Final Spring Awakening
Final Spring Awakening
Teacher’s Resources
Pre‐Production
Sydney Theatre Company and Medina Apartment Hotels in association with PowerArts present
SPRING AWAKENING
A NEW MUSICAL
Book and lyrics by Steven Sater
Music by Duncan Sheik
Based on the original play by
Frank Wedekind
PRE‐PRODUCTION RESOURCES
Synopsis 2
Creative Team 2
Cast 2
Themes 2
Berynn Schwerdt on playing all of
the adult male characters 3 – 4
Teacher’s Resource Kit compiled by
Education manager Naomi Edwards
Education Coordinator Toni Murphy
Editor Lucy Goleby
Contributors Kerreen Ely Harper,
Shannon Murphy and Elizabeth Surbey
SPRING AWAKENING
Sydney Theatre Company Education Resources 2010
© Copyright protects this Teacher’s Resource Kit.
Except for purposes permitted by the Copyright Act, reproduction by whatever means is prohibited.
However, limited photocopying for classroom use only is permitted by educational institutions.
PRE‐PRODUCTION RESOURCES
SYNOPSIS
Spring Awakening takes its inspiration from one of literature’s most controversial masterpieces
– a work so daring in it depiction of teenage self‐discover, it was banned from the stage and not
performed in its complete form in English for nearly 100 years.
It’s Germany, 1891. A world where the grown‐ups hold all the cards. The beautiful young
Wendla explores the mysteries of her body, and wonders aloud where babies come from, till
Mama tells her to shut it, and put on a proper dress.
Elsewhere, the brilliant and fearless young Melchior interrupts a mind‐numbing Latin drill to
defend his buddy Moritz – a boy so traumatised by puberty he can’t concentrate on anything.
Not that the Headmaster cares. He strikes them both and tells them to turn in their lesson.
One afternoon – in a private place in the woods – Melchior and Wendla meet by accident, and
soon find within themselves a desire unlike anything they’ve ever felt.
As they fumble their way into on another’s arms, Moritz flounders and soon falls out of school.
When even his one adult friend, Melchior’s mother, ignores his plea for help, he is left so
distraught he can’t hear the promise of life offered by his outcast friend Ilse.
(http://www.springawakening.com/spring_awakening_on_broadway.php)
CREATIVE TEAM
Director – Geordie Brookman THEMES
Musical Director – Robert Gavin • Sexual awakening
Choreographer – Kate Champion • Adolescence
Set Designer – Anna Tregloan • Teen pregnancy
Costume Designer – Tess Schofield • Youth suicide
Sound Designer – Steve Francis • Abuse
• Religion
Lighting Designer – Niklas Pajanti
• Generations
Associate Musical Director – Eric Rasmussen
CAST
Akos Armont, Clare Bowen, Ali Calder, Olivia Charalambous, Thomas Conroy, Helen Dallimore,
Edward Grey, Andrew Hazzard, Nicholas Kong, Erica Lovell, Scott Morris, Berynn Schwerdt,
Angela Scundi, Rebecca Lee Slade, Christy Sullivan, Jamie Ward, Alex Woodward.
SPRING AWAKENING 2
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BERYNN SCHWERDT ON PLAYING ALL OF THE ADULT MALE CHARACTERS
Notes on a discussion with Elizabeth Surbey
A note from Elizabeth: though most of what you read below is not verbatim, I thought this
discussion might allow a further insight into the production.
Berynn Schwerdt plays all the ‘adult’ male characters in the production. These include the
Headmaster, teacher, various fathers, and a doctor.
The OTHERS, Berynn notes, are representative of the social forces that are oppressing the
young saplings or indeed seedlings are pressing up against the earth. There will be differences
to play, differences of oppression or suppression, and allowing the performer to manipulate
different styles in theses various authority figures. It will be challenging to make them
distinct…although there can be a bit of sameness about them.
Why has the production gone with describing these figures as representative through one
player (one each for the adult male and the adult female)?
Of course at this point we may consider budgetary constraints (as is so often the case in the
theatre), however Berynn declares it was a great decision allowing one actor to play so many
roles and have fun pulling it off! We discuss the difficulty in his challenge to find momentum
with such quick changes and brief visits on the stage expected to reveal much, but he loves the
variety of what he has to play on stage.
