The Intoxication of the Night: UCPE’s Phantom of the Opera

The Phantom of the Opera (1986 musical)

The Phantom of the Opera is special. Before I critique the acting, singing, lighting, set, and orchestra, let my bias be known: I have waited for years to behold it, on either the stage or the screen. As far back as fifth grade, my friends oohed and ahhed over the movie, but I was forbidden from watching it. (I actually waited till I was 12 or 13 to watch PG-13 movies!) By the time I was independent enough to filter my own world, I knew the time and the company had to be special. Union County Performance Ensemble’s production of The Phantom of the Opera satisfied all the criteria; it was an event attended and even performed by many of my friends.

On Saturday night the cafeteria and auditorium of Central Academy (CATA) were filled with excited voices and a wall of people. I could feel my own excitement flushing my face with a warm rosiness as I chatted with people I know and found a seat.

From the opening score, the orchestra tingled my spine with its rendition of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s music; the live music added an element of intensity to the production. The all-student orchestra synergized excellently with the voices and movements of the actors, as did the lighting and sound crew.

The lead roles are double-cast; on this particular night, Christine, played by sophomore Delaney Veurink, sang like an angel, and I could clearly hear her words. The other actors and actresses sang well, but I could not always hear what they were saying, sometimes for long periods of time. This may have been a fault of the microphones and sound system, but all the same, I wish I had been able to hear and thus enjoy more of the singing.

The plot is as much as part of the book or the movie as it is the live theatre performance, so I won’t depend on plot judgments for this review, but I will say that it was intriguing. The central theme is the pull of the spirit between the plain and the hidden, the darkness and the daylight, shame and honesty—a universal human struggle—is evident in the Phantom’s mask and his song:”Open up your mind, / Let your fantasies unwind / In this darkness that you know you cannot fight / The darkness of the music of the night” (“The Music of the Night”).  Which will Christine choose—her muse and “the angel of music,” or her first love Raoul? The plot details of the original book are different from those of the Broadway adaptation, but the theme holds true.

Union County Performance Ensemble is a group of dedicated adults, aspiring theatre, tech, music, and dance students representing high schools across all of Union County, NC. Partnering with the Union County Community Arts Council, which promotes culture and the arts among students and the community, UCPE has produced a musical for the past 13 years, such as Hairspray in 2010 and Miss Saigon in 2009.

This is the last weekend of the production, but Sunday (26 Feb) holds performances #8 and #9. Reserve your tickets by calling 704-290-1599, and hope it’s not sold out! Adult tickets are $10; student tickets, $6.

Read more about the plot and student details in this Charlotte Observer article.

Passion in Action

You may have read my recent post promoting the 2012 Famine.
This year’s experience was more difficult and more powerful for me than the 2011 Famine.

We gathered together Friday afternoon, totaled the funds (over $7,200!), drank gallons of apple juice, collected non-perishable goods, and finally broke the fast on Saturday night: Our 30-Hour Famine is over.

Over 50 students raised funds, fasted, and prayed on behalf of hungry and needy children around the world, specifically those in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bolivia, Kenya, and Zambia.

On Friday night, the middle school youth group joined us for a few “TRIBE” challenges, and we watched and discussed the short film “Journey to Jamaa” produced by World Vision (jamaa means family in Swahili).

On Saturday morning we did landscaping and cleaning for senior citizens in the local community; in the afternoon we did walked around a couple neighborhoods in my town.

At this point during the weekend, I felt so radical: We were walking through a neighborhood, knocking on the doors of strangers and asking for donations of non-perishable dry goods or blankets for the Union County Community Shelter. When we found the courage, we asked for prayer requests and prayed for the family on the spot. If not, we prayed in the street for the empty house or slammed door. I thought, This is the kind of thing that crazy people do—that faithful people do. And I’m one of them.

The Famine weekend is, in a word, satisfying. It is a powerful experience because it made us deliberately dependent on God for energy and strength. We drank only apple juice and water (and even then, some students went without juice). Moreover, we spent extra energy helping our community.

This vulnerability and reliance on God for physical needs is a small picture of the human lifetime: I believe everyone has an emptiness and a longing because God has set eternity in the hearts of men, and we can only depend only on God to fill that emptiness. That is a dependence on God for a spiritual need.

Every “TRIBE” simulation challenge was followed by a discussion time that relates a Bible verse to the game. The following verse speaks of this physical/spiritual parallel:

“Jesus answered, ‘Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.’ ” (John 4:13-14, NIV)

Jesus is speaking to a woman at a well about eternal life. She answers, “Sir, give me this water so that I won’t get thirsty and have to keep coming here to draw water.” She doesn’t yet understand what Jesus is saying, but the weight of his words eventually sinks in. She will still have to draw water every day whether or not she has eternal life. And for those of us who have already heard about Jesus’s everlasting spring, we still have to pray and read the Bible to taste the water of life and satisfy our souls.

