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If you would like a printable copy of the One Act Performance
Evaluation, click
here.
If you would like a printable copy of the One Act Technical
Evaluation, click here.
One Act Event - General Rules
Each district should attempt to
insure that the one acts presented at its individual festival adhere to the
following rules as closely as possible.
- Selection of One Act Plays
- Entrees may come from
published plays, original works, or cuttings from full length plays.
Both musicals and non musicals are acceptable. Readers’ theatre or
chamber theatre pieces are not allowed.
- Each Troupe is permitted to
submit only one entry.
- There is a one year
performance moratorium on plays presented at the District and State
Festivals.
- Proof of the payment of
royalties must accompany registration. Written permission for cuttings
and/or original work must be included if applicable.
- The playwright and publisher
must be included on the registration form.
- For a one act play to perform
at the State Festival it must be performed at and receive a Superior
rating at the district level.
- The number of Superior rated
plays permitted to showcase at the State Festival will be determined by
the following formula:
1-6
plays performed at District—1
7- 12 plays performed at District—2
13-18 plays performed at District—3
19-24 plays performed at Districts—4
25 or more plays performed at Districts—5
- All schools must be currently
affiliated with the International Thespian Society to be considered for
performance at the State Festival. Affiliation must be current on or
before the date specified by the State Director.
- If a district chooses an
alternative one-act to perform at the State Festival, the Chairperson of
that district must inform the State Director of that change prior to the
February board meeting. After the February board meeting, if a one act
is unable to perform, it will not be replaced by an alternate.
Preliminary and General
Considerations
- All members of the cast and
running crew must be currently enrolled students attending classes at
the same school as the Troupe presenting the one act. Home schooled
students may be included in a troupe’s production if those students
reside within the boundaries of that school. An exception will be made
for any sponsor who runs the lights or sound for the production.
- The cast of the play being
performed at the State Festival must be the same as the one performed at
the District Festival. The State Director must be informed of any
changes due to extreme circumstances. Permission to make such a change
is at the discretion of the State Director.
- The performance appearing at
the State Festival should be presented as closely as possible as it was
performed at the District Festival which should be performed as closely
as possible to the one approved by the school’s principal. If the
production does not meet community standards at the troupe’s school, it
will not meet them anywhere else.
- Sponsors must notify the
District Chairperson at the district level and the State Director at the
state level if the play contains language and/or stage business that
members of the audience may find offensive. A brief description of the
nature of the offensive material should also be included. An alert to
possibly offensive material will be noted in the program.
- One act plays must be
directed by the Troupe’s sponsor as listed on official Troupe documents
or a currently enrolled student under the sponsor’s supervision.
- Six programs for each
presented play should be provided by the Troupe. These programs will be
collected at the Stage Manager/Directors’ meeting. Additional programs
may be made available to the audience at the Troupe’s discretion.
- No advertising may appear in
programs distributed during the festival.
- Prior to a performance, no
chewing gum, drinks, food, or smoking is permitted on stage, backstage,
or in the loading dock.
- All remnants of any food or
drink consumed in the dressing rooms must be removed before the room is
vacated. Dressing rooms must be left at least as clean as they were when
each troupe occupied them.
Load-in/out and Pre-show
- A working cell phone number
must be supplied by each participating Troupe’s sponsor. The sponsor
must remain available for communication during the entire section of
time between load-in and load-out including performance.
- All Troupes must adhere to
the published load-in load-out schedule.
- Once a truck has unloaded or
is loaded it must be moved out of the dock as quickly as possible to
make room for another truck.
- Each Troupe will be allotted
a storage area backstage. This area will be a clearly defined 6’ x 9’
rectangle.
- No item in the 6’ x 9’
storage area may be placed on top of another item to create a stack in
excess of 6’ total height.
- Each Troupe will be given a
thirty minute make-up and costume period in a dressing room.
- No costumes or stage make-up
may be worn before entering the dressing room at each performing
troupe’s assigned time on the day of the Troupe’s performance.
- A Troupe requiring more time
to execute elaborate make-up, hair-dos, or other business must indicate
this request on its registration packet. This request should include an
estimate of how much additional time will be needed and a description of
why it will be needed. Permission will be granted based on this
information.
- The director and stage
manager of each one act are required to attend a meeting at a scheduled
time after load-in and prior to the beginning of that section of one
acts. Each participating Troupe will be informed in advance as to the
location and time of this meeting. This is a very important meeting;
attendance is mandatory.
- Persons directing trucks into
the main TPAC loading dock which services the Ferguson and Morsani
Theatres should never be on the same level as the trucks. Trucks should
be directed from the upper level of the dock.
- Persons directing trucks into
any loading area must exercise extreme caution at all times.
- All those involved in loading
in/out should dress as stage hands. No overly baggy clothing, skirts, or
long hair hanging loose.
- Everyone working on the
loading dock must wear appropriate shoes. This includes students,
directors, sponsors, technicians, helpers, parents, chaperones, and
board members. Appropriate footwear includes closed toe, closed heel,
low heel shoes such as tennis shoes or work boots. Examples of
unacceptable shoes include sandals, flip-flops, slippers, clogs, high
heels, sling backs, etc.
- All sets must be ready for
production prior to loading in. Only basic, normal reassembly of set
pieces will be permitted. Unusually complicated construction, sawing,
painting, etc. in the opinion of the One Act Manager and/or the Event
Manager will not be permitted in any area of the venue.
- No venue will supply tools to
any Troupe for set construction or assembly.
- Running is forbidden anywhere
in any venue.
- Climbing onto or jumping off
the elevated loading dock is forbidden.
- Once a Troupe has loaded in
its set and props, all those involved except those attending the Stage
Manager/Directors’ meeting must leave the area.
- The stage wings, loading
area, or dressing room hallways may not be used as a rehearsal space.
