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NBC's 'SMASH' MAKE A MUSICAL, School #10 - Trimble Tech High School, Fort Worth
NBC's 'SMASH' MAKE A MUSICAL, School #10 - Trimble Tech High School, Fort Worth
By Cindy Ripley on February 14, 2012
![NBC](https://www.mtishows.com/sites/default/files/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Cindy-teaching-edit-224x300_0.jpg)
Fort Worth, TX
Reported by: Cindy Ripley, iTheatrics Senior Education Associate, Resident Master Teacher
February 1, 2012
I always knew Texas was famous for doing things in a big way. No doubt. Even walking to the baggage claim in DFW airport, the distance was immense. But I had no idea that Trimble Tech High School would embody this notion of “big” and fill it with possibility.
The giant vocational high school, made up of 2,000 students, pulls from the entire district of Fort Worth. It is a place where career-minded kids can choose special majors and find specificity in their educational goals. This is a school that offers courses in computer animation, culinary arts, plumbing, cosmetology, health science, carpentry, auto body repair as well as print shop, and hospital administration to name a few. Many of these programs even grant certifications into the workforce. Athletics are very strong as is the school’s band program. Now, I invite you to sit back and think about this. How many tech schools have you heard of that are diligently trying to build an arts program? A gold star goes to this NBC’s ‘SMASH’ MAKE A MUSICAL school.
![NBC](https://www.mtishows.com/sites/default/files/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/kids-playing-edit-300x224_0.jpg)
Led by drama teacher, Cheryl Penland, we gathered around a table bright and early. One by one, the “big guns” as I call them, walked through the door to join the meeting. They were Dave Ruffin, an AP history teacher and community theater director; Isaac Ristow, a dynamic, young choral teacher who has doubled the school’s choir numbers in two years; Earnest Colvin and Hollis Gordon, two dedicated and talented band masters, and Val Lopez, the art teacher who is a Trimble alumna and wears that pride on her sleeve. If that wasn’t enough brilliance for one table, in walks Joel Taylor, the district arts coordinator with a video crew comprised of Trimble students. Only two or three times in my life have I seen such a cross section of arts people on the exact same page. Their hope is that the honor of receiving the “NBC’s ‘Smash’: Make A Musical” program will give their kids the focus and impetus to put a sustainable musical theater program firmly in place. No talking theory – these folks were ready to get to work.
![NBC](https://www.mtishows.com/sites/default/files/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/kids-with-poster-edit-224x300_0.jpg)
I feel like we painstakingly planned a five course gourmet meal and I was leaving just as we unveiled the appetizer. The buzz had begun. Kids were already contacting friends to join their “NBC’s ‘Smash’: Make A Musical” project. I FELT the momentum before I could even navigate my way out of this Texas size building. BIG has a new connotation for me. “NBC’s ‘Smash’: Make A Musical” program at Trimble Tech has the potential to have the "biggest" impact ever!
“NBC’s ‘Smash’: Make A Musical” program is administered by iTheatrics under the supervision of Timothy Allen McDonald. For more information, or to apply to become a part of the program, logon to www.MAKEAMUSICAL.ORG.