• Meet Andrea Green

    Composer and playwright of musicals that make a difference in the lives of children!

    Andrea Green enjoys national acclaim for creating contemporary, dynamic Broadway-style musicals with messages of understanding, acceptance and respect. Two songs that reflect the mission of her work are The Sky's the Limit! and (Everybody is) One of a Kind

     

     

  • On the Other Side of the Fence Wins The Gold Medal from the 2015 NY International Film Festival!

    We are pleased to announce that On the Other Side of the Fence took home the gold medal from the 2015 NY International Film Festival & the bronze medal from the United Nations for outstanding achievement in a film that exemplifies the ideals and goals of the United Nations!

  • Andrea Featured on Children's Music Network

    Showcasing her song “(Everybody is) One of a Kind”. 

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  • Unity Across the Globe

    The Return of Halley’s Comet goes international!

    The people of Estonia are embracing Andrea's The Return of Halley’s Comet for its originality, universal appeal and themes of tolerance and communication.

     

  • Sondheim Center for Performing Arts

    As artist-in-residence Andrea directed her musical THE SAME SKY with 60 children in Fairfield, Iowa.

  • Leading Psychologist Believes in the Music

    Renowned author and psychologist, Dr. Dan Gottlieb, is an ardent supporter of the messages of tolerance and inclusion that are conveyed through the music and lessons of Andrea Green musicals.

  • Philadelphia Honors Andrea

    On May 16, 2013, Andrea Green and Teresa Maebori were honored by a special resolution by the City of Philadelphia, for 30 years of teaching tolerance and acceptance to youngsters from the HMS School for Children with Cerebral Palsy and Germantown Friends School. Andrea's musicals served as the vehicles for bringing the children together in partnership.

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  • Broadway-Style Children's Musicals

    Musicals that capture the heart and soul of theater, seamlessly blending entertainment and education through story, words, and music.
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  • Performing Artist and Educator

    Andrea offers workshops to inspire theater directors, teachers, and therapists to enhance their own creative work.
  • Music Therapy

    Andrea consults as a music therapist in a variety of settings with children who have a wide range of special needs.   
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  • Composer

    Andrea is a composer of music, lyrics and content for television, film, stage, recording and live performance.   

Children's Theater | Jewish Community Voice | Andrea Green Music

Puerto Rico & Cherry Hill teens collaborate on musical project

By JAYNE JACOVA FELD Voice staff 


Students from the Colegio Ponceño Musical Theater group performing “Homeroom the Musical” in Puerto Rico in February.

Students from the Colegio Ponceño Musical Theater group performing “Homeroom the Musical” in Puerto Rico in February. 
The things that teenagers obsess over could fill a feature-length musical. In any given homeroom, on any given school day, adolescents worry about their looks, upcoming exams, and how their GPA stacks up against others. They fret about fitting in, fashion, friends, frenemies and bullying—both cyber and traditional.

In other words, “Homeroom the Musical”—a production as noteworthy for its big song-and-dance numbers as its value as a springboard for inspiring candid conversations—is typical of the work of music therapist and playwright Andrea Green.

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The former Cherry Hill resident, nationally acclaimed for creating musicals that bring together people from different worlds, is once again tearing down fences. This time it’s in the form of a cultural exchange between theater students from Puerto Rico and Cherry Hill that will culminate in several performances in June as well as a music video.

“It’s more than just a performance,” said Green, recently transplanted to Philadelphia. “For those who perform it and those who see it, it really speaks to their issues and helps them talk about how they feel about themselves and how to help each other.”

Green, recently the subject of an Emmy-award winning documentary about the 30th anniversary production of her musical “The Other Side of the Fence,” wrote “Homeroom” some 25 years ago. It was based on some 600 essays gathered from middle school students about their feelings and experiences and has been performed hundreds of times since then, including a run at the Walnut Street Theatre and the Ritz Theater in Westmont. Admittedly, she has not seen every production, but Green said she tries to reach out to every school group that produces her work. From initial contact with the Colegio Ponceño Musical Theater group, she had a good feeling. On a whim, she and Selma Tolins- Kaufman, her co-writer, decided to attend the performance in February. They were not disappointed.

