Some teachers are just better then others. The best teachers are ones who don't just teach facts and figures to their students, but they also teach life lessons and make connections. Show choir directors and theater directors tend to have a special connection with the people they work with. I believe this is because they get to see kids at strange times through the day, maybe when they re not quite all there, mentally speaking. Kids also have to feel comfortable to be themselves around their directors, but they also have to be their character too. Directors also need to be comfortable being around their students and actors. There is a large variety of directors in performing arts, and with that comes a large variety of relationships students and actors have with their directors. Many of these relationships are good but some can be not so good. I think that these relationships depend on two characteristics. How nice or mean the director is to the students and if their group wins or puts of a good performance or if they don’t.
First there is the student director who is very helpful but sadly gets over looked when it comes to directors. I think that relationships with student directors are tricky because in school and in everyday life they are your equal and you have to treat them as such, but when you’re the actor and he/she is the student director he/she suddenly has more authority then you and that is hard for a teenager to understand and respect.
Then there are directors that are rude to the kids and don’t put on good shows. By “rude to the kids” I mean during practice. Don’t get me wrong. They could be the nicest person when you talk to them one on one, but during practice all they do is call out mistakes and say that nothing is ever good enough. Students dislike these types of directors because a lot of the time directors that are rude don’t produce good shows because the kids just feel belittled.
The second kind of rude directors are the ones that are rude in rehearsal, call out people singularly, nothing is ever good enough, but they win and put on good shows. Performers feel like they can put up with this type of director because winning is the payoff.
Its always nice to get a nice director. It is also nice to win. There is one kind of director that is so nice, he makes rehearsals fun, he never gets mad at the kids, and he never wins. That is a big letdown for the performers because he never would have told them what they were doing wrong because he is too nice.
Personally I think a rude director that wins is preferable over a nice director who doesn’t.
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