'Today' show puts Palm Springs charter school students in spotlight
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Lannis Waters/Palm Beach
Post
G-Star School of the
Arts Film and TV
Production major Zachary
Lambe, checks the
settings on a
crane-mounted camera
during the production of
a commercial at the
school on March 8, 2011.
![]()
Lannis Waters/Palm
Beach Post
G-Star School of the
Arts Film majors Emily
Serpico, 15, and Avery
Mendel, 16, apply
make-up to professional
actor Chris Ashby during
production of a
commercial at the school
on March 8, 2011.![]()
Lannis Waters/Palm
Beach Post
Greg Hauptner, G-Star
School of the Arts
Founder.
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Palm Beach Daily
News
G-Star School of the
Arts for Motion Pictures
and Broadcasting, a
charter high school and
home of the new sound
stage. |
By
Kevin D. Thompson
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer PALM SPRINGS — The kids at G-Star School of the Arts for Motion Pictures and Broadcasting are no strangers to working in front of and behind the cameras. The students, after all, are enrolled in a high school that has partnered with an Oscar-winning visual effects company and where over 50 feature films have been produced since the school opened in 2003 on an old water utilities plant on Congress Avenue. But on this unusually balmy March afternoon, even savvy G-Star students are buzzing about the national exposure they're about to receive as a five-member crew from NBC's Today prepares to tape a feature on the Palm Springs charter school. "This is pretty awesome," said Jervis Neath, a 16-year-old 10th-grader who's studying acting. "I'm going to do anything they ask me to do." Today national correspondent Jamie Gangel recently spent the afternoon at the school's 11-acre, 110,000-square-foot campus, talking to students, visiting classes and getting a peek at the school's four-and-half story soundstage. Gangel, a 16-year NBC News veteran who has interviewed newsmakers from ballet star Mikhail Baryshnikov to President Bill Clinton, said her cousin told her about G-Star after a recent trip to Palm Beach County. "She gets all the credit," Gangel said after a break in taping. "She came to visit the school, then sent me an e-mail saying, 'Do I have a story for you!'" NBC said the report is scheduled to air in early April. Greg Hauptner, the school's founder and CEO, said NBC called him late last year about featuring the school on the network's top-rated morning program. "I was honored and thrilled at the same time," said Hauptner, a former celebrity hairstylist and tireless promoter who in 1985 dumped his 1967 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow into the Atlantic to protest the lack of artificial reef for fish. "This taping is a validation for our program." G-Star started in 2003
with 150 students - all
ninth-graders. By 2007, the
school added grades 10-12.
Now student enrollment is up
to 885, Hauptner said,
adding that number will
increase to over 1,100 for
the 2011-2012 school year. Hauptner, 64, said G-Star boasts the largest movie studio in the state. "We're bigger than Universal," Hauptner said of the studio at the Orlando theme park. "We just don't have the rides." The school also has formed a partnership with Florida State University film school and Digital Domain to create a career path for students interested in getting a job in big screen digital effects. Digital Domain, a visual effects and animation company, was founded by Avatar director James Cameron and the late special effects master, Stan Winston (Jurassic Park). The company has created effects for over 60 movies, including Titanic, Tron: Legacy and the Transformers films, and is building a site on Okeechobee Boulevard and Dixie Highway in West Palm Beach along with an animation studio in Port St. Lucie. "This is the perfect story for Today," said Sylvie Haller, a Today producer. "The kids are getting a great education and learning all the basics, but they're also learning about the world of entertainment through some real, hands-on experience." That was definitely the case for Sandra Figueroa, a 16-year-old 11th-grader. Figueroa, who wants to be an entertainment lawyer, co-directored a glitzy Ferrari car commercial as NBC's cameras rolled. Figueroa shouted directions at two hunky male models (she even instructed one to be more animated), helped set up shots and handed out bottled water. "I really loved the experience," Figueroa said. "I've never worked on anything this big."
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