A Quote by Grant Gustin

In college, I actually majored in Musical Theater. I was pursuing a BFA in Musical Theater. — © Grant Gustin
In college, I actually majored in Musical Theater. I was pursuing a BFA in Musical Theater.
I always wanted to do musical theater. That was where I saw my life going since I was a musical theater major in college before I went to Pentatonix.
I would love to do stuff on camera. That's what I want to do. It took me a really long time to feel confident as an actor. I think, also, because there's a weird stigma about musical theater where we treat the men who do musical theater differently than we treat the women in musical theater.
I double majored in English education and theater with a musical theater minor. Teaching is the only thing that makes me as happy as performing.
I do regret that when I went to college, I didn't have a liberal arts education. I got a BFA in musical theater, so it was a very directed toward what I was doing. I wish that I had expanded my horizons a little bit.
My background is musical theater. I have a BFA from the University of Florida.
Musical theater is an American genre. It started really, in America, as a combination of jazz and operetta; most of the great musical theater writers in the golden era are American. I think that to do a musical is a very American thing to me.
'Cabaret' was one of the first pieces of musical theater I saw that showed the possibilities of what musical theater can do.
I'm somebody who grew up listening to a lot of musical theater, so getting to finally write musical theater songs and songs that sound that way - the emphasis being on the storytelling, but the arrangements and the orchestrations can be really varied - I found that to be, actually, a really joyful discovery.
I trained at a conservatory as a mezzo-soprano and was a musical theater major in college so I had a theater background.
I started in theatre. I went to the Boston Conservatory and majored in musical theater.
I grew up doing musical theater. I went to a school for musical theater, so that was always what I wanted to do growing up.
I knew I wanted to pursue a career in the theater the minute I graduated from college having not pursued it! So I went back to school and got a degree in music and began working in musical theater.
I was there when the quote-unquote golden age of musical theater was flourishing. I met everybody who worked in theater or was famous in theater from the '40s on.
I always wanted to make an album, but I knew that I didn't want it to be a musical theater album. It's not that I don't love them - I own every musical theater album ever made - but it just didn't seem right for me.
I've never had any feeling of disconnection between the classical theater, or the contemporary theater, or musical theater, or the thing that we call opera.
I've loved musical theater ever since I was a kid. My mother's a pianist, and my grandfather was an amateur theater director and stand-up comic. And I was an only child. And I loved attention. So from an early age, my family was teaching old musical songs.
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