Fiona Tan's POV
Oh, how the time flies. Just yesterday, I was in the dance studio learning the moves for the musical, and now, it's time for the technical rehearsals. It reminds me how close I am to the real thing, and the technical rehearsals was a full sound run but in practice uniform.
It was time to practice the chaotic dance that had a meeting as its context. Taking my file and chair, I set it to its final position before picking up my file. The music started, and we started to dance with intensity, as if we were in an actual meeting. Most of the time, we were in sync with uniformed moves. However, the moves that had special variations because of its musical theatre aspects—we all stepped up to make sure we performed them well to show them its musical theatre. When I heard the song come to an end, I ran up to the chair as everyone got into squats hiding their faces before pressing the imaginary button to call Melody's parents.
Crystal's POV
While the choir sang "A Million Dreams," my piano partner and I were doing everything we could to coordinate the duo piece. I controlled the right hand since I was more experienced, while she controlled the left because she lacked the experience and wouldn't be able to have the level of coordination needed for the right hand. Even then, it felt like second nature to us, and we were able to complete the piano duet effortlessly, our accompaniment doing the choir its justice.
Nicole's POV
As part of the finale, I had to sing and dance at certain parts where the script said "chorus." Yet, I felt like this has become a part of me. All the time taken off from chatting and social media just for this moment, and yet never really giving up my grades. I felt a utopia only discipline could bring, as my musical journey came to an end. I gained so many lessons from being in the musical, and an avalanche of rewards for that. Call that a utopia at its best!
Lydia's POV
With everyone's support, the saxophone became a lot easier for me to play. The buttons I wasn't able to find once upon a time, I could locate them without even trying. Blowing the saxophone didn't need my life to fulfil, it just needed normal human breaths to complete the task. It was a game pushing the buttons and blowing into the saxophone, and I finally found myself blend into the western orchestra!
Mrs Nur's POV
Crystal, YZ, Nicole...I had watched them as literature students and participants of the musical. All of them have improved so much from the start. The musical has made YZ more patient, his fiery temper now under control. Nicole has shown great strides in her learning attitude, now having a stronger sense of responsibility and discipline. My only concern is that she's going to stress herself out trying to make sure what must be done is done. Crystal? I felt like it was more of a showcase of all her strengths, but I have come to notice Crystal hasn't been pressuring herself to keep her "perfect popular girl" image anymore. She's letting herself be vulnerable (Chapter 101) and I have seen getting the help she needs (Chapters 49 and 55). I guess even a musical can make one a better person, huh?
YOU ARE READING
Find your faith
Teen Fiction⚠️Tw: €@+|ng d|$0rd€r$, $€|f-h@rm, @++€mp+€d su|c|de, b|00d, p@n|£ @++@£k, h@r@$$m€n+⚠️ A "Chronicles of Peace" AU where Crystal does much better in her academics, she accepts the offer to take 8 subjects hoping she'll have more options if she can't...