There may be something in the adults being representative of or distorted by how the young
people see them, allowing for a much larger than life portrayal (for example, the Headmaster
and his offsider). Such stylisation to the characters can also be seen in the original Vedekind
stage play. The production may well benefit from the comic relief this allows the audience
amongst the more serious content of the story, preventing Spring Awakening from becoming
too heavy, too maudlin, and too tragic a story.
THE BEAUTY QUEEN OF LEENANE 3 1
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A great point to these characters is that they allow the audience to see how the adult world has
let the young people down in so many ways. Mother says she will tell Wendla everything yet
the audience knows she doesn’t do a good job of this.
However, the relationship between the adults and youths isn’t black and white. Melchior knows
more than he allows for, but he is still only sixteen. Does age allow something in its attempt to
just ‘be’? He has the intellectual age, but he doesn’t have the wisdom – for that we can forgive
him.
The play ends with a song entitled ‘Purple Summer’. Purple is wounds, purple is autumn, purple
is sexuality. This final song helps us to acknowledge that when these young people come
through the spring of their lives to enter their summer or adulthood, they do not come through
without bruising. As in all life, with every new life and growth there is the shadow of mortality.
Musicals often conclude with a song that allows for some reconciliation, which is perhaps a
point of difference with stage drama. So to recognise the final song’s suggestion that the
characters have not survived unscathed reflects the play that lies as the foundation of the
musical.
‘Purple Summer’ is also a song initiated by the character Ilse, who has maintained a presence
throughout before we see her actually brought onto the stage and into plot. She is ever present
in the girls’ chorus as a shadow or echo of the young characters, but we only learn of her actual
importance in the final scenes of the play. She is a survivor and perhaps a link between the
young people and their stumble into adulthood. Yet she too has been bruised.
SPRING AWAKENING 4
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© Sydney Theatre Company.
Spring Awakening
Forget Chicago – These kids are going to tear up the stage
Whereas most musical theatre in Australia is imported from London and New York with
strict and comprehensive instructions about reproducing the original production, Sydney
Theatre Company has obtained permission to rework the aesthetic of Tony Award‐winning
Broadway blackbuster musical Spring Awakening, for their 2010 season. Within the
Australian music theatre industry, non‐replica productions are almost unheard of.
Taking the reigns are director Geordie Brookman (Baghdad Wedding) and choreographer
Kate Champion (The Age I'm In), who have given their own flavour to the explosive story of
twelve teens on a collision course with adulthood. Duncan Sheik and Steven Sater's
Broadway musical ,was adapted from Frank Wedekind's seminal 19th century play, which
(with its frank depiction of sex and suicide, lust, repression and rape) was banned as
pornography when it opened in New York in 1917.
The spirit of Wedekind's play, If distilled, would be a frank treatment of youth ‐ who
Wedekind refused to judge or idealise; rather he saw youth for the serious experience it too
often is – while also recognizing that it is often silly, brutal and senseless. The trick for any
re‐production would be to capture the "truth" of that experience, without reducing it to the
cliches that dominate the media.
Champion saw Spring Awakening by chance while she was in New York with her production
of Dirty Dancing. It immediately stood out amidst the razzle‐dazzle of Broadway. “A lot of
the musicals were either Disney or had that Disney flavour, more polished and classic,
cliched Broadway ‐ whereas Spring Awakening had grown from a development process that
started on off‐off‐Broadway; even though I saw it well into its run, it still had a really
different quality and aesthetic to any other musical I had seen on Broadway."
Champion, whose passion is dance theatre rather than straight dance, collaborated closely
with Brookman on the work. "[Geordie] knows how I work with my company (Force
Majeure) – I don't go into a studio and make up lots of moves on my own body and then
teach them; and I'm also not interested in that sort‐of cliched musical theatre language:'
Champion's creative process is task based ‐'you encourage [the performers] to invent moves
of their own, then you sculpt them and shape them and edit them into the musical score,
she explains. This was an important approach for a work where authenticity was key.
Another factor was the cast, who were selected through a series of open calls and auditions,
and drew on people with no dance experience.
