Penn View alumni Brooks Inciardi in his memorable role as Lumiere for Dock's performance of Beauty and the Beast in 2011 |
Calvin Derstein as Penn View's beloved candlestick |
Penn View’s Drama Department prepared a wonderful
presentation of Beauty and the Beast, Jr for enthralled crowds at the beginning of March. One month earlier, our Family and
Consumer Science instructor Melanie Baker took on the challenge of creating
thirty skirts which would enchantingly transform thirty ordinary (albeit brave and rhythmically gifted) middle school students into thirty fabulous dancing napkins.
Having not an ounce of ability in the area of sewing, Mel's task is something I could never have accomplished in my wildest dreams. Which is part of the reason I was intrigued
to the point of volunteering my assistance when I heard she was looking for helpers! I had to see it for myself.
Not feigning skills I lack, I was forthright
with my lack of sewing competency. I
advertised myself as unskilled labor and told her I was willing to learn or
accomplish whatever mundane task she wanted to assign. Still, she gave me the benefit of the doubt
and when I arrived she remained in hopeful optimism that I would in some way
touch a sewing machine.
There were instruction sheets, handcrafted patterns, and foreign objects like bobbins….
There was expectancy on her face. But, nope.
There were instruction sheets, handcrafted patterns, and foreign objects like bobbins….
There was expectancy on her face. But, nope.
The long fabric tails would become waistbands for skirts once placed into the hands of people who actually know
how to thread a needle on a machine.
People like the three talented Middle School students who volunteered
their time to help and had more awareness about making a garment than the
school nurse who has had more than half a
century to glean that knowledge.
Mackenzie Smith, Ruth Michel and Olivia Yetter created skirts with admirable confidence while I was applying Bandaids (yes, plural) to the pinholes I had inadvertently poked into the tips of my fingers. Of course the skirt fabric had to be white….
Mackenzie Smith, Ruth Michel and Olivia Yetter created skirts with admirable confidence while I was applying Bandaids (yes, plural) to the pinholes I had inadvertently poked into the tips of my fingers. Of course the skirt fabric had to be white….
Student Mackenzie Smith and PE teacher Cheryl Ryder turning fabric into twirling masterpieces |
Administrative Assistant Bonnie Miller pressing a skirt |
While several of my coworkers were displaying the skills of a seamstress, their machines
humming complicated quartets about the superiority of their needlework skills…I was
sweating (I kid you not) and trying desperately not to make a mistake while I cut out my long simple strips. I'm not to proud to say I was eyeing the clock... just like I watched it when I was 15 years old and trying to complete a two hour shift of babysitting for the world's angriest toddler. But that's a story for another day.
Band Director Shelley Berg along with Ruth and Olivia (two of our magnificent student seamstresses). |
Science teacher and resident choreographer Lisa Reichley worked with the napkins until they were dancing like The Rockettes.
PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE! |
The show was marvelous. Earned or not, I felt satisfaction knowing that the waistbands holding up those skirts were cut with my very own quaking hand.
As one of the (apparently) few people in the world with less sewing ability than you, I can appreciate this post more than most. But what I really appreciate is your willingness to help out even though it is not your area of expertise. The Bible says God loves a cheerful giver—and I'm pretty sure "giver" in the original Greek can also mean "volunteer." Thanks for taking us behind the scenes of this terrific production—and thanks to all who used their sewing skills to help make it happen!
ReplyDeleteThanks,Jay!
ReplyDelete