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The UIL One-Act Play “one-hour rehearsal” is one of the most misunderstood moments in the entire contest process—and one of the easiest places to lose valuable time. In this episode of Afterpiece, Billy and Annie Dragoo break down what the hour actually is (and is not), using the UIL Handbook as the guide.
Rather than treating the hour like an acting rehearsal, this episode reframes it as a technical orientation, safety check, and systems integration period. Annie and Billy emphasize the importance of simultaneous workflow—lighting checks happening while sound levels are set, while the set is measured, approved, and assembled. The key is parallel processing, not sequential waiting.
Listeners will learn how to:
Organize deck, lighting, sound, and actor teams to work at the same time
Use Contest Manager inspections efficiently without stalling progress
Prioritize anchor moments like opening cues, major transitions, and closing looks
Avoid common time-wasting mistakes that derail otherwise strong companies
Exit the space professionally and confidently before contest day
This episode is a practical, experience-driven guide for directors who want their companies calm, prepared, and technically solid when it matters most.
Website: www.DragooTheatre.com
By Billy & Annie DragooThe UIL One-Act Play “one-hour rehearsal” is one of the most misunderstood moments in the entire contest process—and one of the easiest places to lose valuable time. In this episode of Afterpiece, Billy and Annie Dragoo break down what the hour actually is (and is not), using the UIL Handbook as the guide.
Rather than treating the hour like an acting rehearsal, this episode reframes it as a technical orientation, safety check, and systems integration period. Annie and Billy emphasize the importance of simultaneous workflow—lighting checks happening while sound levels are set, while the set is measured, approved, and assembled. The key is parallel processing, not sequential waiting.
Listeners will learn how to:
Organize deck, lighting, sound, and actor teams to work at the same time
Use Contest Manager inspections efficiently without stalling progress
Prioritize anchor moments like opening cues, major transitions, and closing looks
Avoid common time-wasting mistakes that derail otherwise strong companies
Exit the space professionally and confidently before contest day
This episode is a practical, experience-driven guide for directors who want their companies calm, prepared, and technically solid when it matters most.
Website: www.DragooTheatre.com