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Theater master classes for youth attract Broadway talent

NEW YORK (AP) - Imagine being a young songwriter and getting tips from a creative team who really know how to construct a tune. After all, they wrote 'œLet It Go.'ť

The husband-and-wife songwriting duo of Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Bobby Lopez are just some of the luminaries who have signed on to give master classes and advise fledgling artists as a way to benefit the nonprofit TheaterWorksUSA.

Joining the Oscar- and Tony-winners for virtual tutorials are Tony award-winning Broadway director Jerry Zaks and Tony-nominee Judy Kuhn. Broadway director Stephen Brackett, composer Joe Iconis, two-time Tony winner Donna Murphy and Broadway musical director Kimberly Grigsby are also involved.

'œThe theater makers and the actors have all just come together trying to find ways to use their creativity to keep theater alive, to blow on the embers to keep it alive until we can all be in a space together again,'ť said Anderson-Lopez, half of the team that wrote 'œFrozen'ť and 'œFrozen 2.'ť

The participating composers, performers and directors will use Zoom to offer their expertise on audition technique and performance. Some classes will be one-on-ones and others will have multiple participants. Prices range from $35-$150 with most of the teachers donating their time.

The new initiative comes as theaters across the country have been stilled by the coronavirus pandemic. Most of the master class teachers have a personal tie to TheaterWorksUSA, which for decades has been a producer of family theater, including 'œDog Man: The Musical,'ť 'œPete the Cat'ť and 'œClick, Clack, Moo.'ť

'œTheaterWorks has always been an important organization for us. They were really the producers who first took a bet on us,'ť Bobby Lopez said. 'œWhen we were starting out, they gave us our first job and they've done so for so many other professionals.'ť

Anderson-Lopez and Lopez said they leapt at the chance to help their old employer and raise spirits of their young students.

'œWhen I was growing up as a girl, I didn't even know women could be songwriters and theater makers. So I feel a big obligation to just show up and say, '~Look, here's someone who is doing it,''ť Anderson-Lopez said. 'œIf they can see it, they can be it.'ť

Both songwriters have been hunkered down with their two daughters during the stay-at-home orders but quarantine has an upside: They're writing a song a week. They're hopeful live theater will return.

'œTheater will not go away. But our job is to just try and keep the seeds alive as long as we possibly can. And those seeds are our vital nonprofit organizations like TheaterWorksUSA,'ť Anderson-Lopez said.

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Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

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