Maria Thibodeau

High School Musical Big Fish Hooks Island Hearts

With dancing, music, costumes and storytelling, Big Fish: The Musical dazzled audiences at the Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School Performing Arts Center.

With dancing, music, costumes and storytelling, Big Fish: The Musical dazzled audiences at the Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School Performing Arts Center over the weekend.

The house was packed all weekend — and so was the stage, on which nearly 50 performers brought to life the magical tales of a father and fabulist, and his son’s lifelong struggle to understand his father.

Caitlin McHugh and Sklar Hall.
Maria Thibodeau
Caitlin McHugh and Sklar Hall.
Maria Thibodeau

Islanders have come to expect outstanding things from the high school’s singers, actors and dancers, and this year’s musical delivered many worthy farewell performances from seniors who have starred on the stage from year to year.

Director Brooke Ditchfield hand-picks each annual musical for the roles it offers the young people in the high school performing arts program. The level of talent in this year’s group was so high that she double-cast the lead female character, with Caitlin McHugh and Bella Giordano giving equally compelling performances as Sandra Bloom at alternating shows.

Skylar Hall, as leading man Edward Bloom, and Jaiden Edelman, as son Will, also excelled as both actors and singers.

Jaiden Edelman commands the stage during a solo.
Maria Thibodeau
Jaiden Edelman commands the stage during a solo.
Maria Thibodeau

Mr. Hall’s character maintained his optimistic spirit in the face of all obstacles as he danced, charmed fish and a giant, chased a girl and an assassin, and climbed into a cannon to get blasted across the state of Alabama.

That flight, and a climactic flood later in the narrative, were dramatized by animations from the school’s art and design students, who teamed up with the performing arts department to create projected backdrops for the set.

Other memorable moments that had the audience applauding included a tap-dancing chorus line, with a cameo by choreographer Ken Romero as a fast-tapping, sequin-covered Uncle Sam, and just about every appearance by audience favorite Karl the Giant, played by Wyatt Belisle on stilts.

The production design was equally remarkable, from the back projections and stage lighting to Chelsea McCarthy’s exuberant costuming, an essential element in a show so full of spectacle.

Stage was jumping all weekend long.
Maria Thibodeau
Stage was jumping all weekend long.
Maria Thibodeau

The 13-piece orchestra, led by high school music director Abigail Chandler, also contributed tremendously to the atmosphere of the production, adding emotional content to key spoken scenes as well as supporting the singers in their numbers.

More pictures.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/18/2020 - 15:28

Permalink

Marge Harris OAK BLUFFS

Congratulations to Brooke and all the folks who worked together to bring this fantastic event together. What great fun and yet, you captured a few tears especially towards the end of the musical/ drama. I had seen the movie and quesitoned how this would sail as a musical but I was so pleasantly surprised and elated and so proud of all the kids and teachers and folks who make it work. THANK YOU AGAIN FOR A GREAT HAPPENING!

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.