"I gave them improvisation [tasks] that I then filmed and worked with, to get the actual
material from the cast, says the choreographer. “[I think] a lot of music video language has
strayed into musical theatre ‐ and I was trying not to repeat that; I was trying to find a
rawness that comes from being 17 or 18 ‐ a raw energy, a frustration, an awkwardness"
It calls to mind another STC production, last year ‐ Once and For All We're Gonna Tell You
Who We Are, So Shut up and Listen. That production also focussed on achieving the rawness
of youth, by putting its young performers in the driving seat, and using improvisations to
devise the work. But whereas Once and For All showed attractive, apparently well‐adjusted
teens experimenting with sexuality, relationships and self‐expression, Spring Awakening
puts its characters in extreme situations ‐ its got everything:' Champion agrees ‐"teenage
suicide, abortion, incest ‐ the list just goes on:'
Despite all that, Champion says its a fun ‐ wild ‐ ride. "Its such a bittersweet [experience]. I
think it’s affirming, in that life goes on ‐ no one can avoid those harder lessons in life, and it's
all part and parcel of that age. [This production] affirms that struggle is a necessary part of
life!"
Dee Jefferson, The Brag, 1 Feb 2010
The evolution of Spring Awakening:
From off off-broadway to Sydney
1/Feb/2010
Daring Spring Awakening…
When asked recently at a subscriber briefing if Spring Awakening was a “family
show” my answer, in brief, was all I could do to stop myself short of tearing at my
hair and swimming out to sea… indefinitely.
I believe in a kind of theatre that teaches us why we grieve, why we love and why we
choose to go on living in a world of moribund personal connectedness. I believe in
theatre of passion and experience, where one is not moved to go by a subscription,
but where one goes to be moved.
In short, yes… Spring Awakening is an experience for anyone who has lost or loved
and still lives passionately. Spring Awakening is an experience that will remind some
of us of the fragile beauty of youth as well as its capacity for self‐destruction and
self‐aggrandizement. Spring Awakening will confront, surprise, entertain and
celebrate the joys and the follies of all life, young and old.
We no longer teach our children how to grieve, but to mourn with decorum. We
don’t teach them how to love, but how to practice love in moderation. We don’t
teach our young to live with passion, but to exercise excess with discretion.
Culturally, our approach to regulating the academic development of our young
people is done so with the best intentions at heart, but regulation cannot account for
the needs of the human soul.
And so my plea to you is this; instead of retreating to familiar idioms and wary
skepticism, let us take our young people by the hand, show them to their seats and
teach them to live with the passions, through theatre and through the arts… not
irrespective of our individual family values, though not irrespective of the
individuals who define that bond either.
Akos Armont
(Moritz Stiefel)
Teacher’s Resources
Post‐Production
Sydney Theatre Company and Medina Apartment Hotels in association with PowerArts present
SPRING AWAKENING
A NEW MUSICAL
Book and lyrics by Steven Sater
Music by Duncan Sheik
Based on the original play by
Frank Wedekind
PRODUCTION RESOURCES
This is how I feel 2 – 5
Making choices 6 – 8
The ‘S’ word 9
Teacher’s Resource Kit compiled by
Education manager Naomi Edwards,
Education Coordinator Toni Murphy,
Editor Lucy Goleby
Contributors Kerreen Ely Harper, Shannon
Murphy and Elizabeth Surbey
SPRING AWAKENING
Sydney Theatre Company Education Resources 2010
© Copyright protects this Teacher’s Resource Kit.
Except for purposes permitted by the Copyright Act, reproduction by whatever means is prohibited.
However, limited photocopying for classroom use only is permitted by educational institutions.
THIS IS HOW I FEEL
It can be difficult to discuss the themes brought up in
Spring Awakening in a teaching environment, so we
“
MORITZ: You start to cave,
suggest you facilitate discussion between the students
themselves, rather than engaging with the whole class.
you start to cry. You try to
Please mention:
run, nowhere to hide.
Lifeline – 13 11 14 or www.lifeline.org.au
You want to crumble up,
Kids Helpline – 1800 55 1800 or www.kidshelp.com.au
and close that door.
Act One, Scene Ten.
Spring Awakening.
” as well as any counselling services at your school or in
your region.
AIM: discover how this play, which has origins over 100 years ago, remains relevant to
teenagers and families today.
DECODING EMOTIONS
Stand in a line or a circle (note, these exercises are often even more effective if some students
stand as outside observers).
Person A begins by showing the group a simple gesture or subtle, barely evident facial
expression.
Person A then turns to the Person B, standing next to them, showing the expression
unchanged.
