CRAFTING ONE OF THE BIGGEST theater productions in the College’s history started with a phone call that Director, Professor of Theater, and Music Department Chair Michael Abbott ’85 called a “make-or-break moment.”
After the department decided to include a musical in the 2023–24 season—the first to hit the Ball Theater stage in nearly a decade—Abbott knew he needed just the right person to help him pull it off.
“In February 2023, Choreographer Kathleen ‘Kat’ Hickey was the first person I contacted,” Abbott recalls. “I knew I had to get her first. It’s a huge dance show and she’s the pivotal firecracker that could make it all happen. She gets us, she knows Wabash. If she said no, we wouldn’t have a show.”
Thankfully, Hickey agreed to join Abbott in bringing “Something Rotten!” to campus. The dance lecturer from Purdue University also choreographed Wabash’s last musical in 2014, the Tony Award–winning “Guys and Dolls.”
Written by Karey Kirkpatrick and John O’Farrell, “Something Rotten!” is set in the 1590s and follows brothers Nick and Nigel Bottom as they desperately attempt to write a hit play but are stuck in the shadow of the Renaissance rock star known as The Bard. When a local soothsayer foretells the future of theater involving singing, dancing, and acting at the same time, the duo sets out to write the world’s very first musical.
Leading up to the show’s run in November, Abbott spent nine months securing support and funding, hosting auditions and callbacks, arranging an ever-changing rehearsal schedule, and uniting a large cast, orchestra, and stage crew.
“It was a journey, easily one of the hardest things I’ve done,” Abbott says. “But I felt tremendous gratitude knowing every night when I came to rehearsal that this company—Kat, Colleen Pingel (vocal director), the cast and crew—was willing to give me everything they had, week after week.
“I’m very grateful to Wabash too,” he concludes. “Putting on a musical like this is expensive and hard, and everyone from the top down just kept saying, ‘Yes, we want to support this.’ It’s thanks to them that we were able to put on such a fantastic show, one that audiences will not soon forget.”
Cast
Design and Production
Orchestra
by Paige Johnson
Auditions make me nervous, and “Something Rotten!” was no exception.
After dancing 13 years at a local studio, last July I made the difficult decision to step away. Studying four disciplines, demonstrating for younger classes, and dancing in the company meant spending 10–15 hours a week outside of school in the studio. That left little time for anything else. Knowing I was starting high school, I wanted the opportunity to try things I had never done before.
I wasn’t quite sure what would fill my time until my friend Zoe Abbott, daughter of Theater Professor Michael Abbott, mentioned Wabash was planning a musical for the fall and encouraged me to audition with her.
Walking into Ball Theater for the first time was nerve-racking. I knew there were people older and more experienced than me trying out for a chance to be part of the musical. But it immediately felt different than most other auditions I’d experienced. Everyone—the directors, the stage manager, and the fellow actors—built each other up. They smiled, joked around, cheered, and applauded after each audition, making me feel more at ease.
Five days later, I had accepted a role in the ensemble, had gotten measured for costumes, and was walking into the theater for our table read. This was where we read through the script and got the chance to see the ideas for the costumes and sets. Getting to hear everyone act out their parts made me realize just how amazingly talented the group was and how perfectly the directors cast the show.
I knew just by being around these other actors that I would become better. I was even more excited for rehearsals to start.
Singing rehearsals were my favorite. Our vocal director, Colleen Pingel, was great at working us through challenging harmonies. She taught us techniques to keep our voices healthy, to massage our vocal cords, and to read music better. In nine weeks, I grew vocally stronger, was able to pick up music faster, and could hit high notes easier. With only three sopranos in the show, I had to be confident. Colleen’s encouragement helped. She took the cast from a group that had never sung together to an ensemble that sounded professional in a short amount of time.
Choreography rehearsals were tiring, but I loved dancing on the Ball Theater stage and in the Experimental Theater. 皇冠足球比分_澳门皇冠体育-在线|平台@ learned the biggest musical number, “It’s a Musical,” in the Experimental while the stage crew was busy building the orchestra pit in Ball. While we were learning the kick line, Choreography Director Kat Hickey made us restart over and over again until it was right. She was tough on us during the rehearsals, but she let us laugh—a lot.
It felt like a safe space for me. Kat had stepped into the role of a dance teacher and mentor that I desperately needed after leaving the studio. She gave me corrections and helped me with anything I needed and had faith in me as a leader—she even asked me to help the college guys with tap.
I was the youngest person in the cast and they looked to me for help with their dancing. At some point during one of the many kick line restarts, I made faces at everyone to lighten the mood as we got