During the prayer walk/food collection, the neighbors called the police on us, but there were no problems.

Also, by the end I had spent 26 hours with dozens of faithful people, reinforcing my idea that every Thursday night I go to a 2-hour family reunion, not merely “youth group.” For me in particular, during the Famine I turned to people for comfort in the absence of food, instead of the other way around. The physical discomfort is so worth the love and joy that permeated every hour. This is the kind of familial love that fills you to overflowing and makes the world seem fresh and beautiful.

By the time we had broken the fast, every need on every plane was satisfied. Amen.

The Famine is over, but you can always contribute to World Vision. Your money will not be wasted.

PS: I want to thank “Aunt Kathy,” a commenter at The Poorganic Life, for the idea of a poster or banner to commemorate the weekend. This is what happened as a result. Everyone signed it and it’s now hanging in our youth building!

Photos courtesy World Vision and Joylily Bogle.

More photos of our event can be seen at http://www.wysite.org/sites/jaarsyouth/PhotoAlbum.

Freshman Fiction: A Bad Day

Proof of our awesome English class: we decorated this door for a school-wide contest. 2nd place.

I’m posting a story I wrote for my freshman English class. I had forgotten about it until my brother asked for biology help, but in the same folder as my bio notes I found my entire freshman year repertoire.

I’m not posting this solely because I’m totally self-centered and want to show off my writing skills. (I may be a little proud, but I’m going to ignore that for the sake of recording my life on this blog.) No, what struck me about this is how it reflected my life at the time of writing (13 September 2009). I don’t enjoy ‘creative writing’ or fiction—this is probably my most recent piece—but I like how I distilled my current situation and emotions into the writing. I did cry over geometry homework, stress about sports, drink out a blue water bottle, and fail an art assignment. What can I say, transitioning to high school was rough for me.

If it seems to use strange words (like parapet, turret, and breastworks), it’s because the point of the assignment was to use a list of vocabulary words and their definitions.

This one’s to you, Mr. Eddy.

“A Bad Day”

Laura O’Dell sat in Geometry class, laboriously working on the newest pile of homework from the incompetent teacher. Everything was going wrong with this class today. She hadn’t been able to finish the previous day’s homework, a result of bad teaching and a basketball game that left her practically asleep over her homework. Of the problems Laura had managed to finish, most were wrong, discouraging her even further. Why did she have her worst subject right before lunch, she thought bitterly, at a time when her growling stomach blocked her attempts to concentrate.

The teacher was talking so fast, droning on and on. Laura was trying to comprehend it with all the will she could summon, but wanted nothing but to lay down her head down and cry. She wanted her tears to streak the blue ink covering the paper, but her cursedly self-disciplined nature kept her eyes dry—barely.

The students around her began a great shuffling noise, with papers fluttering and calculator lids sliding shut. What? Laura sat up spasmodically; everyone must be leaving for lunch, she thought. She hadn’t heard the bell, and suddenly she was alone with the teacher and the loud busy hum of the air conditioning unit. Ms. Mathis approached her desk, looking with concern upon Laura’s drawn, ascetic face.

“Having a hard day?”

Laura was struck by remorse for being so distraught over schoolwork. Her mind’s eye retracted from the cold classroom to see a tiny Earth hanging in an infinite universe. She remembered what her dad had said just a couple days back—“You have to make sacrifices sometimes, so that you can live your life.” But the feeling of deep guilt about her self-pity was as brief as it was sudden. Why shouldn’t she feel horrible?

At least this teacher wasn’t inhuman, no matter how inefficient Laura considered her. A tremor of relief ran through her, relief that she could stand up from behind the breastworks barely hiding her distress.

“Um…” Laura took a breath. “Yeah, there’s so much homework, and it seems I have so little time.” She smiled weakly, and the teacher returned it. Even though she felt like a child for complaining, she was a little better. Also, Laura remembered happily, it was lunchtime. No worries there, right?

Walking to the cafeteria in the bright sunlight, hearing the water tricking out of the fountain and the wind rustling the trees was balm. The barest outline of a smile appeared on her face. “Look at this beautiful weather! It’s almost fall!” Laura thought, and her smile grew.

Her light steps grew heavy again when she reached the doors of the cafeteria. Where were her friends? She looked around and hurried to the parapet, peering below to see if they might be on the second level. There! There they were, sitting right by the bottom of the short staircase—an interesting mix of those whose real friends ate at a different time, students new to the school, and whoever had got kicked out of their usual tables. What a telling thing it was, where people sit at a meal, Laura thought.

A few at the table were thinking the same thing miserably, a few who cared for popularity. When Laura needed a seat, they could stand it no longer and decided the excuse to get up might as well take them to another table.

It left Laura, her best friend Brianna, and a few boys from their Geometry class. Just as Laura was taking a deep draught from her water bottle, her friend Angie approached their table.

