By Nicole Lyons, December 4, 2024
University of Central Missouri student Quinton Weed rehearses in the Elliott Student
Union for the upcoming live radio drama, “It’s a Wonderful Life,”
which will be performed in the Union and simultaneously broadcast on The Beat at 7:30
p.m. Dec. 10.
Just in time for the holidays, students and faculty with The Beat, the campus radio station at the University of Central Missouri (UCM), are producing a live broadcast of “It’s a Wonderful Life.”
Audiences can watch the production in person in the Elliott Student Union atrium or listen to the live broadcast on The Beat. Both take place at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 10. Those who come to campus will be
treated to free hot chocolate and popcorn, courtesy of the Union.
The Beat has produced recorded radio dramas, but this will be the first live radio
drama. The goal is to transport listeners back to the 1940s, when the classic movie
premiered and it was common for families to gather around the radio to hear a live
broadcast.
“It's a bigger undertaking, but the students really like the challenge,” said Shannon
Johnson, associate instructor of Media Production and station manager for The Beat. “The auditions were open to the entire campus.
We have a mixture of Music Tech students, Theatre students, Fashion students, Digital
Media students, but they all have a love of performing. It’s a really nice collaboration
with the whole campus.”
About 25 students are working on the production, including a live pianist who is composing
music for the scene transitions.
Johnson and the two Foley artists have worked to find just the right items to create
realistic sounds that will bring the beloved story to life. Work is underway to construct
a wind machine, and Johnson’s son, a Mechanical Engineering student, is welding a
car door to a frame so it can be opened and closed. There is even some UCM flair through
the use of a red Mule cowbell for the sound of a retail store door opening. And, of
course, a small bell that everyone will recognize as the sound of an angel getting
its wings.
“There's simple ones like doors opening and closing and cars driving off. But it's
all of the little things that help you feel like you're actually there,” said Carson
Meade, a junior Digital Media Production major from Savannah. “And so it's kind of
like a mystery almost, trying to put together the puzzle of how to imitate that sound.”
The show script includes commercials, but the UCM crew has decided to recreate live
commercials for actual sponsors of The Beat.
“So, for Alley Cats, we're going to have a bowling ball rolling. Heroes, we’ll do
the sizzling sound of the food,” Johnson explained. “We're going to recreate it with
our announcers as a thank you for our sponsors who have helped us.”
The show doesn’t come without its challenges. For some students, “It’s a Wonderful
Life” marks their first live performance. For others, they’re finding creative ways
to produce a show without visuals.
“One of the biggest things we have to think about is making sure that you are emotive
in your voice and you don't speak monotone with all the different emotions that you're
trying to portray because they can't see your face,” said Rosalyn Schuster, a senior
Musical Theatre major from Nixa. “If you're smiling, they don't know that unless you
have some kind of change in that voice.”
With podcasts on the rise and voiceover work continuing to be a popular career choice
for actors, the inaugural live radio drama is also an opportunity to learn new skills.
“Radio drama is another form of acting – voice acting. It's really just everywhere
these days on the radio, it's in film voiceover, it's in cartoons, it's in pretty
much everything,” said Quinn Allen, a senior Theatre major from Lone Jack. “Voiceover
is really something I love learning because it's another tool I can have in my toolbox.
It's a very versatile form of acting because your voice is an instrument that you
can shift and change and mold to whatever you like.”
Schuster said her favorite part of the production is the story itself.
“I think that ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ is such a feel-good holiday-time story, especially
just the ending,” Schuster said. “It's all about community and persevering through
hard times, and I think that's always a really good message to keep in mind, that
it's always possible that things can get better.”
The production is partially funded by a grant from the Speech and Theatre Association of Missouri.
To listen to the live broadcast at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 10, visit ucmbeat.com. For more information about UCM’s Department of Communication and Digital Media Production,
visit ucmo.edu/comm.
UCM students Kaia Trujillo and Payton Lawrence practice in the Digital Media Production
studio ahead of The Beat’s live production
of “It’s a Wonderful Life.”