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Spreading Joy and Harmony Since 1966 |
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Mad Hatter Barbershop Chorus |
About Our Music Director
Joe Hudson, Mad Hatter Barbershop Chorus director since 2004 Maybe that's because he found his calling so early. "Joe made his debut in the Franklin School, in Stratford, Connecticut, where I was the principal," says Garrett Stack, host of "American Jukebox" on WMNR Fine Arts Radio. "As a third-grader, he starred as the Mayor of Munchkinland in The Wizard of Oz. He was a natural. He just loved performing." He certainly did. When he was six, he became fascinated with the country music his dad played on the radio, and began imitating Garth Brooks. Soon, he was winning roles in musicals and commercials around Connecticut and New York. As a high-school senior in 2001, Joe represented Stratford (Conn.) High School at the Connecticut Music Educators' Western Region and All-State Music festivals. The following year, he entered Western Connecticut State University to study music education. There, he developed his voice, a malleable tenor that fits everything from opera to Broadway musicals and, of course, barbershop. (To hear Joe's voice, listen to George Washington in our animated "Barbershop for President" poster.) Among the opera roles he played at WestConn were Sir Joseph Porter in Gilbert and Sullivan's H.M.S. Pinafore, King Kaspar in Menotti's Amahl and the Night Visitors, Lippo Fiorentino in Weill's Street Scene, Prince Orlofsky in Strauss's Fledermaus, and First Man in Armor in Mozart's Magic Flute. He also plied his talent on the trumpet and trombone in two WestConn instrumental groups: the Jazz Ensemble and the Symphonic Band.
The HatterTones, one of four Mad Hatter quartets, practice choreography for afavorite number, "The Lion Sleeps Tonight." Behind Joe, who sings tenor, are bass Dick Zang (left), baritone Chuck Kreiger (right), and lead Dan Griffin (rear). Meanwhile, in 2002 Joe discovered the Mad Hatters. By far the group's youngest member, he soon became a chorus favorite, in part because of his wacky jokes and infectious enthusiasm. He rapidly became a section leader, an assistant director, and in 2004, when former director Joel Knecht moved to Trumbull, our director. Since the job was part-time, Joe also continued slicing provolone and ham for his customers at Stop & Shop. One day while Liz was at work, she looked up to see a dozen men in red polo shirts striding down the produce aisle. They stepped into her department and stood in an arc before her. In walked Joe, dressed in black tie and tails. Someone blew a pitchpipe, and Joe directed them in the sweetest song she had ever heard:
Strategist: Joe helps the Mad Hatters plot an award-winning contest performance.
She had already guessed what was up. As he dropped to his knee and opened the little white box, she rushed into his arms. There, between the azaleas ($5.99) and the African violets ($2.99), he whispered: "Will you marry me?" "Yes!" Not long afterward, Joe graduated from WestConn with a bachelor's in music education. Suddenly, he heard about a full-time job opening—one that seemed too good to be true: the directorship of the Danbury High School Choirs. It was a plum appointment in the state's largest high school, right here in Danbury. When the Mad Hatters heard about the opening, many of us believed it was destined for some older, more experienced educator, not a youngster fresh out of college. But when Joe told us he was going to apply anyway, we went to bat for him. A flurry of calls and letters went out in support of his candidacy. Here's some of what we wrote:
We didn't know whether our testimony would help or not. Other candidates were probably marshalling their own cheering sections. Typically, Joe never asked us to help. Quietly we lobbied; quietly we waited. Then, after a summer of suspense, Joe walked into our Tuesday, August 15, rehearsal with a big grin on his face. "May I please introduce myself?" he said. "I am Joseph Hudson, director of the Danbury Mad Hatters—and director of the choral department at Danbury High School!" Our little band went wild with cheers and applause.
"You Make Me Feel So Young!" Joe formed a high-school quartet withbarbershoppers Andrew Fritzer, Thomas Russell, and Bryan Prywes. Joe and Liz married on December 29, 2006, in St. Peter's in Danbury. On hand once again were the Mad Hatters, dressed in black tuxedos and red satin bowties and cummerbunds. At a nod from the priest, they sang the Lord's Prayer in stirring four-part harmony. Tears glistened in Joe's eyes. But after the ceremony, he couldn't resist a joke: "You performed at my proposal, and now you're here at my wedding," he said. "But I'm sorry, you just can't come along on the honeymoon!" It's been only a few years since Joe took command of the Mad Hatters, but he has already made his mark on this venerable Danbury institution. Membership has risen and contest scores are up (read about our latest triumph). The group's artistic prowess is maturing, too, as Joe's coaching evolves from technical instruction to matters of heart and soul. "You cannot move an audience to tears with this song," he told us during a lackluster rehearsal of "Over the Rainbow," "until you connect to them instead of singing at them. Sing your story, and the audience will hear its story, too." In his spare time (we don't quite understand how he has any), Joe enriches his musical experience by performing in musical and theatrical productions around the state. He's played Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof, Moonface Martin in Anything Goes, Nicely-Nicely Johnson in Guys and Dolls, Alonso Smith in Meet Me in St. Louis, General Bullmoose in Li'l Abner, Fagin in Oliver! and various characters in 45 other productions. But Tuesday night with the Hatters is still Joe's favorite part of the week. He's grown up with these men, some of whom are now past 80. They kid around with him. ("We like to think of Joe as the son we never wanted," President Bob Bradley jokes at singouts.) They share their troubles and joys with him. He's become not only a great director, but a wonderful friend. —Terry Dunkle, Mad Hatter baritone
Good show!. Joe high-fives the chorus after the curtain closes on "Phantom of the Barbershop," our 2007 annual concert. |
Meet Joe Hudson OccupationChoral director and deli counter man BornDecember 26, 1982, in Bridgeport, Connecticut ParentsRobert Hudson, a dispatch supervisor at Connecticut Light & Power, and Maryann Hudson, a data-entry clerk SiblingsGeorge Hudson, a machinist SpouseElizabeth Ehli Hudson, a florist and bank employee Favorite Book3rd Degree, by James Patterson Last Book ReadHarry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, by J.K. Rowling Favorite Song"Dream On," by Aerosmith Favorite Barbershop Song"When I Leave the World Behind," as sung by Wheelhouse Favorite FoodItalian! Favorite DrinkRoot beer Favorite PastimesWatching comedies and horror movies Worst HabitProcrastination Pet peevesPeople who don't listen; people who talk in the theater Most Prized PossessionCarIf Joe won the lottery......he'd buy a piece of land big enough to have a house, a barn, and a lot of acreage for picnics. To email Joe.......
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