Registration for the Spring Arts Camp at the Alliance for the Arts, a five-day program during the public school spring recess, is now open. The camp is presented in partnership with Florida Rep Education and runs March 19-23.

Campers are invited to unravel the haunting mystery of Pirates of the Gulf Coast through songs and scenes of piracy, pillagers, and the brave heroes that stood in their way. The program combines visual and performing arts. There is a final stage performance Friday, March 23.

Winter Arts Camp is $185 for the week and held at the Alliance for the Arts, 10091 McGregor Blvd. Fort Myers FL 33919. Drop off begins at 8:45 a.m. with camp starting at 9 a.m. each day. Aftercare is available for an additional cost.

For more information or to register, visit www.ArtInLee.org or call the Florida Rep at 239-332-4665 x2020.

The Rotary Club of Fort Myers brings  The Screaming Orphans back for an outdoor concert on Feb. 3 at the Alliance for the Arts. Comprised of four sisters from Ireland, The Screaming Orphans are known for their high-energy music that blends pop rock with traditional Irish music. The concert benefits the Rotary Trust Club of Fort Myers and offers a night of music, food and a good cause.

Gates open at 6 p.m. and the music kicks off with MacGilliossa at 6:30 p.m. The Screaming Orphans  take the stage at 7:30 p.m. Food trucks and beverage station will be available to offer a variety of food, wine and beer for purchase. Blankets and lawn chairs are encouraged, but coolers will not permitted.

Attendees can save big with $25 presale tickets, which can be purchased online at ArtInLee.org or by calling 239-939-2787. Tickets purchased at the gate are $35. Kids under 12 are free with an adult.

Your love, their musical

Musical improv duo turns relationships into on-thespot created musicals.


IF YOUR RELATIONSHIP your significant other were a musical, what kind of musical would it be?

“West Side Story”? (Different cultures, disapproving families.)

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“The Music Man”? (One’s quiet and well-read, the other’s outgoing, talkative and really not into commitment.)

“Groundhog Day”? (You’re in a rut and every day feels the same.)

“Beauty and the Beast”? (Self-explanatory. But really, why do opposites attract? Cue Joe Jackson’s “Is She Really Going Out With Him?” which opens with a complaint about seeing “pretty women out walking with gorillas down my street.”)

Rebecca Vigil and Evan Kaufman think couples’ relationships are the perfect fodder for a musical and have created fully improvised shows for hundreds of them based on each couple’s own unique love story.

The two bring their musical improv show, “Your Love, Our Musical” to Theatre Conspiracy in Fort Myers for four shows, Jan. 11-14.

They describe the show on their website as “just like ‘Hamilton’… if ‘Hamilton’ was about how you met your boyfriend online dating.”

Musical improv, they say, is like regular improv, but much more complex. The performers, along with their musical accompanist, have to create songs, complete with rhyming lyrics, on the spot.

“It’s a whole other level of skill,” says Ms. Vigil. “You’re doing two different skills at the same time, which are both difficult: you’re basically composing music and lyrics alongside constructing a narrative and jokes. We go on all cylinders.”

“Improv in general is juggling a bunch of different things,” says Mr. Kaufman. “Musical improv is adding one little extra piece — music. It’s a complex little piece, I guess you would say. It breaks down into a couple of different things: finding the melody or tone or genre of the songs, working your way through the song to heighten or continue to explore the theme. And then the third piece is rhyming, which is the thing people find the most impressive, but is always the last thing we think of, when doing a song. It’s like a muscle; you exercise it and work it, and eventually it becomes second nature to you.”

The other factor, he says, is what’s called “an offer” in improv: Someone comes out and says something, which gives you a piece of information, even if it’s just as simple as “Beautiful day today.”

“The other person who is part of our scene is Dan Reitz, our musical director and accompanist,” says Mr. Kaufman. “He is almost like a third improviser. When he feels the emotions building in a scene, he plays music that matches, or juxtaposes something opposite for comedic effect. Dan basically provides us with an offer for our scene and for our song.”

Volunteers, not victims

The show works like this: the two choose a couple from the audience, people who volunteer to talk about their relationship.