“It was one of the top productions of ‘Homeroom’ I’ve ever seen,” she recalled. “I almost couldn’t believe I was in this tiny town in Puerto Rico seeing this amazing production.”

She was not the only one star struck. The actors, all high school students from a private Catholic girls’ school, flocked around them after the production to discuss their overwhelmingly positive experiences.

“They told me they were able to connect with kids different from themselves for the first time,” she said. “Homeroom just opened doors for them.”

Green was not ready to let go when it came time to return home. She conceived of the idea for “Homeroom The Music Project” as both a cultural exchange for teens and an opportunity to bring greater exposure to the musical that has proven so successful in creating awareness of and sensitivity to the issues of bullying, discrimination and self-esteem.

Dan Gottlieb, a Cherry Hillbased psychologist and WHYY radio host, has signed on to the project. He will be working with the Cherry Hill and Puerto Rican teens to facilitate conversations based on the musical. As he sees it, the issues raised are as relevant as ever.

“Sixty percent of my work is with adults,” noted Gottlieb. “I see the scarring that’s been done by bullies. It can last a lifetime, it can change your identity and it’s very hard to undue.”

In Homeroom, he sees authentic opportunities for adolescents to explore and discuss these issues.

“The reason why this show is so valuable for kids is because it teaches them to recognize the humanity of each other: The bully, the bullied and those who bear witness,” Gottlieb added.

Homeroom the Music Project is more than just the cultural exchange and performances, Green said. Producer and Director Henry Nevison will be filming the project in association with MindTV/Independence Media. Nevison also produced the award-winning “On the Other Side of the Fence” documentary detailing the longstanding musical partnership between students with cerebral palsy and their typical peers from Germantown Friends School. The film has been aired on public TV and featured at community screenings by the Philadelphia Film Society in Philadelphia, in Rochester, New York, and as far away as Estonia.

She is hoping that the upcoming documentary could give “Homeroom” similar exposure.

“In the future, other groups that want to do this musical could look to the documentary as a role model,” she explained. “Homeroom belongs in every school.”

Tickets for the 7 p.m. June 7 production of “Homeroom the Musical” at Cherry Hill West can be purchased at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/homeroom-the-musical-tickets-25038309257. In addition, Green has set up a fundraising page to allay the costs of the project, including bringing the students from Puerto Rico. For more information, visit https://www.gofundme.com/homeroomthemusical. 

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Children's Theater | The Cherry Hill Sun | Andrea Green Music

Teen actors from Puerto Rico to perform with Cherry Hill West students

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It all starts with a dream. Then mix in mission, music and passion and it’s a great formula for success! These are the ingredients that quickly came together to make it possible for 30 teen actors from Colegio Ponceño Musical Theater Group in Ponce, Puerto Rico to come to Cherry Hill to perform with students from Cherry Hill High School West in “Homeroom: The Musical” They arrive on June 4 for a five-day whirlwind of a tour, visiting attractions in the Philadelphia region and perform the family musical for the school on Tuesday, June 7 at 11:30 a.m. and for the public that evening at 7 p.m. at Cherry Hill West They’ll also collaborate on the making of a music video with theater students from Cherry Hill High School West with the song called “Stand Up for Yourself.”

This event is happening due to the incredible vision of long-time Cherry Hill resident, award-winning composer, playwright, director and music therapist, Andrea Green, and her collaborator school psychologist and playwright Selma Tolins-Kaufman, from Elkins Park, Pa. They wrote the original in 1989 and the play has been performed all over the country. With messages that are universal – for kids and adults alike – the musical breaks down barriers and brings people together in friendship. With school related themes, the Homeroom characters present relevant issues that teens can relate to in these crucial growing up years.

When Green and Tolins-Kaufman visited Puerto Rico this winter to see it performed by the Colegio Ponceño Musical Theater Group, they decided the kids should perform it here, in the Philadelphia area. The passion and heart of the Ponce group was so overwhelming, as well as their desire to share the messages of acceptance of respect that are presented in Homeroom the Musical.

