Orange County NC Website
3 <br /> One soup Productions -N Utiye <br /> Organizational Profile <br /> One Song Productions is a local youth-run theatre organization founded in 2002 by Katie Yow <br /> and Daniel Elam, two Chapel Hill High School students, as a supplement to school dramatic programs. <br /> One Song's goals are to engage youth in every step of the creative process and offer new opportunities <br /> for learning and growth in the performing arts. One Song is run by a board of six to seven directors, all <br /> of whom attend high schools in the Durham-Chapel Hill area. Their aim is to provide students in the area <br /> with a fun, creative, and educational experience working on extracurricular productions. Additionally, all <br /> One Song events are produced, directed, and staged entirely by students from area high schools and <br /> colleges. <br /> One Song produces five different shows in a year's season, all of which are directed and cast <br /> by high school students from the Triangle area of North Carolina. One Song has continued to expand <br /> throughout its nearly 10 year history as a result of the community's constant support and generosity, as <br /> the shows One Song produces are funded solely by donations and grant applications submitted by <br /> students. <br /> C=epA Programs =d Sc <br /> Each year, One Song Productions aims to produce a five-show season. We have three <br /> full-length productions, directed by high school students; a summer show directed by a high school or <br /> college student; and a 48-hour theatre event, The February 48. Our three main shows, all of which are <br /> selected and directed by the Board of Directors,provide material that students may not get a chance to <br /> work with in their school environment. Since they often push the envelope, these shows give <br /> participating students(especially actors and directors)the chance to take on more challenging <br /> characters and material that they might not be exposed to in schools, as well as an opportunity to <br /> explore complex moral and ethical angles to modern issues. One Song also provides technical students <br /> with opportunities to be creative and branch out without the confines of a school tech department. All <br /> design and construction is headed by students, giving them the chance to apply technical knowledge <br /> they may have learned in school and take on full leadership positions that might usually be regulated by <br /> teachers or staff in schools. One Song's annual summer show provides many of the same opportunities <br /> as the main shows, but in addition gives local high school and college students outside of the Board of <br /> Directors the opportunity to choose a show and direct. It also provides a way for students to remain <br /> involved in theatre over the sununer, when many of their schools' departments are not active. <br /> The February 48 is also designed to push boundaries, especially the boundary of time. Unlike <br /> our three main shows and summer show, The February 48 is not a full-length show, but instead a series <br /> of one-act plays, all of which are written, rehearsed, and performed by students over the course of a <br /> single weekend. Students are assigned to groups on a Friday night. Student writers are then given the <br />