Waterford
Kids Shine in East Lyme Children's Theater Spring Production
The Montville Times - May 2,
2008
By
Suzanne Thompson, Reporter |
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| Anyone
looking for entertaining children’s theater – by
children – would have been impressed with the East Lyme
Children’s Theater’s 40th production. The
community institution, started years ago by passionate
supporters of youth and community theater, puts on its
productions at the Niantic Center School on West Main Street
in Niantic.
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| This
year’s show ran the first two weekends in April.
Kids from five to eleven years old, from East Lyme,
Montville, Waterford and Stonington, were involved.
Two “cast mothers,” Kris Brookes and Barbara Heaney,
both of Niantic, were co-directors with Lee Rummel, who with
his wife Liz, run the SouthEastern Connecticut Regional
Youth Theater (SECRYT).
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| “The play is a wonderful spoof about The Big Bad Wolf (Three
Little Pigs) and The Wicked Witch (Wizard of Oz) going on
trial, with witnesses including Hansel & Gretel, Red
Riding Hood, 3 Little Pigs and Dorothy,” explained Liz,
who was show producer. “The production had both
humor that only adults would pick up on, but yet the
children also enjoyed it on a different level.”
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| The young
actors got to flex their acting abilities by playing two
different roles, one for each trial. Cast members, in
alphabetical order and their parts were Maura Donnelly,
Grandma in the first act and a Flying Monkey in the second;
Shannon Duhamel, Little Pig #2 and the Scarecrow;
Lauren Eberle, the Big Bad Wolf and Defense Attorney; Amelia
Green, a gallery member and Snow White; Elizabeth Harris,
Little Red Riding Hood and the Wicked Witch; Elizabeth (Ahren)
Heaney, Prosecutor in both trials; Sean Heaney, a little boy
and Hansel; Julia Lefurge, a badger and Dorothy; Megan
Lefurge, Little Pig #3 and a dwarf; Hannah McGaughlin, a
gallery member and Sleeping Beauty; Greysen Mitchell, a
gallery member and Prince Charming; Areil Plantz, Judge I.L.
Hangem in both trials; Claire Rummel as Bailiff in both
trials, and Tessa Rummel as Little Pig #1 and Gretel.
Audrey Rummel was the stage manager.
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| More
students and their parents were involved behind the scenes
with set construction, hair and make-up, costumes, props and
stage crew.
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| The
Rummels are certainly no strangers to theater or East Lyme.
Both grew up attending East Lyme High School. Lee’s
mother is Brenda Kerr Rummel, a driving force behind
community theater in New London and the area in the 1960s
and 1970s. She was involved in efforts that led to the
creation of the East Lyme Arts Council, the East Lyme
Children’s Theater and the Eugene O'Neill Awards.
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| “My mom was smitten with drama when she attended New London
High School in the fifties. When she married my dad,
she gave him an ultimatum and he acquiesced and got
involved, too,” Lee laughed. “As a kid, I started with
the Children’s Theater in 1969.”
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| Brenda
Kerr, the actress, stage manager, mentor and inspiration,
died of breast cancer in 1973. She was barely 33 years
old.
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| “I was 12, my brother was 9 when she died,” Lee said.
“You kind of go on autopilot when that happens.”
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| Lee and
Liz have four children – Logan is 20, Audrey is17, Claire
is 10 and Tessa is 7. The family is in the process of
adopting Codie, 2 ½, who they have cared for as a foster
family.
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| Their
adult involvement with the East Lyme Children’s Theater
started as volunteers as their own children joined.
Lee started directing the kids’ productions in 1998; Liz
started producing the shows in 2000. Lee also is drama
director at Fitch Senior High School in Groton. Then
there is his full-time job as a 911 dispatcher for the Town
of Groton, rotating between 12-hour shifts and time off.
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| As a
home-schooling family, the couple started to put on
home-schooling theater workshops, running a program at a
theater in Norwich. They formed the Brenda Kerr
Theater (BKT) in 2002. Their initial intent was to
provide live theater opportunities for small, local groups.
In 2005, Lee also directed the musical Grease and the comedy
Romeo and Winifred for the Falcon Theater Company at Fitch
Senior High School in Groton. His current position as
the school’s drama director is part time.
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| In 2006,
they reorganized the BKT to become the SECRYT with the
expanded goal of offering these experiences to all children,
youth and young adults in southern and eastern Connecticut.
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| The
SECRYT assumed all responsibility for the management of the
East Lyme Children’s Theater in 2006, working with the
East Lyme Parks & Recreation Department.
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| The
SECRYT has a lofty mission, one based on the recognition
that participating in various aspects of the production of
live theater can be an exhilarating and rewarding
experience, inspire confidence, promote teamwork, bring
diverse groups of people together for a common goal and
facilitate personal expression.
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| Its
objective is to provide the environment and opportunities in
which youth can learn, practice and apply the performing,
administrative, operational, technical and managerial
disciplines of the dramatic arts of live theater.
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| Collectively,
the couple claims more than nine years of theatrical
experience, more than 25 public productions and 100
performances and have conducted approximately 45 theater
workshops for youth. In all, they have worked with
close to 1300 students or cast members. A full listing
of the couple’s theatrical productions is listed on the
SECRYT website.
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| Liz and
Lee work together on managing administrative, operational,
production and workshop-related activities. Lee
teaches all of the SECRYT workshops and directs all of the
public ensemble drama, comedy and musical productions.
Additional instructions, musical directors and
choreographers are contracted to fill the production staff.
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| “I’m a very good delegator,” said Liz. “I like to find
the scripts, make the schedules and arrange everything that
needs to be taken care of for the students so Lee can focus
on directing.”
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| “Or pulling my hair out,” interjected Lee.
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| The
Rummels currently run the SECRYT as a business from their
home. Longer-term, they envision having their own or
leasing theater production facilities, and possibly
establishing a non-profit organization committed to youth
theater in the region.
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| Meanwhile,
the SECYRT website includes a description of the ideal
production space: a proscenium or black box stage for
rehearsals and performances; two changing areas to keep boys
and girls separated during costume changes; a large enough
area to accommodate an audience to enjoy snacks and
beverages during show intermissions and ample parking for
audience members, SECRYT staff and adult volunteers.
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