Homeroom the Musical serves as a model to teach tolerance to teens worldwide. Student performer Aimar Galarza said enthusiastically, “When we presented ‘Homeroom the Musical,’ I saw people in the audience cry and hold each other and I knew ‘Homeroom the Musical’ can make this world a better place.”

Bringing the Ponce teens to Cherry Hill will provide the opportunity to develop a more comprehensive teaching model for using the musical theater experience to bring teens together with acceptance. The musical will not only entertain others and be fun to perform, but help teens connect with others as they explore common issues that impact self-esteem, such as peer pressure, bullying and stress. This process will include facilitated discussions, the making of the music video called and the musical production including students from Cherry Hill and Puerto Rico. Dan Gottlieb, nationally known author and syndicated host of NPR’s “Voices in the Family” heard locally on WHYY-FM, will lead a discussion with both groups of students called “Stand Up For Yourself: Taking Care of Yourself and Others.”

Green shared her enthusiasm about bringing this talented theater group here. She said, “The biggest part of this is that kids feel better about themselves and more supportive of others. As expressed in the song, ‘I’m a Person, Too,’ they realize that everyone has weaknesses and strengths but we all share our humanity. It’s when they come to that realization, that they stop feeling shame about their insecurities and they feel more empowered to be themselves and more accepting of others.”

“These kids are so gifted and they connected so much to the musical that Selma and I wanted to share their passionate performance with others. When I told Cherry Hill Mayor Chuck Cahn and his wife Stephanie about my idea to bring Homeroom to Cherry Hill, they shared my enthusiasm and reached out to help me with open arms.”

Tolins-Kaufman added, “We believe that Homeroom should be in every school because it’s a great message and a great vehicle for teens to work together and explore together these issues that are so relevant to kids today. We hope this will create a model – doing a musical, a music workshop, creating a music video and the partnering of kids.”

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Children's Theater | Creating Safe Musical Spaces: Part II Building Inclusive Communities Through the Arts | Andrea Green Music

Creating Safe Musical Spaces: Part II
Building Inclusive Communities Through the Arts

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In the last issue of PIO! I wrote about neurodiversity and strategies to create safe, inclusive musical experiences for all kinds of students in classrooms, choirs, or performance settings. This column continues the conversation, highlighting the work of two of our members, Frank Hernandez and Andrea Green, who each in their own unique way strive very purposefully to build inclusive communities using music and the arts.

“Open the Circle” by Frank Hernandez and Ted Warmbrand is a favorite CMN anthem that immediately instills the sense of inclusion and community. The song invites everyone into “the circle.” The opening verse is:

Open the circle, the time has come.
Open the circle to everyone.
It’s my circle, without a doubt.
We’ll keep it open ’til nobody’s left out.

As is common in CMN, a lively conversation regarding the third line of this verse took place on the member listserv. A few members questioned why the lyric in the third line says “It’s my circle” and not “It’s our circle.” Regarding the word choice, Frank answered using his own personal experience as an individual growing up blind and the perspective of someone who is actively including children of various abilities in daily music and art lessons. I include parts of Frank’s response here:

As a child with a disability, blindness, I never felt included by the circle. The circle never went out of its way to include me. It was ONE person, a member of the circle, who grabbed my hand and led me into the circle.

So we, Ted and I, strongly believe that the responsibility of exclusivity and INCLUSIVITY falls squarely upon the shoulders of each individual in the group or circle. We, those inside the circle, should work tirelessly to include others, and never stop looking around to see who is being marginalized. When the group believes that “we are open,” the group will STOP seeking to include those on the fringe. We cannot settle or rest until we have actually welcomed everyone into the circle.

He continues,

For the last 20 years, I have dedicated my life to assisting children with special needs, fighting for inclusion for myself and for the countless children we have served at Arts for All, Inc. (http://www.artsforallinc.org/#mission) I have heard their heartbreaking stories of feeling excluded. I have cried NOT because I have felt sorry for them, but because I myself have lived their stories. I have cried because even after the passage of the Americans With Disabilities Act (https://adata.org/learnaboutada), the ADA, we, people with disabilities, are still left out. You see, you can change laws, you can change my lyric to fit your need, even perhaps to pat yourself on the back, but that doesn’t change HEARTS. Feel free to sing “Open the Circle” whatever way is best for you, but don’t believe that the circle is really open. I will keep on championing full inclusion for the children in my program. This is MY responsibility and no one else’s to reach out and welcome someone to the circle.