- Do not loiter or assemble on
the loading dock, in the hallways or back stage at any time.
- All Troupe items, including
but not limited to props, set pieces, costumes, make-up, backpacks, etc,
must be removed at the scheduled load-out. Any item left after the
scheduled load-out will be discarded.
- All personal items must be
removed from the dressing rooms. All items left in the dressing rooms
will be discarded before the next Troupe’s time in the room begins.
- At the State Festival,
costumes may be placed on portable racks supplied by the venue at the
time of your load-in but must be removed during load-out.
- Always be alert for moving
vehicles during both load-in and load-out.
Performance
- No video or audio recording
is permitted during any one act performance.
- Prior to performances all
performers and technicians must remain in assigned dressing rooms until
given permission to leave.
- Each troupe will be allotted FORTY (40) minutes
to move their set from the designated offstage WING area to the stage, perform
their one act and return everything to the offstage BOX. The
adult in charge of one-acts has the discretion to move your one act to the
wing at a more appropriate time to ensure a safe orderly turnover. The troupe is well
served in choosing a one act that has 30 minutes or less of actual performance
time/
- Troupes that
exceed the time limit at District Festival will not be selected for the
State Festival.
- Technicians working sound or
lights in an area not backstage may move to their locations five minutes
prior to the beginning of his/her Troupe’s performance time.
- Time begins immediately after
the One Act Manager/Coordinator informs the Troupe stage manager to
begin and the stage manager says “Go.”
- Time ends when the stage
manager informs the designated One Act Manager that everything is
“Clear”, the stage is inspected, and the One Act Manager agrees with the
Troupe’s stage manager. To facilitate this, the One Act Manager should
closely monitor the entire action. Time does not end until the One Act
Manager has certified every thing is truly clear, the stage is cleaned
of all debris, and everything is safely stored in the troupe’s assigned
storage area.
- The official time will be
kept by the designated One Act Manager who may at his/her discretion
appoint other timekeepers to help verify his/her times. The designated
One Act Manager is responsible for recording the official time.
- No cues or actions are
permitted before or after these two calls of “Go” and “Clear” by the
stage manager except as required by the One Act Manager/Coordinator.
- All music and/or sound
effects must be contained within the forty minute time limit.
- No sponsor is allowed
backstage during his/her Troupe’s allotted time. Backstage is defined as
any area involved with the production of the one act that is not seen by
the audience. If necessary, an exception will be made for
sponsors who run the light or sound systems during a performance from a
position not frequented by the majority of other students involved with
the actual production. Sponsors requesting this exception must submit
this desire in writing with their registration.
- Sponsors or any other adult
may not assist students in any way during the allotted time except as
specified above.
- Only registered members of
the performing school’s cast and crew, venue technicians, adjudicators,
and those granted permission by the One Act Manager/Coordinator are
permitted backstage during any performance.
- Headsets and technician
communication during a performance will be provided by each venue. The
use of any other method of electronic communication is not allowed.
- The use of a follow spot is
not permitted.
- If it is necessary to use a
fly system, the sponsor must include a letter with the registration
packet stating the specific reason for using this system and how it is
intended to be used. Written permission to use the fly system by the
manager of the venue and the One Act Manager/Coordinator must be granted
in advance of the performance. Be aware that not all venues are equipped
with fly systems.
- The use of any aerosol
products (including but not limited to paint, hairspray, hair color,
cleaning products, etc.) must be completely contained. None of the
product can escape to the floor or curtains in any venue.
- No food or drink may be used
on stage without the prior written approval of the One Act Coordinator.
Include the need to consume food or beverages on stage with your
registration.
- The use of smoke, fire,
candles, matches, butane lighters, haze, fog, pyrotechnical effects or
any other form of an open flame is strictly forbidden.
- Prop Guns: A prop gun may be used
if essential to the scene as long as it meets the following criteria:
The gun prop may have no moving
parts. The gun prop must have a solid filled barrel.
Students may not carry or transport the prop gun to or
from the performance site.
- A written critique of each
participating Troupe’s one act performance will be given to the sponsor
following an oral critique by members of the adjudicating team at the
State Festival.
- The spraying, throwing,
sprinkling, spilling, dropping, or scattering of any liquid, powder,
cleaning product, or any substance that can not be removed completely by
a broom as a part of the strike is strictly forbidden. Special care
should be taken if any form of glitter, powder, or confetti is used as a
part of a production, costume or make-up. All remnants must be removed
from the floor before each Troupe’s allotted time expires.
- Since brooms may not be
available at all venues, each participating Troupe should supply its
own. The lack of a broom will not be an excuse for not cleaning the
stage within the allotted time.
- Do not jump off or on to the
stage from the apron before, after, or during a performance.
- Please be aware of the area
microphones on the floor of the apron. They are not “Thespian Speed
Bumps.” Plan your blocking so that all members of your Troupe’s cast and
crew remains in the designated acting area.
- Do not plug anything into any
electrical outlet. Submit any special electrical requirements with your
registration packet.
- Refrain from handling or
touching any curtains or masking material. Even touching a curtain with
the cleanest hand can reduce the life of material.
- Do not use masking, duct,
Scotch, or any other tape on the stage floor. If you need to spike the
stage, secure approval from the One Act Manager/Coordinator.
- Do not touch or use anything
that does not belong to you or your Troupe. This includes, but is not
limited to, ladders, stage weights, chairs, etc.
At the discretion of the District
Chair, violation of any One Act rule at the District Festival will prevent a
Troupe’s selection for One Act performance at the State Festival.
During a performance at the State Festival, at the
discretion of the One Act Manager/Coordinator, blatant violation of any of
these rules will disqualify the violating Troupe’s participation at the
following year’s One Act event at State Festival.
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