JoePgh
Cranky pants and wise acre
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2011
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Last year during the basketball season, I attended a theatrical production on the Storrs campus at the Connecticut Repertory Theater. As I recall, it was a stage adaptation of the Jane Austen novel "Sense and Sensibility." I was extremely surprised when I recognized that one of the student ushers for that performance was a player on the UConn women's basketball team. The thought of posting that information, including the player's name, on this forum did cross my mind. But I quickly decided that while there is nothing remotely negative about a player being a student usher at a theater production, it is still personal information that the player did not choose to share, so it really isn't my right as a fan to share it on her behalf.
But I was very impressed with the fact that a member of the Huskies evidently had an interest in serious theater.
Then last week, I attended a production the the August Wilson play "The Piano Lesson" at the same theater. I was even more surprised to see a DIFFERENT Uconn women's basketball player serving as an usher at that performance.
Seeing two different players filling this role makes me wonder if there is some intentional connection between the WCBB team and the theater arts curriculum on the UConn campus. Maybe a player took a theater course and enjoyed it (and the students maybe got extra credit if they served as an usher and then wrote a review of the performance?), and then recommended the same course to another player? Or is this something that CD (perhaps) suggests to players as a way of broadening their horizons on campus beyond basketball?
I do recall reading that a long time ago, when another UConn basketball team was playing a game in New York, CD arranged for them all to see "The Color Purple" when it was playing on Broadway. Geno came along and afterwards commented to the players about how much concentration was required of the performers to give their absolute best performance 7 or 8 times a week. He suggested that was much harder than the effort he was asking of his players on the basketball court.
I wonder if having players serve as theater ushers on campus is another way of making the same point.
But I was very impressed with the fact that a member of the Huskies evidently had an interest in serious theater.
Then last week, I attended a production the the August Wilson play "The Piano Lesson" at the same theater. I was even more surprised to see a DIFFERENT Uconn women's basketball player serving as an usher at that performance.
Seeing two different players filling this role makes me wonder if there is some intentional connection between the WCBB team and the theater arts curriculum on the UConn campus. Maybe a player took a theater course and enjoyed it (and the students maybe got extra credit if they served as an usher and then wrote a review of the performance?), and then recommended the same course to another player? Or is this something that CD (perhaps) suggests to players as a way of broadening their horizons on campus beyond basketball?
I do recall reading that a long time ago, when another UConn basketball team was playing a game in New York, CD arranged for them all to see "The Color Purple" when it was playing on Broadway. Geno came along and afterwards commented to the players about how much concentration was required of the performers to give their absolute best performance 7 or 8 times a week. He suggested that was much harder than the effort he was asking of his players on the basketball court.
I wonder if having players serve as theater ushers on campus is another way of making the same point.