It’s not like stand-up, Ms. Vigil hastens to say, where if you sit in the front rows, you risk becoming the comic’s punching bag and the brunt of a joke or two.

“Some people have trepidations that if they (volunteer,) we’re going to be mean to them. Our show is celebratory. We like to celebrate these two people (who we base that night’s musical on.) It’s like we’re at a party for these people.”

If multiple people volunteer, they’ll ask questions to help decide which couple to pick, such as: what one word describes your love story, or, what one word would you use to describe how you met? Or, what one word describes your love?

“We had one (show) recently, and the word was ‘political,’ which is an interesting way to think of a relationship,” says Mr. Kaufman. “Sometimes people say, ‘drunk.’ Those are always good. Or ‘Tinder.’ Sometimes people will say ‘at first sight,’ which is more than one word.

“Sometimes we pick people who are the most enthusiastic, or look the most interesting. It always works out.”

They’ve only had one show where no one volunteered.

So, like good improvisers, they immediately switched gears and did a break-up show, creating a musical about one man’s break-up.

“That was real juicy, really dramatic,” Ms. Vigil recalls. She was excited because she got to play emotions she typically doesn’t get to play.

“I got to play this horrible, crazy, villainous girl,” she says, “the antagonist, who was super evil.”

(The guy was at the show, and the woman he’d broken up with obviously wasn’t in attendance.)

First kisses and pet peeves

Once a couple is chosen, they’re invited on stage where they are interviewed for approximately 25 minutes.

They are asked a multitude of questions, about how and where they met, when they had their first kiss and who said, “I love you” first.

They are asked what their pet peeves are about their partner.

“It’s always funny,” notes Mr. Kaufman. “Most of the time, the women have very specific pet peeves: He says he’s listening, but he’s not listening. Then the fellow is like: she’s perfect, I love her, she’s great.

“Sometimes it’s as boring as, ‘They don’t put the dishes away.’ Sometimes it’s weird stuff like, ‘I don’t like their feet and they don’t wear socks around me.’ One woman was angry with the fellow because he refused to close doors. Not just the cabinets, but the front door. People have problems with the way people sleep or the way they chew. It’s pretty incredible anyone’s together at all, really.”

Sometimes people are a little nervous or shy. Sometimes they try to be a comedian and make up answers, but their significant other will call them on it.

“They’ll say, ‘Roger’s just kidding. He’s a school teacher, he’s not a race car driver,’” says Mr. Kaufman.

They try to make the interview feel like a talk show.

“As with any good interview, questions beget more questions,” he says.

“We joke with them, we joke with each other, we go through their whole story,” adds Ms. Vigil. “We try to make the interview an entertaining portion of the show. The first half is this interview with this real couple, and then the second half is when the magic happens. The piano player starts immediately.”

Though people think they work with pre-planned templates, they don’t.

“Every single time he plays, we’ve never heard it,” she says.

He might include a musical reference.

For example, she says, a couple might talk about how they went to a Metallica concert together, and Mr. Reitz will incorporate a Metallica song into the score.

They’ve done hundreds of shows, many in New York, where they’re based. Some audience members become repeat attendees, because the show is completely different every time.

They interview straight couples, gay couples, old, young, those who have been married just a couple of years and those who have been married for decades. One time they even created a musical for a couple who were on their second date.

“We kind of created the relationship then, (imagining their future,)”, says Mr. Kaufman.

Some shows stand out.

For example, there was a couple who met at a BDSM speed dating event. Another met on a bus in New Zealand and spent their first date at a porta potty convention in Texas. One couple met in Egypt; he was in the military and she was a student. They ended up living in the states together, Mr. Kaufman says.

“We have every connection conceivable,” he says. “People who met through friends or in bars. A lot of people meet online now. We had a couple who met online in one of the first chat rooms that ever existed. They were both interested in computers. One lives in England, and the other lived in the U.S. So, we probably met the first couple who internet dated.”

Beginnings

Mr. Kaufman and Ms. Vigil are comedic partners, but not romantic ones.

“We have excellent chemistry,” says Mr. Kaufman.

