Home » Jazz News » Education

212

One Theater Geek's Summer at Stagedoor Manor

Source:

Sign in to view read count
At age 31, Mickey Rapkin packed his bags and headed to summer camp. But it wasn't just any camp it was Stagedoor Manor, one of the nation's most prestigious theater camps, located in upstate New York.

This was where Robert Downey Jr. played Mr. Deusel in a 1976 production of The Dairy of Anne Frank, Natalie Portman performed Cabaret in 1996 and Zach Braff donned bejeweled leather pants in Godspell long before he ever wore scrubs. In Theater Geek, Rapkin, an editor at GQ, follows three campers in their final summer before real life hits. He talked to TIME about his own stage dreams, fitting in at camp and how campers walk away from Stagedoor with so much more than just stars in their eyes.

Were you always fascinated by theater?
I was a proud theater geek. I hung playbills up on the wall in my bedroom. I would go to the theater by myself, take the train into Manhattan as a high school kid to go see Sondheim's Passion. I saw Les Mis more than once. I was that kid.

So you could really relate to where these kids were coming from.
Yes. I showed up at Stagedoor and I saw this 12-year-old boy wearing a feather boa walking around on the first day of camp just because. There was no show, there was no costume; he just found this feather boa in the costume shop and thought, 'I would like to wear this on the first day of camp.' I looked at these kids and thought, 'Wow, I was born in the wrong era.'

What was it like packing your bags and heading to summer camp at age 31?
I was nervous. I felt like a kid again: “What if no one likes me? What if I don't have any friends?" These are some intimidating 18-year-old kids. You think, “Oh, I'm an adult. I can hang." And then you get there and you're like, “What if they think I'm that creepy old guy?" But you hang around long enough and they accept you they're a very accepting group.

How does Stagedoor Manor differ from traditional summer camps?
These kids come and put on 13 different productions. They're fully staged, fully costume, memorized and performed productions. At a traditional summer camp you're playing tennis and soccer you're outside running around all day. At Stagedoor it's a very professional schedule. They get up, have breakfast, rehearse for a couple of hours, have lunch, then they take classes and then rehearse again, they have dinner and then they rehearse again. These kids work so hard, I couldn't believe it. They're basically working from 8 in the morning to 8 at night and they're at summer camp. Some of the kids, they don't like to call it camp. They feel like it's a professional training school. The idea is that if you push these kids beyond what they think is possible you'll be shocked at what they can do. If you treat them like adults they'll respond like adults.

Do these kids go to camp thinking they are going to walk out stars?
Because so many people who have come there have gone on to big careers and these talent scouts come to camp to sniff around, there is a sense among these kids that if you do a good job you can be discovered. But that's really a small part of it. There's a tendency to think these teenagers are all cutthroat, that it's all about getting discovered. It's definitely part of the experience, but it's not the whole experience. There's so much more to the story.

What about the Stagedoor mafia?

Continue Reading...

For more information contact .


Comments

Tags

News

Popular

Get more of a good thing!

Our weekly newsletter highlights our top stories, our special offers, and upcoming jazz events near you.