Anyone else notice the spring influx of graduates from university musical theatre programs, now in NYC auditioning for musical theatre employment? How do they stay afloat? Where do they live? With the limited employment availability in the professional musical theatre, I assume restaurants and retail outlets are having a field day hiring the college educated singers and dancers, with a BFA degree. I'm sure hundreds of recent graduates are asking the value of their degree, as well as their readiness to compete in the professional marketplace! I wish them all well, but unfortunatley ..............
Broadway, professional dance, and professional acting are hurting ...
but the number of applicants and students for Music Theatre (and Theatre, in general) programs & degrees in College have actually steadily increased every year. this year is the highest average for the "major" programs.
local/community theatre companies & non-profit theatre organizations are hurting as well...
but the majority of independent performing arts schools and centers (very vauge) are either seeing absolutely no changes OR even an increased spike, in tuition and students, for some places.
I have been studying the trend and numbers for the past few months -- extremely difficult to explain why this is becoming the normality, now.
I guess you COULD say that many intelligent, creative, and bright people are seeing that the state of theatre is fairly damaged right now; thus making it a wonderful breeding ground for restructuring and reinnovation. it is vulnerable and people want to help make a change.
Many are becoming more involved in theatre management because they believe they can make a financial and social change within the operation of theatre and Broadway. It can only get better from here, it seems..
That might help explain it? Updated On: 5/3/09 at 04:31 PM
That's true, but "experts" are speculating it to be over in '11 or '12 based on whatever it is that Obama promised (I haven't been following it too closely, so I don't know).