Often, it is the well intentioned person, perhaps someone who has white privilege, or someone who's never had to sit away from the circle, who feels that the circle is open. It’s easy to feel that the circle, the group, is open if you are already comfortably inside. As a child who came to the United States from Mexico, I was punished for speaking the only language I knew (Spanish), and I was not accepted into the circle. I had to fight to get into the circle. I had to make my way tentatively and find one other person who would not be afraid to reach out and welcome me into the circle. Though the group felt it was being welcoming, I didn’t feel welcomed.

The keynote that Stuart Stotts gave at the 2015 CMN International Conference in Zion, Illinois, resonated with me. Stuart said, “Words do matter! We should sing and write songs that make us feel warm and fuzzy, but we should also have the courage to make our audience think and reflect.” “Open the Circle” is a song with depth. On the surface, it’s fun, upbeat, and very singable. But there's a lot more to the song than the fun melody. “Open the Circle” is an anthem, a cry, dedicated to all of us who have felt left out and to those who still feel left out.

Frank, who is a past president of CMN, has worked as the Assistant Director of Arts for All, Inc. in Tucson, Arizona, since 1996. Founded in 1986, Arts for All, Inc. is an organization that works to provide accessible education, training, and experiences in the arts to children, particularly those with special needs.

Frank arrived in the United States as an immigrant from Mexico at the age of seven. After high school, he travelled with Up With People (http://www.upwithpeople.org/history), an educational organization whose stated mission is to bridge cultural barriers and create global understanding through service and music. Frank initially came to Arts for All as a volunteer, then as a teacher, and eventually became the Assistant Director. He believes he has the perfect dream job, singing with kids and actively working to “open the circle.”

Frank walks his talk. As the Assistant Director, he works on intake for children coming to Arts for All, as well as teaching and serving as the music director and vocal coach for all of the center’s musical productions. Sixty percent of the children enrolled have special needs, while forty percent are neurotypical. Eighty two percent come from low income homes. The children can choose from afterschool classes in music, dance, drama, art, and ceramics with their peers. Regardless of what disability a child has, the children all do lessons with their age group. Because inclusion is being modeled at every level of the organization, the children themselves go beyond inclusion.

As a result, there is a strong sense of community. Of course, there are times when lessons need to be adapted to encompass certain types of disabilities. The teachers have aides, and both the aides and the teachers are trained to keep expectations high, encourage independence, and not lose anyone.

At Arts for All, a child might be in a wheelchair, but kids in wheelchairs can get out of their chairs and sit on the floor with everyone. Or there may be a child who cannot sit still and needs to be allowed to pass things out or put things away. Or deaf kids might inspire hearing kids to learn sign language. In one story Frank told, a class was playing an instrument passing game, and one little girl had limited movement with her hands. The class was passing a vibraslap, and the girl’s aide was worried about what would happen when the instrument came her way—but the kids worked it out. One child gave the instrument to her, and another helped her pass it on to the next person in the circle. When the kids help each other, it’s magic. Instead of focusing on the negative, the focus at Arts for All—in general, and in Frank Hernandez’s heart in particular—is on the positive.

Andrea Green is another CMN member who has dedicated her life to creating musical experiences that intentionally build inclusive communities. She began by partnering children with disabilities and “typical” children. In 1982 she was working as a music therapist at West Philadelphia’s HMS School for Children With Cerebral Palsy. Nearby Germantown Friends School (GFS) teacher, Teresa Maebori, reached out to HMS when she realized that her GFS students did not understand that children with disabilities were essentially like themselves, even though they might be nonverbal and/or wheelchair bound.