Person B takes on the exact expression and then turns to face the group, adding the next layer
of subtle emotion to extend the expression.
Continue through the group, extending the emotional expression whilst facing the audience
and delivering the new version to the next person and so on.
By the end of the line (or circle) the ‘look’ can be quite extreme – or perhaps go even further
and the distortion can be a way of creating an emotional caricature.
SPRING AWAKENING 2
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© Sydney Theatre Company.
Play with physical gestures or vocal sounds.
Get students to create simple but non‐literal gestures with their hands that would ‘say’
something. eg: Open hands with your palms out, thumbs up, punch fist out and pull back, link
fingers and rip them apart.
Discuss:
1. How much do we rely on body language to interpret what people say?
2. Do you agree that there is a parallel between the use of body language as a way of
expressing feelings externally, and the use of the ‘inner monologue’ songs within Spring
Awakening?
3. Is body language always conscious?
4. In Spring Awakening, the boys and girls form a united chorus, both vocally and physically. Do
you think body language is a shared language, common to all people?
Write a declaration for the Independence of Thought for teenagers.
Present your declaration to your class.
Discuss:
1. What would be your liberating ideas for how teenagers could feel less stifled by society?
2. What ideas do you have to create a nurturing, stimulating, legal yet unburdened
environment for yourselves?
3. Are there lyrics in Spring Awakening that express the same goals or ideals you have written?
4. What would be the limitations or restrictions on any of your suggestions being implemented
in your home or school environment?
5. Do you think your declaration can apply to every
teenager in Australia?
6. Do you think every teenager shares a similar
“
MORITZ: Well, I see, and hear,
experience? and feel, quite clearly.
7. How do we teach others to celebrate the teenage And yet, everything seems so
experience rather than dismiss it as ‘just a stage strange.
they’re going through’?
Act One, Scene Four.
Spring Awakening. ”
SPRING AWAKENING 3 1
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WISHING WALL
Write a wish on a post‐it note.
Keep them general and non‐specific for anonymity.
Stick the post‐its anonymously on a wall for everyone to see and reflect upon.
Discuss:
1. What links can be found amongst the topics revealed?
2. Are there any wishes that reflect some of the themes in Spring Awakening?
3. Are there any unexpected or surprising wishes?
+ Create a wall of fear.
Discuss as above, including mentioning the services listed above.
POSTCARDS
Walk freely about the space.
When prompted, create a still image that would feature
“
WENDLA: I’ve never…felt…
on a postcard. MELCHIOR: What?
For example, five people at the beach, or two people WENDLA: Anything.
having a romantic dinner.
TABLEAUX/MACHINES
Act One, Scene Eight.
Spring Awakening. ”
Walk freely about the space.
When prompted, create a machine or a tableau.
Trigger titles: generation gap, school, forbidden love, failure, spring, winter, hope, fear, etc.
Discuss:
1. What were the differences between creating a machine and a tableau?
2. Which was easier? Why?
3. What common themes/issues emerged?
4. Were there any unexpected or unusual machines or tableaux?
+ Repeat tableau/machine but present each machine or tableau using a specific musical genre.
For example, opera, broadway, rap, country western, Gilbert & Sullivan, etc.
Discuss:
1. Did a musical genre make the game harder or easier?
2. What differences did a musical genre make to your machines/tableaux?
SPRING AWAKENING 4
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© Sydney Theatre Company.
Choose a song you know where the lyrics reveal the thoughts of the performer.
Write a song or poem with a repeat chorus on themes of forbidden love, generational conflict,
wish fulfillment, or another of the themes in Spring Awakening.
Note, these need only be the poetry behind song lyrics, unless you would like to write the
music as well.
Discuss:
1. What do the lyrics of your chosen song reveal?
2. Do you think these ‘song soliloquies’ are an effective theatrical tool in promoting greater
empathy for the characters in Spring Awakening?
3. Do you think songs have a capacity to express emotions that one cannot say?
4. Are these emotions expressed literally, or through the
use of metaphors for the human condition?
5. Are there similar themes expressed in your chosen
song and a song in Spring Awakening? “
If a composer could say
6. Do you agree with the theory that what cannot be said what he had to say in words,
must be sung? **Research your response. he would not bother trying
to say it in music.
