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The P.S. 124 Theatre Club performs a musical adaptation of the animated movie “Madagascar.” In the foreground, music teacher Ryan Olsen operates the sound on a laptop.
The P.S. 124 Theatre Club performs a musical adaptation of the animated movie “Madagascar.” In the foreground, music teacher Ryan Olsen operates the sound on a laptop. Credit: Eveline Chao for The Hechinger Report

NEW YORK — It’s 3 p.m. at Public School 124, also known as Yung Wing School, in Manhattan’s Chinatown, and the theater club kids are ready to break a leg. There are just a few weeks left until their big trip to Atlanta for a three-day event called the Junior Theater Festival, and they’re hoping to add another trophy to the assortment that fills the school’s front lobby.

Website for The Village Voice
This story also appeared in The Village Voice

“Sit up straight!” calls out instructor Kyle Garvin from the base of the stage. “Pretend there’s a string attached to your head, and it’s pulling you up!” Each of the 24 students, from grades three through five, suddenly grows an inch taller. An upbeat show tune adapted from the animated movie “Madagascar” fills the auditorium. One row of children, sitting with their backs to the instructor, turns and beams dazzling, thousand-watt smiles at an imaginary crowd. “It’s showtiiime!” they sing. Another row turns: “Showtime!” A third row turns. At the top of their lungs, they sing, “Showtime!” and leap to their feet.

From the back of the auditorium, their coach, former Broadway star Baayork Lee, looks on smiling. “You should have seen them at the beginning of the year,” she says. “Some of them were so shy. They wouldn’t even open their mouths to sing. Or they would barely sing above a whisper. By the end of the term, they completely open up.”

Low-income students with high levels of arts involvement had higher GPAs, were more likely to go to college and were more than three times as likely to earn a bachelor’s degree.

Like theater itself, this after-school program is a collaborative effort. Now in its ninth year, it was developed with funding and expertise Lee secured through her theater-world connections, is taught by instructors from a nonprofit Lee co-founded called the National Asian Artists Project (NAAP) and is kept afloat through the devotion — and many, many bake sales — of Yung Wing’s principal, Alice Hom, and the club’s parents.

Through their efforts, along with those of other outside arts organizations, they are introducing theater to more and younger participants, at an age when education experts say children are especially poised to benefit from it. They are also bringing more diversity not just to the audience for theater, but hopefully, over time, to Broadway stages as well.

Related: Can testing save arts education?

The Yung Wing theater club is a passion project for Lee. She grew up in Chinatown, too, before being plucked from the neighborhood at age 5 to perform in the original 1951 Broadway production of “The King and I,” starring Yul Brynner. That moment changed her life. She went on to become a professional director, actor and choreographer, most famously developing and playing the character Connie Wong in the original 1975 production of “A Chorus Line.” But she wanted to give back to Chinatown, a working-class neighborhood where she says exposure to theater is low, and people tend to view red-velvet-adorned playhouses as exclusive spaces not intended for them.

In 2005, Lee co-founded NAAP to offer summertime musical theater programs to schoolchildren in Chinatown. The organization has since expanded into other efforts aimed at raising the profile of Asian-American artists, who are underrepresented in theater. (Lee won a Tony Award last June for her work with NAAP.) An annual study of Broadway and the 16 top nonprofit theaters in New York City, put out by the Asian American Performers Action Coalition, shows that from 2006 to 2016, Asian actors were hired for 3.7 percent of all roles, though Asians are 5.6 percent of the U.S. population and more than 13 percent of New York City’s population, per the 2010 census. Asians were also the group least likely to be cast in roles that did not call for a specific race.

In their own careers, the co-founders of NAAP have felt that opportunities for Asian artists were often limited to “Asian” productions, such as “Miss Saigon” (a musical set in Vietnam) or “Flower Drum Song” (set in San Francisco’s Chinatown). At P.S. 124, the students perform such crowd-pleasers as “Annie” and “The Music Man.”

Instructors Kyle Garvin and Hannah Balagot, both professional theater performers, teach choreography to students at Yung Wing School.
Instructors Kyle Garvin and Hannah Balagot, both professional theater performers, teach choreography to students at Yung Wing School. Credit: Eveline Chao for The Hechinger Report

Around 2009, Lee learned about the Junior Theater Festival (JTF) in Atlanta, where students from across the country gather for three days to compete, take workshops and nerd out over musical theater. She knew instantly that she wanted the same opportunity for students in Chinatown.

A two-year pilot program for a year-round, after-school theater club at Yung Wing was underwritten by Freddie and Myrna Gershon, a philanthropically minded theater-world couple (Freddie is co-chairman and CEO of the licensing company Music Theatre International). The program was developed with the help of iTheatrics, a company that produces JTF, and helps create theater programs in underserved schools. NAAP supplied the club’s instructors, professional performers who teach in their spare time, and who enable the children to have artistic role models who are people of color.

