It’s A Musical Life
June 30, 2009 by Amy Nora Long
Filed under Innovation & Excellence, The Faculty
In New York, where you can see productions originating from Africa to Iceland, you can also see musicals this year that came from your own back yard, Suffolk University.
Three musicals originally developed by the Boston Music Theatre Project (BMTP), a program of the Suffolk University Theatre Department, had professional New York area debuts this season. The incredible circumstances are not the triumph of coincidence, but the result of a carefully crafted model and the tenacity of Theatre Department Chair Marilyn Plotkins.
Plotkins founded BMTP in 1987 as the first professional organization in the Greater Boston area dedicated exclusively to the development of new work in musical theatre. “I have a life-long interest in musicals,” says Plotkins. “BMTP was a natural outgrowth of my training, experience and professional interests.”
For the next 10 years, Plotkins partnered with local and national organizations and artists to develop new work, including Elmer Gantry, produced by the Nashville Opera and the Peak Performances series at Montclair State University in January, 2008, and Look What a Wonder Jesus Has Done, featured in the New York Music Theatre Festival this September.
In 1999, Plotkins integrated BMTP into the academic framework of the newly formed Theatre Department to engage Suffolk students in the development process. Crossing Brooklyn, a new musical by Laura Harrington and Jenny Giering, premiered off-Broadway in the fall at the Transport Group and was the first BMTP piece developed with students—but it certainly won’t be the last.
The hands-on experience of BMTP is a unique facet of the Suffolk Theatre Department and has inspired other in-house professional development opportunities, such as Wesley Savick’s National Theatre of Allston and Richard Chambers’ professional design apprenticeships. As the program continues to grow, so will the opportunities. Plotkins is currently in negotiation with two New York writers for the next BMTP project, slated for spring, 2009.
The Modern Theatre Awakens from Slumber
April 19, 2009 by Amy Nora Long
Filed under New on the Hill
Suffolk University’s search for increased classroom and dormitory space has led to the Modern Theatre, the last of three theatres on lower Washington Street in need of a savior. The nearby Paramount Theatre is currently being renovated by Emerson College and the adjacent Opera House reopened in 2004 to house Broadway touring productions.
Suffolk’s proposed plan for the space will retain the historic marble and sandstone façade, creating a ground floor performance space with a dormitory above that will connect to the new dorm at 10 West Street.
“This is a momentous opportunity to raise Suffolk’s profile in the Boston theatre community by creating a state-of-the-art facility while contributing to the revitalization of lower Washington Street,” says Professor Marilyn Plotkins, chair of the Theatre Department.
The Modern Theatre, built as a furniture store in 1876, became Boston’s first movie house in 1913 and 15 years later the first theatre in the city wired for sound. After a brief stint screening adult films in the 70s, an attempt to restore the space into a performing arts center eventually failed in the early 80s. The Modern has remained vacant and in increasing need of repair for the last 20 years.
“The project fulfills an academic need of the University,” says John Nucci, vice president for external affairs, “and also restores an important part of Boston’s history.”
The Modern Theatre project, part of the University’s Institutional Master Plan, has been very well received by the community, particularly Mayor Thomas M. Menino, whose administration has pushed for the preservation of Boston’s historic theatres. And with the addition of the Modern, the University will be halfway to its goal of housing 50% of its undergraduate students.
“The Modern Theatre and West Street Dorm complex promises to be one of the most attractive and exciting areas of the University and the neighborhood,” says Nucci.