Gustav Mahler, Composer. ”
SPRING AWAKENING 5 1
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© Sydney Theatre Company
MAKING CHOICES
The youths in Spring Awakening face a series of difficult
choices as they discover more about life, the human
“
THEA: But how will
condition, and themselves. These choices are influenced by
their peers, their families, the adults in the play, and the
we know what to do
information and support available to them.
if our parents don’t Please mention:
tell us? Lifeline – 13 11 14 or www.lifeline.org.au
Act One, Scene Seven.
Spring Awakening. ” Kids Helpline – 1800 55 1800 or www.kidshelp.com.au
as well as any counselling services at your school or in your
region.
AIM: To explore options and perspectives for a character experiencing major life decisions
and to gain an understanding of the influences on, and consequences of, our decisions.
Write a declaration for the Independence of Thought for teenagers.
Present your declaration to your class.
Discuss:
1. What would be your liberating ideas for how teenagers could feel less stifled by society?
2. What ideas do you have to create a nurturing, stimulating, legal yet unburdened
environment for yourselves?
3. Are there lyrics in Spring Awakening that express the
same goals or ideals you have written?
4. What would be the limitations or restrictions on any
“
Thus our society has passed
from a period which was
of your suggestions being implemented in your home or ignorant of adolescence
to a period in which adolescence
school environment?
is the favourite age.
5. Do you think your declaration can apply to every
teenager in Australia?
6. Do you think all teenagers share similar experiences?
”
Philippe Aries, French Historian.
Cited in the Spring Awakening program.
7. How do we teach others to celebrate the teenage
experience rather than dismiss it as ‘just a stage they’re going through’?
SPRING AWAKENING 6
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© Sydney Theatre Company.
Create a list of behaviour etiquette for the 1890s, either for general life, or specifically in
relation to the workplace, school, social dinners, transport etiquette, going to the theatre,
buying or selling real estate etc.
Keep it amusing by putting in brackets things that relate to 2010 as a comparison.
For example: The man always introduces himself first (and should always have pants on).
When passing people you should touch the brim of your hat with your left hand in
acknowledgement (and hold your crotch Michael Jackson style with the other).
It is good to be able to quote classical literature (as in, “Gag me with a spoon, dude! Where’s
my car?” from Dude, where’s my car?)
View comparative texts with similar themes to Spring Awakening: generation gap, dangerous
love, teen pregnancy, youth suicide:
Romeo & Juliet, Shakespeare’s text and Romeo + Juliet, the adaptation directed by Baz
Luhrmann, 1996.
West Side Story, directed by Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins, an adaptation of the Broadway
musical: book by Arthur Laurents, music by Leonard Bernstein, and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim,
United States, 1961.
Somersault, written and directed by Cate Shortland, Australia, 2004.
Juno, directed by Jason Reitman and written by Diablo Cody, United States, 2007.
Dead Poets Society, directed by Peter Weir and written by Tom Schulman, United States, 1989.
OPTION ALLEY
Split the class into two parallel lines, facing each other to create an alley.
Choose Person A to stand at one end and ask a closed question about a major life decision. For
example, Should I leave school? Should I go to university?
One side of the alley is ‘for’ the option, the other side is ‘against.’
As Person A walks down the alley past each person, they take it in turns to give their argument
as to why they should or shouldn’t make the choice.
Note, no argument can be repeated.
Person A gets to the end of the alley and, based on the strength of arguments, makes a
decision and tells it to the class.
SPRING AWAKENING 7 1
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© Sydney Theatre Company
Repeat the exercise with different players, each faced with a dilemma in Spring Awakening –
suicide, losing their virginity, leaving school etc.
Take the ideas and arguments generated by the alley and create an scene in which a character
+ is facing their dilemma, and is meet by ghosts of his/her life that influence his decision.
Research a significant person who did not do well at school but has gone on to be successful in
their career. For example, Paul McCartney.
Do a comparative study of two people – one who did well and one who didn’t do well at school.
Present your findings and observations to the class.
Discuss:
1. What is your reaction to this quote?
2. Do you feel that your parents and teachers have
“ FRAU GABOR: The world is
filled with men – businessmen,
scientists, scholars even – who
high expectations of you?
have done rather poorly in
3. What do you expect of yourself as a student?
school and yet have gone on to
4. What makes a good student?
brilliant careers.
