This story appeared as part of the 2010 Year In Review issue. The Daily Tar Heel resumes publication Jan. 10.
This school year, the student theater community at UNC has displayed consistent innovation.
In various student-run companies, one-of-a-kind performances have flourished, whether the successes be adaptations of movies, musicals or one-man shows.
Vertigo
Lucius Robinson bridged the complex gap between film and a live performance.
A senior in the Department of Communication Studies, Robinson adapted Alfred Hitchcock’s thriller “Vertigo” for the stage in November.
“I’ve always been fond of the movie,” Robinson said. “We had to choose one for a project, and I thought this would be a cool four-person play.”
With the help of artist-in-residence and professor Joseph Megel, Robinson worked to capture the core of the twisted story and to provoke questions in the minds of the audience.
“We can ask ourselves how we can refrain from facing our own reality, what are we limited by, what are we controlled by, and what images we feel we need to adhere to today,” graduate student Marie Garlock said.
Sweet Charity
Despite budget constraints, Pauper Players, which produces strictly musicals, put on a small-scale performance of a popular hit, “Sweet Charity.”