Teresa and Andrea organized visits between the two schools, and while the visits were nice, they did not produce ongoing relationships. So Andrea got the idea of creating a Broadway-style musical show that would feature children from both schools sharing the stage equally. In order to produce a musical, the children needed to spend three to four months together in rehearsals followed by the run of the show. Andrea believed that spending this kind of time together would create a lasting impact on the children and give them the opportunity to develop ongoing friendships.

Since that initial idea took off, Andrea has written fourteen “metaphorical musicals,” all of which explore the themes of intolerance and prejudice changing into tolerance, acceptance, and friendship. Over the years, thousands of children have taken part in the productions, attesting to personal transformations that participation has provided them. In addition, many diverse groups have produced the musicals both nationally and internationally.

The metaphorical musical story serves as the framework to mirror the process the children go through together. As the story unfolds, fear, conflict, and division are worked through and resolved, and the children learn how to help each other communicate and understand their differences. As the youngsters act out the story and sing songs with themes of acceptance and empathy, they take down fences and build deep, long lasting friendships.

The music supports the underlying philosophy. Songs are written with strong melodic hooks that repeat themselves, so the chorus or the larger group of performers is always providing support to the individual actor. Because some children are nonverbal and/or use assistive devices, or simply need extra time to participate and contribute, the songs are structured so that Andrea is able to creatively improvise and follow the singers. She changes the original music as needed in order to allow everyone to participate fully and encourage vocal, instrumental, and movement expression.

Andrea’s musicals use a format that is flexible and can be adapted to the needs of the participating schools, theaters, and community centers, with the number of parts expanding or contracting as necessary. Cast size can range from very small to up to eighty children.

The cast is determined by partnering children for specific roles, based on their personalities and individual needs. In order to provide the kind of flexibility needed to accommodate everyone, these productions require a strong director who can balance all the musical and nonmusical aspects of the play.

Auditions are conducted in a fun, flexible way. First, to insure that everyone feels comfortable with the audition material, everyone sings together as a group. Then students are paired up to sing, and eventually are invited to sing alone. This process allows everyone to feel more relaxed. Auditions of children with special needs are more individualized, and sometimes the part is created or adapted for the child without a formal audition. Andrea always works closely with teachers and therapists to select the best role for a child, based on their personality and artistic, emotional, and physical ability. She believes that every child who is interested should be accepted into the show, and she creates a supportive framework to make that happen.

Each production takes between three and four months of rehearsals, generally meeting twice a week. During this period, there is time for Andrea to work with the entire group or focus on each school separately. She collaborates with a movement specialist and an art specialist, along with all the teachers and therapists who are involved with the children. Final performances take place at both schools, so that the audience of each school has the opportunity to participate and experience both the process of the story itself, and the process of the story within the story—the process of change that the performers experienced as they put the play together.

While many of Andrea’s plays have won awards, the musical On the Other Side of the Fence has received an especially long list of accolades. The play tells the story of two groups of animals living on two different farms that are not allowed to be friends because the farmers, who are in charge, are involved in an ongoing feud. Unlike the farmers, the animals want to find a solution to the problem. Henry Nevison, a Philadelphia filmmaker, produced a documentary of the play’s production, following Andrea and students from the HMS School and the Germantown Friends School. Nevison’s documentary won numerous awards, including the Gold Medal at the 2015 New York International Film Festival, the MidAtlantic Emmy, the Gold Medal for a Television Documentary on Social Issues from the New York Festivals International Television and Film Awards, the United Nations Department of Public Information Bronze Award for Extraordinary Public Service, and the Silver Telly in the 36th Annual Telly Awards.

As Andrea says, although awards are nice, the real award, due to the level of publicity, is that a broader public is now aware of the work that she has done over the years to create integrated community experiences, and in the process, change the lives of countless children.

When she started creating and directing her musicals in 1982, she had a hunch that the work would be impactful in the long term, but hearing from students who had participated is rare. Recently, Andrea received this gift as well. On April 29, 2016, she found this message, sent from Såttra, Sweden, on her Facebook page:

I played the part of Hoot, the owl in On The Other Side Of The Fence when I was in 3rd grade, (at) Mission Park Elementary School, Salinas, Ca. That would have made the year 1986 or so.

