Advertisement

arts entertainmentPerforming Arts

Union sanctions live theater production in North Texas for the first time since the pandemic

Theatre Three’s ‘The Music Man’ is the first local show to get a green light from Actors’ Equity, which has been stingy blessing productions due to safety concerns.

UPDATED, May 7, 2020 at 3:44 p.m: Dallas Theater Center received approval from Actors’ Equity Association on Friday for Working: A Musical, according to DTC managing director Jeffrey Woodward, becoming the second North Texas production to be sanctioned by the union.

The national actors union has approved Theatre Three’s proposal to mount a live outdoor production of The Music Man, the first such permission granted to a North Texas theater company under strict rules meant to protect union members from COVID-19.

Actors’ Equity Association has been stingy giving its blessing to theaters that use Equity performers, frustrating companies hoping to get back on the boards after the long pandemic layoff.

Advertisement

Dallas Theater Center recently gave up filming a production of the play Tiny Beautiful Things for streaming when it couldn’t reach an agreement over safety measures, says managing director Jeffrey Woodward. Actors in the show publicly lashed out at their own union. But the Theater Center has now received approval to produce Working: A Musical at Strauss Square in the Arts District in July, the second North Texas show to be sanctioned by the union.

News Roundups

Catch up on the day's news you need to know.

Or with:

In the meantime, Theatre Three plans to tour The Music Man, first produced on Broadway in 1957, to three outdoor venues from June 3 to the Fourth of July. Audience size will be limited.

The Uptown-based group just raised $30,000 toward the show budget during a weeklong fundraising drive that included a video of director Joel Ferrell getting inebriated and working blue. He’s discussing his love for composer Meredith Willson’s story of a traveling con man who fleeces small-town Iowans by promising to create a boys marching band.

Advertisement

Equity member Kyle Igneczi stars as the title character. A fully vaccinated cast and crew, weekly testing and outdoor rehearsals are among the safety measures agreed to, according to artistic director Jeffrey Schmidt. Earlier in the pandemic, Theatre Three received permission for filmed productions by having the actors shoot their own scenes at home.

Details

The Music Man runs with audience capacities of 150 to 200 at the Coppell Senior Center (June 3-13), Union Coffee in Oak Lawn (June 16-27) and Texas Discovery Gardens (June 30-July 4). $75 per pair. 214-871-3300. theatre3dallas.com. musicmandfw.com.

Advertisement