- By Lindsey White
- Entertainment
"At the time we decided to put on Festival24.0, it was already about two months into quarantine and about the time that many theatre events would have been happening on campus, had we not been sent home," explains producer Arin Sheehan '22. "So it was already a very melancholy time, especially for performing arts students."
The regularly scheduled spring Festival24 had taken place in January, but other spring events and productions at PMA were canceled or postponed.
"That was when I kind of realized that as an event, Festival24 is supposed to bring students together," says Sheehan. "If we couldn't physically be together, maybe we could do so digitally."
Producing the one-off Festival24.0 online in the spring prepared the students to move this fall's production online as well.
As the first theatre event of the semester, Festival24 offers first-year and transfer students an introduction to the theatre community at Cornell.
"Students from across the campus get involved to create something beautiful and new," says Sheehan. "For me as producer, I love the payoff at the performance when everyone gets to show off their great work to the audience; it may be a lot of work to get to that point, but I think it is well worth it."
One advantage of the online format is freedom from space constraints: students will perform five original plays instead of the typical four. "For the audience, it is a whirlwind of different plays, stretching different genres and styles, meaning there will always be something for everyone," says Sheehan.
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