“Our program is different,” said Mary Bogrette, Theatre Director, “because students have an opportunity to get real experience, mentored by an adult. Selecting different types of material for performance and class gives everyone an opportunity. The tiered classes, especially International Baccalaureate (IB) Theatre, Acting 3, and Advanced Technology, are game-changers. Before, I felt the program was centered around the productions. Now, I feel that the curriculum is just as important.”
In her fourth year as director, Bogrette has been instrumental in building the current program from scratch. “My first year, there was one acting class and one theatre production class offered each term.” Since then, “I have expanded the program and created a new curriculum, so I am currently teaching theatre (acting/technical theatre/IB Theatre) full time.”
“When I was in 8th grade at the Bloomfield Hills Middle School,” remembered Naomi Parr, senior and a co-president of the International Thespian Society (ITS), an Honor Society for theatre students, “the then high school theatre teacher retired. Mary Bogrette, who was the middle school theater teacher at the time, got the job at the high school and moved up with my grade. Because of this, the current seniors have had her for almost eight years, and many of us think of her as a second mom.”
Student Catherine Recknagel also seems to have grown up in the BHHS Theatre Program. She helped her older sisters with their theatre projects and has been directly involved in the theatre program for four years. “I have served as an ITS Board President, as an actor, and as a technician.”
Catherine’s mother, Nancy, has been with the program even longer. “This is my ninth season with the BHHS Theatre Program,” she said, adding, “My participation includes being a parent volunteer, a parent booster serving as one of the founding members of BHHS Theatre Boosters; vice president, and [currently] president of BHHS Theatre Boosters.”
Three of Nancy’s daughters have gone through the program, but she began volunteering before there were Boosters. “Things got done, but there was no organizing parent group to support the theatre program.” Having Boosters was a major change, as was moving to a new high school building that included a brand-new theatre auditorium.”