The Show Goes on With 51蹤獲's 'Anon(ymous)'
August 31, 2020

While COVID-19 has closed the curtain on some college theater productions, Sheila Malone has used the pandemic as an opportunity to give her students skills beyond the stage.
The 51蹤獲 will produce the retelling of Homers Odyssey through the use of green screens, home filming, voiceover acting, digital media, video editing and more. The play will premiere online in November.
The pandemic has , and many other performing arts events throughout the world, including dance, orchestra, opera and festivals have been canceled. Playwrights , such as stripped-down productions, rethinking the business model and making plays accessible to a wider audience.
But the performing arts have not been completely shuttered. Theater productions around the world have adapted to the pandemic with online performances. Schools and theater companies have had to be innovative, incorporating elements such as pre-filmed performances, audience interaction over Zoom and more.
Malone has a background in new media and has produced interactive video installations for galleries, museums and theater productions. She also works for local
theater companies that have had to adapt to the pandemic by offering staged readings
over Zoom.
Rather than forgo all theater productions for fall, Malone decided to put her skills to work and share them with her students.
This is a process and I cant foresee what hurdles well come against, but I know theres a lot of creative space in the play, said Malone, professor of theatre. After this project, students will hopefully have an arsenal of skills in addition to acting, she said.
Malone said Chaffey students will film themselves at home using cell phones and other personal equipment. They will also be able to produce other video elements from home with virtual access to the colleges digital lab.
Theater is definitely trying to find its footing and adapt to the trials and tribulations of being in a pandemic, but I feel like the students are in good hands with Sheila, said Mikayla Brown, a 2020 Chaffey graduate majoring in theater design and technology at Emerson College in Boston.
With the use of green screens, montage, animation, found footage and voiceovers, Malone
hopes students will be able to tell the story of a refugee boy journeying through
the U.S. in search of his parents. Students will be given remote access to the colleges
digital lab to produce elements from their home computers.
Staff are currently receiving training in video editing software to put together all of the components.
Cecile Entz, a theater major from Fontana, hopes to serve as stage manager for Anon(ymous). Its a role that requires a lot of communication with people working both off- and on stage, so she anticipates challenges in an online environment. But she also sees the benefits.
Not everyone goes into theater to perform on Broadway or the stage, she said. Some go into the film industry. This is going to help me figure out what to do with my career.