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John Noble to take final bow with ‘Night of the Stars’

Candy Williams
By Candy Williams
3 Min Read April 24, 2019 | 7 years Ago
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Greensburg attorney and champion of high school musicals John Noble is a pretty humble guy when it comes to taking credit for the success of his “Westmoreland Night of the Stars.”

The event held at The Palace Theatre in Greensburg has grown to a two-night celebration of local students representing 18 schools and home-school students across Westmoreland County and their dedication to the performing arts.

“I get too much credit for all of this,” he says. “It’s taken thousands of hours by hundreds of volunteers to make all of this happen.”

His daughter, Elly Noble Carr, politely disagrees.

Decades of dedication

“For the last 23 years, he has dedicated 10-plus weekends a year to ‘Musical Theater Season’ and has seen over 1,500 hours of high school and middle school productions, plus countless hours of rehearsal,” she says.

“For 23 years he has organized the sound/microphones, contracted the lighting, scheduled the Palace rental, designed and printed the T-shirts, purchased the balloon drop, coordinated 18-20 high school/middle school rehearsals and segments, solicited and maintained the sponsors, designed the plaques, organized the programs and personally selected every single seat for every single patron, student and supporter – all on his own.”

Beyond the effort that goes into “Night of the Stars” each year, her father also has an incredibly genuine way of making every student feel important, Carr says.

“He has a way of remembering every kid’s name, what role they played last year, where they’re going to college. He has truly invested his support and pride in every individual kid – and that’s truly special. He is one of a kind.”

Passing the torch

He will be turning over his duties of planning, organizing and running the shows to his daughter, a professional actor who beams with pride when she talks about her dad and his accomplishments.

“I think I’ve always known I would eventually run the Night of the Stars someday; I can’t imagine a May without it,” she says. The event is not a contest or competition, but rather “an arena where students cheer for each other, not against each other, where they applaud a wonderful production instead of trying to ‘out-do’ it.”

“The schools come together to participate in a true celebration of creativity, positivety, fun and hard work. It’s easy to want to be a part of it. It’s a thrilling time of year!

Leading the next generation

Noble, 63, who enjoys acting in community theater productions for Stage Right, says he was 39 when he started “Night of the Stars” and many of the talented “Stars” alumni are now running local school theater programs.

“With Elly returning from New York, it was the right time for me to ‘pass the torch’ to her to lead the very capable next generation,” he says. “Sure it’s hard, but to quote my ‘Father’ line from ‘Children of Eden.’ ‘The hardest part of (something you) love, is the letting go.’”

Noble says it’s time for him to work less, travel more and simply “sit back, relax and enjoy the show.” Asked if he still plans to attend high school productions, he replies, “Of course! I’ll be seen at musicals – just not all of them.”

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About the Writers

Candy Williams is a Tribune-Review contributing writer.

Article Details

John Noble’s 23rd Annual Westmoreland Night of the Stars When: 6:45 p.m. May 1 and 2 Admission: $20, all seats…

John Noble’s 23rd Annual Westmoreland Night of the Stars
When: 6:45 p.m. May 1 and 2
Admission: $20, all seats reserved
Where: The Palace Theatre, Greensburg
To reserve tickets: 724-925-1123 or elly@noblemediation.com
Details: thepalacetheatre.org
Performance order subject to change:
May 1
Act 1: Greensburg Salem Middle School —”Newsies;” Penn Middle School— “Peter Pan Jr.;” Franklin Regional — “Thoroughly Modern Mille”
Act 2: Valley High School — “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat; Burrell High School — “The Mystery of Edwin Drood;” Monessen Jr./Sr. High School — “Grease!”
Act 3: Kiski Area High School — “The Sound of Music;” Jeannette Senior High School — “Annie;” Penn Trafford High School: “The Addams Family”
May 2
Act 1: Arts in Education — “Annie;” Derry Area High School — “The Little Mermaid;” Greater Latrobe High School — “Man of La Mancha”
Act 2: Yough Senior High School — “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat;” Greensburg Central Catholic — “Children of Eden;” Hempfield Area High School — “Legally Blonde”
Act 3: Mt. Pleasant Area High School — “Annie;” Ligonier Valley High School — “Into the Woods;” Greensburg Salem High School — “Mamma Mia”

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