Tonight I found myself humming "Good Friends" to myself as my now 10-year-old son comforted his best friend [whose] dad passed away from cancer this morning. Andrea, your music touched my life more than I even realized. I am so happy to have found you here on Facebook to share this! And I am so happy to see that the songs are living on!

Andrea continues to work as a music therapy consultant for children and senior citizens. She conducts seminars for college students on working with children with disabilities. She is currently working on a new documentary about how the country of Estonia used her musical The Return of Halley’s Comet as a vehicle for promoting peace and acceptance. She is also crowdfunding to produce a model program for her musical HOMEROOM, which she created with school psychologist Selma Tolins Kaufman to address the issues of bullying, discrimination, and self esteem.

Andrea is a remarkable example of how one person work’s has touched thousands of children over the years, creating not only warm, inclusive, and integrated communities, but simultaneously inviting the participants to experience the change that is needed so that they are able to carry on the lessons learned into their own lives and adulthood.

Personally, as a musician advocate for disability awareness and inclusive communities, I am so happy that there are people like Frank and Andrea who walk the talk in everything that they do. And I am so thrilled that CMN is a forum where we are able to expand our understanding of what is facing the children of our world now. CMN’s mission, to “celebrate the positive power of music in the lives of children by sharing songs, exchanging ideas, and creating community” remains relevant as we strive to bring light and warmth to children and their families, no matter how those children’s bodies look or how their brains are wired. We can all work together—we must all work together— to create a better world for all.

Children's Theater | Life's Lessons | Andrea Green Music

Life’s lessons

Children’s show shares values

BY MARY KAY SWEIKAR

Commercial-News

July 17, 2012

DANVILLE — This weekend, 40 area children ages 8 and up will appear as a variety of barnyard animals in the Danville Light Opera summer musical, On the Other Side of the Fence. Performances will be at 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday in the Bremer Conference Center Theatre at Danville Area Community College. Doors open 30 minutes prior to the show.

Written and composed by Andrea Green, the musical follows the story of two farms that are separated by a big, strong fence and a long-standing feud between the two farmers. Because of their differences, the farmers have forbidden the animals on their respective properties to fraternize with the animals on the other side. One day, two pigs form a special friendship by talking to each other over the fence — much to the chagrin of the farmers.

All the animals begin to wonder why they have to be segregated, and they look to each other for answers. The play explores themes about tolerance, acceptance, friendship and understanding.

Green wrote this musical in 1983 to serve as a vehicle to bring together students from an elementary school and a school for special needs children.

Charlie Hester, director of the show, said, “I found the themes so inspiring and meaningful, and the songs are just adorable and fun.” She said that Green plans to travel from New Jersey to see the Danville performances, and she will available to meet with the cast — and most likely the audience — after the show.

”I’m really excited and honored that Andrea is coming here,” Hester said. “I’ve been in theater all my life, and I can’t remember when the author of a children’s show last came to Danville to see the actual performance and meet the cast.”

Hester talks with children at each rehearsal in hopes that their participation in the play will help to teach them mutual respect. “On the Other Side of the Fence has brought these kids together in an open dialogue about the way we would like to be treated — the way we treat our friends and others,” Hester said. “We’ve addressed the importance of encouragement in social media and that some ‘fences’ keep us safe, but others deserve to be challenged.

“The show imparts a beautiful message that’s so empowering for children. I hope that the children in the show and the audience will relate it to how they can make changes for the better in our community.”

On the Other Side of the Fence is an ensemble show, which means that there is no one star, and most of the cast is on stage during every scene. Also, nearly all of the children in the show have at least one line to say.

“About 30 percent of our cast are new to the stage, and we have a lot of little ones who just might steal the show,” Hester said. “We’re all experiencing some wonderful moments with these children and some of them are sure to steal the show.”

Cast members include Olivia Craig, Victoria Juvinall, Peyton Jones, Kalen McGowan, Madison Thompson, Morgan Klett, Ashton Thompson, Lauren Powell, Brookelyn Powell, Jeremiah Strain, Thomas Strain, Brianne White and Tim Mills.

