The very first one I did was halarious but, in my defense, thrown together. The two parents who had signed on to do the talent show at the beginning of the school year were nowhere to be found time came for the talent show in February, so I volunteered to mix it with my huge event called "Spring Fling", a spring carnival with a silent auction that merited my school about 2/3,000.00 the first year. I was very proud. As years have gone on, I have completed 3 more talent shows and each one has gotten bigger and better. No matter how you plan, it will always have to get better.
Start by sending out a flyer about your talent show about 3/4 weeks in advance of your event to raise awareness and excitement! 2 weeks after that send home the permission forms for the students to get filled out, by their parents, and bring back by a set deadline. Have a talent show preview to inspect your students acts and make sure that they are appropriate for all ages to see and hear. One weeks before event send home a letter telling parents of those entered what your plan is, ie: everyone arrives @ the same time, approx. 45 min before showtime dressed and ready to go on stage. Do your best to maintain communication with all of the parents of the event and monitor feedback. You'll want it to make it even better for next year.
The planning: I start out by calling a videographer to record the event so parents can enjoy the show. My videographer sold videos by pre-sell on the talent show day for about $20.00 with a kickback from each sale going back to the school. Then I call a lighting guy @ a local big church and ask them to volunteer their time. They bring the spotlight and the parents love to see their children in the spotlight!!! Ok, so there's your first two secrets, the next step is to secure your stage. If your school already has one, well, then you're set! If not, some school systems have portable stages. If yours does not, then incorporate your community resources. Call a builder who might be willing to build you a sold, but, temporary stage to get you through the event. They can write off the time/labor & supplies it takes to do this for you. It just takes alot of planning!!! Cover the stage with fabric or donations from a craft store or local Wal-mart. Go to a party store and offer them free advertisement if they donate to your school. The ideas are endless @ the party store.
Go to Sam's to get your drinks, chips, popcorn supplies/machine, candy, etc...and sell it for more profit to go back to your school. These can be fun and exhausting!!!
Be creative and make this event your own for your school!! If you have a local celebrity use them as your role model...Have an American Idol competition of your own.
At my talent show, nobody won or lost. It was all for fun. It helped the children with their speaking/performing in front of crowds and gave their parents a wonderful memory!!!
I called in a favor the first year and had the local weather guy be my MC for the evening. I wrote down the info and 3x5 cards to give him some insight. The kids were in awe that the local weather man knew so much about them.
Put together your stage, decorate and get ready for your dress rehearsal. One to two nights before the show. It's useful, helpful and necessary to give you and the students a preview of how the whole show should go. Tell your parents all details of video purchasing, etc...while you are on the staqe and giving out info.
Call a restaurant or fast food joint that supports your school and ask them to cater food and give a 10% check back to the school at the end of the night.
Well, that about rounds it out. It's alot of hard work and dedication, but, so very worth it for the kids!! You're doing this for them and they deserve the best!!
Oh yeah,!!! remember to have fun!