Ms. Vigil originally conceived the show with partner David Magidoff, when she lived in Los Angeles. They performed the show, with a different name, in the L.A. region. Then she moved to New York “about 2007, 2008,” she says and wanted to continue to perform the show.

She happened to see Mr. Kaufman in a show in Boston, and thought he’d make a great musical improv partner.

It’s a shame he lives in Boston, she thought. But about a year later, unknown to her, they were cast in the same show in New York. Ms. Vigil was surprised when he walked through the door.

She told him her concept, and “Your Love, Our Musical” was formed four years ago.

“There’s a lot of interview shows and musical improv shows, but the idea to combine them was what made ‘Your Love’ kind of special,” he says.

They were looking forward to performing in Fort Myers.

“We have four shows down there,” says Ms. Vigil. “We get to meet four different couples.”

They know Florida skews older than most states, but that doesn’t faze them. Some of their favorite shows have been with couples who have been married for decades. One couple, they remember, was married 50 years; she was a nurse and he was a doctor.

“Their story spanned so many decades,” says Ms. Vigil. “You get to play with time and references to everything else (in history and pop culture).”

“Older couples have much more experience; they know each other, they have more stories, so you’re able to get a complete picture, which makes for a better musical,” says Mr. Kaufman. “Young people haven’t been through as much.”

If there’s one theme that threads through all their shows, it’s that “no matter how difficult a relationship is, or what obstacles they face, people seem to find a way to be together,” he says. “Sometimes we’ll hear these stories and think: it’s impossible, how did these people end up together, whether it’s family issues or distance or the chance of their meeting was so slim, where they met and how they met.

“Love finds a way. People find each other. It’s really wonderful.” ¦

“Your Love, Our Musical”

>> When: 8 p.m. Jan. 11-13, 2 p.m. Jan. 14

>> Where: Theatre Conspiracy, Foulds Theatre, 10091 McGregor Blvd., Fort Myers

>> Cost: $25 ($11 for students with current ID)

>> Information: 939-2787 or ArtinLee.org/ theatre

>> More: Evan Kaufman and Rebecca Vigil will host a two-hour Musical Improv Toolkit Workshop at noon Saturday, Jan. 13. Open to those 16 and older. Tickets are $45.

The Alliance for the Arts offers camp options including Summer Arts Camp for grades 1 – 6 and Musical Theatre Intensive Camp for grades 7-12. Alliance member registration opens February 12. Non-member registration opens February 26.

Summer Arts Camps allow children to discover their creative abilities by taking part in visual and performing arts with a different theme each week. Camp is held at the Alliance located at 10091 McGregor Blvd. Fort Myers, FL. There is an art exhibition and final stage performance each Friday afternoon. Camp runs from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. with extended care available from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. for a fee. Summer Arts Camp is $160 per week for Alliance Members or $200 per week for non-members. You may become a member to receive early registration and a 20% discount.

Themes include:

  • June 4 – June 8: Once Upon A Time
  • June 11 – June 15: Trapped in a Video Game
  • June 18 – June 22: Robot Mayhem
  • June 25 – June 29: The Search for Yellow Beard’s Hidden Treasure
  • July 9 – July 13: Are You Game?
  • July 16 – July 20: Broadway: Another Opening, Another Show!
  • July 23 – July 27: Super Heroes
  • July 30 – August 3: Let’s Rock Out!

Musical Theatre Intensive camp is held at Broadway Palm’s rehearsal space in Royal Palm Plaza and offers students the unique opportunity to work with Broadway Palm’s resident Choreographer and with actors from current Broadway Palm shows. Camp runs 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Daily arrival time 8:45 – 9 a.m. with no extended care available. There is a final performance each Friday at 3:00 p.m. Each week is $175 for Alliance Members or $220 for non-members.

Themes include:

  • June 4 – June 8: Seussical (Grades 6-10)
  • July 9 – July 13: Annie – Act 1 (Grades 7-12)
  • July 16 – July 20: Annie – Act 2 (Grades 7-12)
  • July 23 – July 27: Mamma Mia! (Grades 7-12)
  • July 30 – August 3: Broadway Palm Season Guide (Grades 7-12)

Alliance member registration opens February 12. Non-member registration opens February 26.

Learn More