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On the Road with Taproot Theatre

A travel journal of Taproot Theatre's Road Company. We travel to elementary and secondary schools throughout the Pacific Northwest performing plays dealing with issues such as bullying, harrassment and friendship building. Our plays empower kids to deal positively with these issues by providing them with safe steps to approach them.

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Thursday, January 31, 2008

Picking Up the Spare

by Daniel Stoltenberg



This week of touring, students celebrated the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr. by taking Monday off from school. This provided a much appreciated day of rest for the Road Company as well, and we launched into the week with renewed enthusiasm. Imagine our dismay when we discovered on Thursday morning that disaster had struck again. “I think Simone’s veering a little to the right” said Adrienne (Simone is our van, in case you haven’t been keeping up with our blog and/or antics). We needed to get gas anyway, so we pulled into the 76 station on the corner of Aurora and 85th. When we piled out, we saw that Simone’s front right tire had gone completely flat! We pulled out enough of our set pieces to get at the spare tire, which was a good deal heavier than I expected it to be, and dug around in the van until we located our trusty jack. Of course, none of us was particularly proficient in the changing of tires, so we gave it our best shot but couldn’t even get Simone off the ground enough to get the old tire off. All of this before dawn, in the chill winter air, mind you!

Fortunately, Adrienne called AAA and utilized her charm and state of panic to get them to dispatch a service vehicle to our location, which arrived in almost no time. The mechanic (I will call him Gus) saw our predicament and immediately inquired, seeing the spare tire and abandoned jack, “Well why haven’t you changed the tire yet?” with a grin. Then he quickly broke out a couple tools that made our rusty jack look like an antique and had the tire changed in no time flat. We snagged a quick photo with Alicia’s phone (luckily Gus was extraordinarily good-natured in these wee hours of the morning) and set off for Carnation, back on track. We arrived with time to spare.

As is the case in all of these somewhat disastrous and comic scenarios, I am once again reminded of the strengths of our team, and grateful for their perseverance and good nature in the face of adversity. How fitting that in a week dedicated to remembering Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., we should happen upon such a beautiful reminder of the power of unity and collaboration, no matter the obstacles in our path.

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posted by Taproot Road Company @ 2:22 PM 0 Comments Links to this post

Friday, November 23, 2007

ROAD COMPANY vs. DISASTER

Well last week proved an eventful one for our faithful little Road Company. It all started very unassumingly... We boarded the ferry onWednesday and were happily on our way to Bremerton. Picture us,gleefully driving our big white van down the road, fixing to be righton time to Esquire Hills Elementary School, when Alicia says, "Why isSimone shaking so bad?" (note: Simone is our van's name.) We are all puzzled for a second... that is until we look at the gas gage. We coast down Hwy. 3 until we start back up a hill and then promptly stall on the side of the road. Well, this had never happened before.

After weighing our options (pushing our 15-passenger van loaded withequipment up the 4-lane highway seemed unlikely) we sent Team Find Gas, which consisted of Solomon and Laura, running toward civilization while Daniel, Alicia and I held up camp with Simone the Van and called the school to give them a heads up on our situation. Team Find Gas(both ex-cross county runners) returns with remarkable speed and I start filling the gas tank. Laura is kindly directing traffic around us, as our van is quite large and takes up a little more than the shoulder of Hwy. 3. We all load back into the van happily and I'm thinking, "Phew, we're not even going to be that late!" Until Alicia tries to turn the van on. Well, being that we're parked on an incline and that Simone's gas tank holds at least 32 gallons, the measly 2 gallon can has done us little good. We panic a little and call Josiah for assistance. In minutes Team Find Gas is at it again. Alicia carefully backs the van (with power steering disabled) closer to levelground. Finally, with nearly 4 gallons of gas in her, Simone starts up, but not without much revving of the engine by our trusty driverAlicia. And we were off!

Although we were almost a half-hour late,we managed to get Star Power set up and ready in time for our originally scheduled 10 o'clock show time. I was amazed and very proud of our teamwork and everyone's amazingly upbeat attitudes through the entire experience.

But that was only Wednesday.

On Friday we geared up for a long day filled with four performances of Star Power, two at each of two schools we were to perform at in Puyallup. The first two shows go off without a hitch and we rush to Pope Elementary for our second two shows. We are nearly set up when all of a sudden the gym goes dark. The lights flash and there is abuzzing sound and the lights flash again. I peek out the gym door and see the hallway is also dark. The entire school had lost power. The amazing administration team from Pope Elementary is there in minutes with flashlights, but we aren't sure yet if the lights will be back on before it's time for the first show because apparently the transformer had blown down the street and the whole block is out. We wait to hear and plan for what we'll do should there be no electricity.

When we're pretty sure there's no chance of the problem being fixed before the show starts, we move the backdrop off the stage so we can open the gym doors and at least get a little natural light so the students can see us. Right on time the teachers file the kids into the gym, and we start the show for 350 kids without microphones or our normal sound cues that are built into the show. It was a great experience. The sound cues we needed we created ourselves: applause, the "Talent Quest voice" provided by Daniel backstage, and even our own music sometimes. The highlight for me was humming my own song while I performed the baton twirling routine that my character "Veronica Rouge" does. It was mostly "You're a Grand Old Flag" played on my hand that was curled up to look like a trumpet. If nothing else it made the show more exciting than ever for us. When it was all over (the power was restored before the next show) we sure appreciated our sound cues and our tired voices were very grateful for microphones.

Well, in the battle of Road Company vs. Disaster, I think it's safe to say Road Company is coming out on top. For now at least.

By Adrienne Littleton, 11/21/07

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posted by Taproot Road Company @ 9:48 AM 1 Comments Links to this post