Centerville High School Performing Arts Center

Centerville Schools Performing Arts Center
Address 500 E. Franklin Street
City Centerville, Ohio
Capacity 1,228[1]
Opened December 2007
www.centerville.k12.oh.us/PAC

The Centerville Schools Performing Arts Center is a theater venue in the Dayton, Ohio area that opened in December 2007. It has a 1,200-seat main auditorium and contains a modern dance studio, scene shop, and other support areas. A prominent feature of the center is the two-story glass lobby. The new PAC was financed by a levy and was built at the back of Centerville High School. The cost of the project was about $7.5 million.

In addition to the school's productions the facilities are also rented out for dance recitals, shows, concerts, and other performances. Some notable productions that have taken place in the Performing Arts Center are: Doyle Lawson, the Dayton Contemporary Dance Company, Jon Petz, Udit & Aditya Naryan, and Indian Idol's Aditi Paul.

Contents

Centerville Theatre

The Centerville High School Theatre Department produces four main stage productions each school year. Through the 2007-2008 school year there were only three main stage productions. In 2008-2009 season a fall musical was added. In addition to the four mainstage shows, the students produce four additional productions throughout the year. In December there is a student-produced play performed for K-1 elementary students, and during February the students perform a "Night of One Acts". In May the Advanced Acting and Directing class along with the Technical Theatre Tech Prep class produce a full play. The season ends in May with the annual Extreme Theatre experience.

Centerville High School Theatre is affiliated with the International Thespian Society and is organized as Troupe #2204. New members are inducted into the Thespian Honor Society at the annual Theatre Banquet in May. In 2010 they were asked to perform their fall musical, Lucky Stiff, at the state conference in March. In 2011 they are scheduled to return to the mainstage at the state conference with their production of The Dining Room by A.R. Gurney.

High School DayTony Awards

On June 13, 2010, the Second Annual High School DayTony Awards celebration was hosted by Jim Sagona and Sinclair Community College at Blair Hall. Thirty-eight Awards of Excellence and sixty-one Awards of Merit were received by students from seven area schools. Centerville High School students received an Overall Production Award, sixteen Awards of Excellence, and twenty-three Awards of Merit.

Best Overall Productions

42nd Street (Centerville High School)

Awards of Excellence

Choreography
Direction
Lighting design
Set design
Performance supporting role
Performance leading role
Performance ensemble

Awards of Merit

Costume design
Direction
Lighting design
Musical direction
Orchestral music
Properties
Set design
Performance supporting role
Performance leading role
Performance ensemble

Production history

2011-2012 Season

2010-2011 Season

2009-2010 Season

2008-2009 Season

2007-2008 Season

2006-2007 Season

2005-2006 Season

2004-2005 Season

2003-2004 Musical

Music

Band

The school's band program consists of the Centerville Jazz Band marching band, the Winter Guard and Winter Percussion (indoor percussion ensemble), three jazz ensembles (Jazz I, Jazz II, and Jazz III), the Basketball Pep Band (BBPB), Wind Symphony, Symphonic Band, and the Concert Band.

Orchestra

The orchestra program at Centerville High School consists of its Symphonic Orchestra, Concert Orchestra, the Chamber Orchestra (a small ensemble made up of several quartets), and an Alternative Strings program (which plays bluegrass, jazz, and Celtic music).

Choir

Centerville High School also has three choirs, known as Concert Choir, Elktonians and Forte.

X-treme Theatre

X-treme Theatre is an annual event sponsored by the Centerville High School Theatre Department. The students must write, direct, design, act, and sing in an original theatre production. This event originated in 2007 and has continued annually. To prevent planning ahead a set of rules dictating specific items that must be included in the show are revealed twenty-four hours before the performance. These items may be characters, specific props, certain words, and various other requirements (such as a musical number). The event starts at 7:30pm on a Friday and the script or scripts are written overnight with production and casting beginning at 7:30am the next day. The performance begins that Saturday at 7:30pm. The show traditionally includes an improvisational component at the beginning of the show.

References