Were trying to pick our musical at my high school and we have a lot of girls. Were trying to find a show with a lot good girls parts but also 1 or 2 good guy parts (for me mainly) Any suggestions?
Nine is the definitive answer but may not be the show your school is looking for.
City of Angels almost fits what you are looking for but, in addition to being a challenging show to do well, might also well be considered too hot a show for a high school.
Doubt they would let you do Nine, but that is one. Probably get away with re-casting for Chicago, but they would probably have an issue with that and Chicago really needs dancing. (At my sons' school, the dancing in most of the shows they did was usually replaced by marching around the stage in time to the music, which meant you really did not want them to do a musical with much dancing).
I am struggling to think of one. How about a revisionist 1776, reversing the roles?
While it's not the best of shows, Leader of the Pack is always a fun option. You can have lots of girls singing any one of the numerous songs, and there are only 2 guy roles of any significance.
-There's the muddle in the middle. There's the puddle where the poodle did the piddle."
Didn't think of Leader of the Pack. That is not a. Bad idea...not exactly a great show, but I bet it would be very enjoyable on a high school stage. The simpler, the better.
Re Annie, I think that could work too...just make everyone in the chorus female and you only have a few roles that really need to be men...Daddy W., Rooster, and FDR.
I agree with Nine as well. But it's probably too adult. There was an interesting all-woman version of Godspell at a community theater in Flint last year, that could work with just men as Jesus and Judas. Maybe interesting could be an all-lady version of The Mystery of Edwin Drood, just going along with the Miss Alice Nutley thing..."oh, all of the men got sick somehow, we ladies must fill in for them!" Madness ensues in 19th century London.
"Contentment, it seems, simply happens. It appears accompanied by no bravos and no tears."
Except changing the sex of characters is explicitly not allowed and therefore illegal.
Question to the opportunity: are you actually choosing it or just speculating?
If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it?
These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.
We did Seussical at my school (an all-girls school, with very few boys from our brother school). We had 6 guys in the cast: Horton, the Mayor, 2 Wickersham brothers (but we also had 2 girls - they added an extra), General Schmitz and Vlad Vladikoff. All other characters were played by girls, including Jojo, the Cat in the Hat and the Grinch. Jojo was actually played as a girl so some of the lines had to be changed (in rhyme!).
I'm sure we got permission to do it, as our director wouldn't be the type to do things illegally. I heard about the hassle he had to go through to get our changes to Into the Woods approved a couple of years later (we added an ensemble), so I'm sure he went through all the correct processes then too. We also weren't the only school to do gender changes to Seussical that year either.
We also did Into the Woods with only a handful of boys and adding a mainly female ensemble. I think there were 6 boys. The Steward and Narrator(s) were played by girls.
Since I've graduated I know they've done Beauty and the Beast, the Sound of Music and Thoroughly Modern Millie, but I don't know how many boys were in those.
Yes, there are ways to get permission, and as you said, it isn't usually easy. I was specifically referring to the comments about Drood.
If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it?
These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.