5. A good teacher?
6. A good parent?
7. Have societal expectations of education changed?
Act One, Scene Ten,
Spring Awakening.
”
+ Watch the recently released film An Education by Nick Hornby, based on a memoir by Lynn
Barber.
Write a reponse for the Headmistress to give Jenny when she asks for an explanation of the
importance of an education over leaving school to get married.
Discuss:
1. What are the similarities between Jenny’s predicament and those experienced by characters
in Spring Awakening?
2. Do you think that Jenny’s parents are somewhat to blame for her decisions?
3. What were the contributing factors in Jenny’s decision‐making process?
4. Would any of these factors have changed if different information was available?
5. Do you think this situation would occur in 2010?
6. If so, why?
7. If not, what has changed between the 1960s and today?
SPRING AWAKENING 8
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© Sydney Theatre Company.
THE ‘S’ WORD
After watching Spring Awakening it is important to pay
attention to the language that is used today in our media
and literature regarding sexuality. Are the repressions
imposed on people in the 1980s different from ones we
“
FRAU BERGMAN: For a
woman to bear a child,
are dealing with today? she must… in her own
personal way, she must…
AIM: To discover the liberated and repressed elements
of the Australian culture regarding sexuality.
love her husband.
Act One, Scene One.
Spring Awakening.
”
Read these two articles on a recent comment made by
Tony Abbot about women and virginity as the ultimate “gift” one can give another.
‘Abbot confirms women’s worst fears’, The Australian, www.theaustralian.com.au/news/
abbott‐confirms‐lwomens‐worst‐fears/story‐e6frg6n6‐1225823774571
‘Making a gift of yourself’, The Australian, www.theaustralian.com.au/news/opinion/making‐a‐
gift‐of‐yourself/story‐e6frg6zo‐1225824116457
Discuss:
1. Does religion still define our ideas of innocence, virginity and whether sexuality is morally
acceptable as it did in Spring Awakening?
2. If so, how?
3. Should politicians be allowed to talk about their personal opinions on such sensitive matters,
particularly when they are commenting more about the opposite sex?
4. Is our media responsible for the language and ideas of our culture and our views towards
sexuality, including homosexuality?
5. What are all the old wives’ tales about virginity and what it represents?
6. Is there any truth in any of these?
7. Is there a gender bias in Australia?
8. Would you classify the language we use to describe women as chauvinistic, adoring, or
neutral?
9. How does it compare to the language and behaviour towards women in Spring Awakening?
SPRING AWAKENING 9 1
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BroadwayWorld.COM Interviews: SPRING AWAKENING Director Geordie
Brookman
Hit musical Spring Awakening is making its Australian premiere as part of the Sydney Theatre
Company's 2010 Main Stage season. The director, Geordie Brookman, was kind enough to sit
down and answer a few questions for BroadwayWorld just weeks out from the show's
Sydney opening.
What attracted you to the idea of directing Spring Awakening in Australia?
I’ve always been a big fan of Wedekind’s original play, it’s such a brave and direct piece of
work. As soon as I heard Duncan Sheik’s score I knew that he and Steven Sater were coming
from the perfect place in their approach to adapting it. So, ultimately a whole combination
of things attracted me to the piece, its thematic concerns, the chance to work with a great
young cast and the chance to tell a very powerful story that has real lasting relevance. I’ve
always wanted to create theatre that could make you feel the same way a rock and roll
concert does, Spring Awakening does just that.
Have you seen other productions of SA around the world?
No. Once I accepted the job directing the production I tried to avoid any material to do with
other productions (in particular the American original) so that my creative process wouldn’t
get compromised.
This production has been billed as a ‘non‐replica’ production. Why did you choose to make
this a non‐replica production and how have you aimed to bring a ‘new aesthetic’ to the
show? Were you at all influenced by the non‐Replica Hungary version?
I think it is a wonderful opportunity to give the show a strong Australian stamp. I also think it
speaks to how confident Steven and Duncan are in the piece they’ve created that they were
open to the idea of non replica. My experience is predominantly in text based theatre where
I suppose almost all productions would be considered non replica. To be perfectly honest I
probably wouldn’t have been that interested in the project if all I was doing was recreating
someone else’s work. In regards to creating the aesthetic for the production I‘ve approached
it as I would any other musical or play, I haven’t consciously tried to make it new or
different, just to find the best and most powerful way to present the material.