“Hey, Angie, what took you so long? Here, sit down.”

“You know, yesterday we got kicked out of this table by upperclassmen—some obnoxious boys,” Angie said. She didn’t sit down, but edged towards a nearby table.

“What, those boys over in the line?” Laura looked over her shoulder furtively, like a sniper peeking over a defensive low wall. There was a group of dark-looking boys waiting in the lunch line.

“Yeah, those are the ones.”

She was gripped in a sudden fit of irritation. “For Heaven’s sake, Angie, sit down! We’ll just tell them no—it’s our table today!” I can’t handle her weakness right now, thought Laura selfishly.

“I wouldn’t be that brave,” said Brianna.

“I’m sorry. Angie, you can sit wherever you like. But I’m too cross to move,” Laura said icily, and then sighed, wishing she wasn’t feeling so mean.

“What’s wrong, Laura?” asked Brianna.

“Just a bad day.” Laura sighed again. “I have another game today, but I’m so tired and still kind of sick, and I have way too much homework. And this morning I was looking for my new sandals I just bought, and I think I’m going crazy, for I put them right by my bed and now I can’t find them anywhere. Then this morning in art, I got a 76 on my project! I worked so hard on it all last week and I didn’t finish like 10% of it… so my teacher gives me a D!”

“I’m sorry. At least you’re learning—that’s all that the grades should reflect… how much you’re learning.”

“Amen,” said Laura, and put her head down in her arms.

“Guys, don’t mess with Laura today,” Brianna said to Wilson and Frank, their friends from Geometry.

“Why?” Laura’s lamentations had gone over their sports talk and banter, and Brianna sighed at their cluelessness.

“A bad day, is all. OK?”

Laura sat up and took another drink of water, and held the thick plastic bottle up to her face. Suddenly, through the blue she saw the silhouette of some tall and stocky figures standing by their table.

“This ain’t your table,” one said slowly, looming like a small tower.

“It is today. We have as much right to it as you do, except we got here first,” Laura replied quickly, her light green eyes dangerous-looking.

“Hey, OK, little lady.” He laughed mockingly, his friends following suit. They turned and went to the first level of the cafeteria.

As soon as they left the small round table erupted in a paroxysm of noise.

“You looked like you just might shoot someone, and they sure didn’t want to be your enemies.”

“I just hope they don’t shoot me!” She looked back up to the low railing above them, as if expecting to be picked off at any moment.

“Oh, Laura, I can’t believe that you told ‘em off like that,” said Angie.

“Well, you can’t let people ruin your lunch.”

“You can’t let a bad attitude ruin your day,” said Brianna wisely.

“You’re right. I think this cheered me up a bit, actually. I overcame a challenge.” The girls laughed at Laura’s word choice.

“You’re so weird,” said Wilson briefly, and then turned back to discussing how to defend the turret in his and Frank’s favorite video game.

They all laughed again.

Finding Validation and Purpose

Near the end of a week off of school in January, I found myself unable to sleep, feeling totally empty and unsatisfied: “Grasping at validation. Running on fumes of who I once was and hopes of what I may one day be.”

My problem was finding validation.

Validation is a person’s raison d’être—“reason to be.” In the best of cases, it allows people to accomplish great things, like the recent Intel semifinalist who gained a lot of attention because she was also homeless. It’s what makes me stay up late, wake up early, and gives me motivation to face a new day. In the worst of cases, it’s what I use to try to fill the void in my heart.

(If some standardized test essay ever prompts me to define validation, I will be able to write it in 15 minutes flat; I’ve spent so much time thinking about it already!)

I don’t believe I’m alone in basing my value on myself. That is, of course, what I’m doing when I try to find fulfillment in grades (achievement) and fitness (identity)—I am trying to satisfy my soul with external ambitions.

Two years ago, I was caught up in myself. I was devastated if one of my life’s trophies lost its gleam of perfection, and I cared little for the concerns of my family, friends, and global society. It was miserable to base my value on my ability to be good, because I am innately, humanly sinful.

When I eventually broke out of my own self-imposed iron bars, the world seemed bright and new, and its real problems overwhelming. Wanting to participate in any activity that served an end greater than myself, I spent time on a summer mission trip, co-led a Bible study for middle school girls, became more involved at my youth group, and read books about being a zealous Christian.

I found freedom in losing my identity in something beyond myself, ie. God’s Kingdom.
I found hope.

A Bigger Picture?

Reblogged from Oatkake:

Click to visit the original post


That thing is happening again. The thing where everything, absolutely everything is stripped away.  All that’s left is me. Little old me. Left to realize I can’t fend for myself. Left to be vulnerable. Left to even hurt a little bit. Left to be a little bit raw and broken, and lonely. Left to wonder why pain is so desirable to some.

Read more… 74 more words

We are of the same mind this week. Is it the weather?