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Celebrating Theater for Young People

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This winter, join us as the Kennedy Center proudly welcomes audiences to the Family Theater, the new home of Imagination Celebration. This 320-seat theater designed to house performances for young people and their families will open December 9, 2005, with a stage adaptation of "Alice," a children's book by actress and comedienne Whoopi Goldberg.

Since 1973, The Kennedy Center’s Youth and Family Programs (YFP) has presented performances for young people from preschool through high school, in both school and family audiences. Tens of millions of children, teachers, and families have enjoyed Imagination Celebration performances over these first three decades—both here at the Center and as part of Imagination Celebration on Tour, which visits more than 69 cities annually.

A program of the Center’s Education Department, YFP holds unique position in the field of performing arts for young people as a program that not only presents but also develops, commissions, produces, and tours productions in the traditional genres of theater, music, and dance as well as puppetry, musical theater, storytelling, and opera.

ARTSEDGE supports these Center-produced works with lessons, interactives, print and other integrated media resources that help students gain a richer understanding of live performance and the world of the arts. In celebration of our newest performance space—and the next 30 years of bringing the performing arts to young audiences—we have gathered some of our favorites for this month’s Spotlight.


Lessons:


A Character Lifebox

Students create a "life box" for a character in the play Shakespeare Stealer, based on the book (and Kennedy Center play) of the same name.

Grades K-4 Printed Matter Available


Music as a Storyteller

Students learn about music's ability to convey elements of storytelling, such as plot, tone, and characterization, in the Kennedy Center's production of The Nightingale.

Grades 5-8 Printed Matter Available


Twain: Tom Sawyer—Mythic Adventurer

This lesson focuses on the content and style of development in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.

Grades 9-12 Printed Matter Available


A Lens into the Past

This lesson which supports the YFP Production of Dreams In The Golden Country uses photographs to visually describe the transition from old world to New World experienced by immigrants to the United States.

Grades K-4 Printed Matter Available


Children of War

Based on the Scholastic Book The Journal Of Ben Uchida: Citizen 13559, students explore the realities and effects of war by examining children's diaries, journals, and letters.

Grades 5-8


King Arthur: Man or Legend?

The Kennedy Center Production of Excalibur leads students to further study about the legend of King Arthur as depicted in stories, poems, and artwork.

Grades 5-8


Lewis and Clark: Artful Recordings

Influenced by the production Lewis and Clark: West for America, students research, study and draw, plant and animal species discovered and recorded during the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

Grades 5-8


 

How-To's:


Coaching Youth Storytellers

Storyteller and educator Kevin Cordi gives tips for coaching students in storytelling.



Bringing the Classroom to Life with Role-PlayPart of the Featured Spotlight

Use role-play to activate your students' imaginations.



 

Advocacy Essentials:


Why Arts Education MattersPart of the Featured Spotlight

Derek E. Gordon, Executive Director, Jazz at Lincoln Center and former senior vice president for the Kennedy Center, discusses the place of the arts in a comprehensive education.



Exercise Your Influence for the ArtsPart of the Featured Spotlight

A call to action for teachers to take a proactive role in advocating for arts education.



 

Look·Listen·Learn:


Listen to The Nightingale

Using audio clips from the Kennedy Center's production of The Nightingale, students explore how music can communicate a story.

Audio Available Interactives Available


Celebrating Sondheim

Enter the complex and lyrical world of Stephen Sondheim, one of the most celebrated composers of the American musical theater.

Images Available Printed Matter Available


Playing with Shadows

Discover the secrets behind the art of shadow puppetry in this multimedia exploration, designed for grades 5-8, which explores this age-old art form through animations, videos, interactive activities, and more.

Audio Available Images Available Interactives Available Video Available


 

Meet the Artist:


Judith Viorst, on the Art and Practice of Writing

Author and playwright of Alexander, Who's Not, Not, Not, Not, Not, Not Going to Move talks about her experience and habits as a writer.



Barbara Field, on Becoming a Playwright

The playwright for Dreams in a Golden Country talks about her beginnings and her creative process as a playwright.



Tim McDonald, on the Practice of WritingPart of the Featured Spotlight

The playwright for the Kennedy Center production Roald Dahl’s Willy Wonka speaks about his experiences and challenges as a writer.



 

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