When the fledgling club first traveled to Atlanta in 2011 for JTF, it was invited to perform on the festival’s main stage, in front of 6,000 people, and as iTheatrics founder Timothy Allen McDonald put it, “they got a standing ovation and brought down the house.” Each year since, they have won numerous awards, including the trophy for Outstanding Production for the best overall elementary school performance three years in a row, from 2013 to 2015, and again in 2017. “After that [first win], the parents were like, ‘Wait a minute, we have an award-winning theater club? We’ve got to do it again!’ ” said McDonald.

Indeed, the Yung Wing school parents have embraced the club wholeheartedly. After the initial two years of funding were up, they took it upon themselves to keep paying for it. It costs more than $1,000 per student, in the most expensive city in the United States, in a predominantly immigrant neighborhood where the average family income is $37,362. But to the parents, it’s worth it.

“After he joined, my oldest son began to love coming to school,” said Beijing-born Feili Ye, the mother of two club members. (Her son, Aaron Wang, starred as the title character in “The Music Man” in the 2015-16 school year.) “I think this program is really amazing. When other parents say they’re not sure if their kids should join, because they want them to focus on academics, I always tell them it actually helps with the rest of school, too.”

Another parent, Philippines-born Evelyn Leon, said theater education has brought her two daughters “improved self-confidence [and] better public speaking skills … Especially with my younger child who is on the more shy side.” She noted that she learned public speaking from a course during college, but that her elementary-school aged daughter is already able to speak confidently in front of groups.

Related: Theater helps English language learners master Common Core: But can it close the achievement gap?

Yung Wing School’s panda mascot adorns the lobby of the school.
Yung Wing School’s panda mascot adorns the lobby of the school. Credit: Eveline Chao for The Hechinger Report

Those benefits — not to mention the plain old desire to make school a fun, joyful place — are what drive iTheatrics’ mission. In the past, the company has worked with entities ranging from the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., to New York City’s Department of Education, to help schools develop sustainable theater programs. Most recently, iTheatrics completed a two-year pilot program in Cincinnati, in conjunction with the Educational Theatre Association, which will soon bring its efforts nationwide, through an initiative called JumpStart Theatre; iTheatrics also partners with local community theaters and schools to hold one-day versions of its Junior Theater Festival in places like Salt Lake City, Utah; Newark, New Jersey; and Charlotte, North Carolina.

McDonald estimates that his organization has helped bring theater programs into thousands of middle schools across the country. (Most high schools, he said, already have some sort of theater program.) Elementary schools like P.S. 124 are the “new frontier, because upper elementary is a great time to introduce kids to theater.” He notes that musical theater teaches everything from music to language arts and even science and digital skills, “because lights, sounds and now productions are all run through computers.”

A study found an 18-percent difference between dropout rates for low-income students with high arts participation (4 percent drop out) and those with less arts involvement (22 percent).

A 2012 National Endowment for the Arts report underscores the benefits of exposure to the arts. The study found an 18-percent difference between dropout rates for low-income students with high arts participation (4 percent drop out) and those with less arts involvement (22 percent). Low-income students with high levels of arts involvement also had higher GPAs, were more likely to go to college and were three times as likely to earn a bachelor’s degree. Yet, funding for the arts currently shows no sign of rebounding from cutbacks stemming from George W. Bush-era No Child Left Behind policies and the 2008 recession. A Department of Education fact sheet put out by the Obama administration highlighted a “definite arts opportunity gap between the highest-poverty and lowest-poverty schools,” and also noted that “minority students and those from low-income households have less access to arts instruction.”

Those realities lend extra urgency to the work that iTheatrics and NAAP do. Thanks to them, that trophy case in the lobby of Yung Wing School is getting crowded. In January, the theater club traveled to Atlanta and won yet another award, for Excellence in Dance.

Sarah Chiu, a junior in high school who participated in the theater club during its second year, says the experience she had in Atlanta is a major reason she now attends Talent Unlimited, a performing arts high school in Manhattan. She recently appeared in an “off-off Broadway” production, and is thinking of becoming a playwright. “I would love to maybe write musicals and really represent the Asian-American community,” she said.

But even for former classmates who have moved on to other things, said Chiu, theater club was unforgettable. “It took everyone out of their comfort zones, where we all came together as a family to support each other,” she said. “That’s something I really love about theater: When something goes wrong you usually have someone there to support you, and as the theater world would say, ‘make the show go on.’ ”

This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for our newsletter.

Eveline Chao is a freelance writer based in Brooklyn, NY, and the author of NIUBI! The Real Chinese You Were Never Taught in School

Correction: An earlier version of this article referred to iTheatrics as a “nonprofit”; though the company operates on a nonprofit model, it is organized as a for-profit institution.

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