratorio” sounds old fashioned
and intimidating. But the general public is quite familiar with
oratorios--even if they don’t know it. Handel’s Messiah is an
oratorio. So is Andrew Lloyd Webber's Joseph and the Amazing
Technicolor Dreamcoat and Lee Breuer’s Gospel at Colonus. Most
recently, Paul Simon used the oratorio form in his Broadway musical
Capeman.
An oratorio simply means that a story is told through
song. Historically, oratorios have been performed by church choirs or in
concert hall settings, with soloists who “step out” from the chorus to
sing, or dramatize, a particular role. An oratorio is usually performed
without a set or production elements. The idea behind the oratorio is to
activate the audience’s imagination to fill in what isn’t shown literally
on the stage. The oratorio is based in one of the world’s oldest
traditions--that of storytelling.
In King Island Christmas, the convention of
the oratorio is used in this way: A group of Christmas Carolers come to
the theatre to sing the story of King Island Christmas. When
needed, soloists will adopt a role (including inanimate objects and the
forces of nature) to dramatize certain parts of the story. The carolers
narrate the story to the audience as well. The final result is a thrilling
evening in the theatre where the imagination of the audience is unleashed.

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