Acclaimed Documentary Filmmaker Barbara Kopple Follows Texas Students in Disney's "High School Musical: The Music in You"
Short form segments premiere Saturday, Oct. 27. Story culminates in half-hour documusical premiering Sunday, Jan. 20
Academy Award-winning documentary filmmaker Barbara Kopple (Harlan County, USA, and American Dream) follows the story of a student theater company in Fort Worth, Texas, as they learn to express themselves and experience the positive effect music and the arts can have in their lives.
The story, High School Musical: The Music in You, a special presentation in association with the NAMM Foundation, begins in a series of 12 interstitials premiering every Saturday beginning Oct. 27 (7:55 p.m., ET/PT) on Disney Channel. It culminates in a half-hour documusical featuring opening night of the H2O production of Disney's High School Musical,"premiering Sunday, Jan. 20 (8 p.m., ET/PT) on Disney Channel. The short-form series will also be presented in Disney DXD on www.DisneyChannel.com and available on Sprint TV beginning in November.
Rich Ross, president, Disney Channel Worldwide, said, "I'm excited by everything High School Musical has become and am honored to welcome Barbara Kopple back to Disney Channel to do what she does best. She lets her film's subjects, the members of the theater company, tell the story of how music theater becomes a wonderful experience and an opportunity for self-expression for them. We're eager to share her work and their experience with kids and families everywhere and, together with the NAMM Foundation, encourage creativity and innovation in our schools and in our culture."
The unscripted narrative introduces Disney Channel viewers to the H2O theater company, comprised of students and teachers from Western Hills and Arlington Heights High Schools in Fort Worth. Kopple's style and knack for being unobtrusive lets the students and teachers tell the story about auditions, rehearsals, breaking down cliques and building friendships before they ultimately bring an adapted stage version of High School Musical"to the school auditorium.
Disney Channel teamed with the nonprofit NAMM Foundation to launch Disney's High School Musical School Grant Program, an initiative that allows for middle and high schools across the U.S. to apply for a grant to cover all licensing costs associated with producing their own in-school stage show, and to receive a cash grant that will help support additional teaching and production needs to enhance educational opportunities.
More information on the grant program, a link to the application and a downloadable activity guide is available at
www.DisneyChannel.com/MusicInYou.
As the short-form series rolls out, Kopple introduces the students and presents a wide view of who they are and why they are trying out for a role in the summer theater workshop, H2O's production of Disney's High School Musical.
On audition day, hopes are high as an array of students give it their all on stage, leaving directors Anne Hunter and Julia Worthington with difficult casting decisions. Among the students who audition are Curtis, a football player who hopes that dancing will help his footwork on the grid iron; Brad, who loves music and plays in an alternative band but doesn't like limiting himself to one genre of music; Kristina and Sarah, who both audition for the role of Sharpay; and new girl Stacia, cast as an ensemble character, who feels left out of the clique of "leads."
Later, viewers see the teachers guiding the theater troupe in building sets, making costumes and shaping the summer production, a task they encourage the students to work hard at to make the show a success. As production goes on, the rival students begin to mix into one big group, gearing up—despite last-minute snafus—to perform before a sold-out crowd. On opening night, High School Musical stars Monique Coleman and Oleysa Rulin drop in on the cast for a surprise visit.
The H2O production of High School Musical: On Stage was presented in association with Musical Theatre International (MTI) and Disney Theatrical Productions. High School Musical: The Music in You is produced and directed by Barbara Kopple. It is a production of Cabin Creek Films.
For more than two decades Kopple has created an impressive body of work, telling thought-provoking stories from the coal mines of Kentucky to the war-ravaged Bosnian countryside. With a combination of her signature "fly-on-the-wall" style, direct cinema techniques, interviews and great storytelling, Kopple remains on the forefront as both a nonfiction and fiction filmmaker. Her films Harlan County, U.S.A. and American Dream each won Academy Awards. For Disney Channel, Kopple directed and produced Confident for Life: Kids and Body Image and the critically acclaimed Friends for Life: Living with AIDS and Learning for Life: Kids and Learning Differences.
(Editors note: Photos are available via e-mail or at www.disneychannelmedianet.com. Registration required).
About The NAMM Foundation
The NAMM Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing active participation in music making across the lifespan by supporting scientific research, philanthropic giving and public service programs from the international music products industry.
About The Disney Channel
Disney Channel is a 24-hour kid-driven, family-inclusive television network that taps into the world of kids and families through original series and movies. Currently available on basic cable in more than 94 million U.S. homes and to millions of other viewers on 27 Disney Channels around the world, Disney Channel is part of the Disney-ABC Television Group.
Media Contacts
NAMM Communications - John Dolak, Director
johnd@namm.org
619.735.4028
The Lippin Group for NAMM
namm@lippingroup.com
201.317.6618
About NAMM
The National Association of Music Merchants (NAMM) is the not-for-profit association with a mission to strengthen the $19.5 billion music products industry. NAMM is comprised of 15,400 global member companies and individual professionals with a global workforce of over 475,000 employees. NAMM events and members fund The NAMM Foundation's efforts to promote the pleasures and benefits of music and advance active participation in music-making across the lifespan. For more information about NAMM, please visit www.namm.org.