Also in the cast are Isabelle Peters, Haley George, Augusta Mansfield, Katelyn Hanson, Bree Morgan, Sammi Wesner, Wynter Haas, Dacota Juvinall, Hope Hanson, Abigail Bueter, Amy Mills, Georgie Kiser, Nelle Smith, Torri Marlow and Grace Vogt.

Other actors are Molly Smith, Brooklynne Klett, Emma Ferren, Rebecca Peters, Abigail Strain, Sarah Schroeder, Karrin Estes, Callie Jane Mansfield, Emily Everett, Natalie Mills and Kara Howie.

The cast includes a number of sets of siblings, including Hester’s three children: Amy, Natalie and Tim Mills.

Music director for the show is Chris Huffman, and Megan Ketcherside is choreographer. Co-producers are Marilyn Unzicker and Brittany Powell. Unzicker said, “This show has been so much fun for all of us,” as she ticked off all the various animal characters represented in the musical. “The parents have come up with some great costume ideas,” she added, “and it’s up to each child to make their animal special on stage. “The children in the show are just wonderful and they all get along so well with each other,” Unzicker said.

Food collection

The cast will collect donations for the Your Family Resources Center. Attendees at the show are asked to bring non-perishable foods and toiletries to the performance. Hester has a personal story to share that made her choose the YFRC for donations. “Along with my three children, I went through the Women’s Shelter nine years ago,” she said, “and the people there literally saved my life. “By collecting items needed for the Danville women’s shelter, we hope to show everyone that the journey to the other side of the fence has only just begun.

 


Order Musicals Now!

  • Homeroom The Musical +

    Students in a middle school homeroom share the pain and joy of becoming teenagers through their individual stories. Read More
  • On The Other Side of the Fence +

    In two worlds that appear to be vastly different, a friendship occurs between Ham and Bacon, pigs who live on two sides of the fence. Read More
  • The Return of Halley's Comet +

    In the year 1910, a friendship was born between non-verbal, bizarre-looking aliens and a young girl. They return 75 years later. Read More
  • The Same Sky +

    Diverse fabrics come to life in Fabric Fantasia, telling the story of Lady Tattersol, the mean bully seamstress who rates and divides them on separate shelves. The fabrics are fearful of Tattersol but are curious about each other. Polyester Louie Read More
  • Same City +

    Jane takes the Runaway Express to Same City to escape her world at home, where she feels “unaccepted” and “different”. Read More
  • 1

Featured Testimonials

Andrea Green is the heart of children’s musicals…….from every beat to every word, her musicals bring out the most valuable lessons teaching understanding and acceptance. Her musicals open the curtain on messages told through a creative story and an array of musical styles. Thanks and applause to her for believing in teaching children through musical theatre.

– Bobbi Wolf, Executive Director, Wolf Performing Arts Center

...Having Andrea here at the Sondheim as the artist-in-residence gave a level of quality we had not been able to provide in the previous three years of our youth theater camp. The young performers thrived, expressing their creative spirit, while gaining confidence. Andrea should be applauded for the experience she provided the children in southeast Iowa.

– Rustin Lippincott, Executive Director, Sondheim Center for the Performing Arts

More reviews/testimonials

Featured Video

Health and Wellness correspondent Patrick Elsing sits down with Andrea Green

Featured Review

"Andrea Green captures the heart and soul of theatre, seamlessly blending education and entertainment through words and music. She tackles the tough subjects and always delivers a fun experience for the performers. The response we get from groups performing her work is overwhelmingly positive. We encourage all levels of theatre and their audiences to experience an Andrea Green musical, they will not be disappointed."

– Kenneth Dingledine, Director of Operations, Samuel French, Inc.

More reviews/testimonials

Latest News!

The Daily News sits down with Andrea to discuss her inclusive and inspirational musicals   Read the article


CBS Philly highlights Henry Nevison’s documentary On the Other Side of the Fence   Read it


The Jewish Exponent features On the Other Side of the Fence in their article Building Bridges With a 'Fence'   Read the article 


 Read More "In The News"    

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