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ArounD toWn Alumn returns to direct RHS spring musical

Brian Williams entered Robbinsville High School as a freshman in 2004 with his sights set on playing piano for Broadway productions. Then he got a taste of teaching.

“I was having a better time helping other people make music than making music myself,” said Williams, who as a student occasionally led choir classes when the instructor was out. “That’s how I caught the bug; the rest is history.”

Williams was part of the high school’s first graduating class in 2008, later earning a bachelor’s degree in music education and master’s degree in teaching from Westminster Choir College in 2012. He returned to the district, first teaching music at the middle school before moving to the high school in 2016.

Today, Williams is the high school’s choir director and was the director of the spring musical, Pippin, a widely acclaimed production about the son of a king who struggles to find his place in the world. The show was held from March 31 to April 2.

It’s an experience, Williams said, that is universally relatable to students and adults alike.

“Ultimately one of the reasons we picked the show is the main character is going through a crisis about where he fits in life, and teenagers are constantly evaluating where they fit,” Williams said. “Sometimes something extraordinary is incredibly ordinary. You take for granted what you have.”

About 70 students were involved in the production, on stage and in the crew. They had been working for months learning and rehearsing their lines, coordinating dance routines, painting sets and building props.

Among those students are Rachael and Bridget Godfrey, 17-year-old twin seniors who led key aspects of the show.

Rachael was the student technical director and stage crew coordinator who oversaw everything from construction of the set to costumes, lighting design and sound control.

The role helped Rachael strengthen her leadership abilities and management acumen. Those are skills she said will prove valuable throughout her life and career.

But school productions like the spring musical and fall drama can also help students find where they belong, an experience not unlike the lessons explored in Pippin

“Being on crew always brought that sense of peace for me in middle school and high school. Crew always was something I could come back to and it made me very, very happy to be there,” Rachael said. “Whether it’s the people or the show we were doing, crew always feels like a family to me.”

Her sister, Bridget, played the character Catherine, an on-stage lead in the show. She was also one of the cast’s dance captains.

Bridget has long performed in productions outside of the school, including in community theater groups and ven-

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