In terms of the Hungarian production, I haven’t heard much about it except that they used
disco cubes. We aren’t using disco cubes.
SA has attracted a devoted fan base across the world, particularly the Broadway
production. Is the Australian response to the show living up to your expectations?
There has been an amazing response, both from fans who know the show through the
Broadway cast recording and through people who know of the original play. Most positively
they seem genuinely excited about the prospect of it being a brand new production.
Do you plan to tour the show?
We certainly hope to, I think it’s a show that would find a big audience in any part of
Australia and we have a great company behind it in Sydney Theatre Company and
passionate investors in the form of Power Arts.
SA touches on a lot of controversial topics including rape, abortion, masturbation, suicide
and child abuse. As a director did you have any issues in how to portray these on stage
and/or fears of the audience reaction? What are some of the challenges you’ve had to
overcome to bring this work to the stage?
I can’t say I that I did have any issues with any of the content. It’s a very honest view of life
and in particular a period of life that every single one of us go through. I think that one of
theatre’s jobs is to discuss difficult issues on the stage. When it comes to portraying some of
this stuff on stage I just try to be as truthful and direct as possible. Luckily I have a very brave
company of performers.
In regards to audience reaction, I think that every single member of the audience will have
some connection to the material in the play through personal or social experience so I would
hope that despite the fact that we are exploring dark or difficult issues they will engage in
them with us.
Teenagers account for a very large percentage of the US production’s fanbase. Is that your
target audience here as well and if so, what message do you have for parents who might
be wary of their children being exposed to such themes?”
As a director I can’t say I work with a ‘target audience’ in mind. But it is certainly a work that
I think holds massive relevance for teenagers. I think part of good parenting is to explore and
discuss these sorts of issues with your children (at the appropriate age of course) and seeing
them explored onstage can be an extension of that.
Do you see Spring Awakening as portraying a message or as having a key theme/meaning?
I suppose there are a couple of key themes for me within the piece, one relates to the idea
that suppression and oppression in any form is a destructive thing. The other is that sadness
and melancholy are important parts of life and are not things to be afraid of.
If you were to have your audience come away from Spring Awakening feeling one thing,
how would it be?
I hope they come away deeply moved, I hope the show helps to illuminate a couple of tricky
parts of life and I hope they go home with any one of the fantastic songs stuck in their head!
The cast is made up predominantly of young ‘unknowns’, was this your deliberate
intention?
The only intention going into the auditions was to find the best group we possibly could. I
wasn’t making judgements on experience or lack of it. We did hold to a pretty strict age
range though.
How did you find the open‐audition process?
I think it was important for this show in particular. To find the number of performers we
needed with the skill base that the show demands we needed to look beyond traditional
sources. It was eye opening in terms of realising how much amazing young talent is out
there in Australia.
You do have the very experienced Helen Dallimore in the cast, how do you find working
with her? Has she taken on a somewhat mentor role with the young cast?
Helen’s a dream. Incredibly funny and just a great presence in the rehearsal room. It’s been
great for the younger members of the cast to work with both her and Berryn Schwerdt (who
is playing all the adult males). They are wonderful sources of knowledge and support.
Any tips for BroadwayWorld.com readers for stars to look out for in the future?
I’d say watch out for everyone of the 15 of them! They surprise me each and every day.
Whilst at the moment I imagine that your focus is largely on SA, do you have any dream
shows you would love to direct in the future? How about an actor who you would love the
opportunity to work with?
I have a dream list of plays longer than my arm! Some of the writers on the list include
Martin Crimp, Chekhov, Dea Loher and anything written by my wife, Nicki Bloom. In terms of
people I’d like to work with, I’d love to just go and sit in rehearsals and watch Christoph
Marthaler create a work.
Any other comments you wish to add?
Come and have a music theatre experience unlike any other at Spring Awakening!
Wednesday, January 20, 2010; Posted: 11:29 AM ‐ by Emma Cambey
Book and lyrics by Steven Sater. Music by Duncan Sheik. Based on the original play by Frank
Wedekind. Directed by Geordie Brookman (Metro Street, Baghdad Wedding) with
choreography by Kate Champion (The Age I'm In, Same Same But Different, Dirty Dancing)
For further information about this production of Spring Awakening visit
www.SpringAwakeningInAustralia.com and follow www.twitter.com/SpringAustralia