A patriotic tribute
Michele Marr
On a stage festooned with red, white and blue bunting and flanked on
each side by wall-to-wall, floor-to-ceiling American flags, more than
50 children stood in neat, tiered rows, prepared to sing.
A few looked shy, their expressions studied. A few looked dreamy.
Some looked proud. Nearly all of them flashed smiles that broadcast
an irrepressible exuberance.
They wore T-shirts and jeans -- the quintessential American
costume. Each of their navy blue shirts was emblazoned with an
American flag and three words, “Hope of America.”
The children’s choir of the Huntington Beach South Stake of The
Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints sang “Hope of
America,” the title song for the church’s 19th annual Independence
Day program.
“Whatever you are doing for the rest of the day, the show sets the
right tone so it’s not just ‘It’s the Fourth of July, we’re going to
have a barbecue.’” said Mark Matthews, who choreographed the dance
for the show with his wife, Julie.
This year, the hour-long music, dance and video production,
directed by Kathlene Busby, the church’s cultural arts director and
her co-directors, Diane Christensen and Elaine Miller, celebrated our
nation’s youth -- the hope of America.
It also commemorated the 100th anniversary of flight; acknowledged
Bob Hope, in the year of his 100th birthday, for his service to our
armed forces during an entertainment career that has spanned more
than seven decades, times of war and times of peace; honored our
nation’s military; and celebrated our national heritage.
Three tour guides, played by Parker Jacobs, Deanna Purdy and
Tammie Shinedling, led the audience through the show’s Americana tour
with bits of vaudeville patter.
At an early stop they paid tribute to every U.S. president by
name, “from George to George, by George.”
Later, in Kitty Hawk for the Wright brothers’ first flight, Jacobs
explained, “The Wright brothers built the first airplane.” “That’s
right!” quipped Shinedling.
The music was performed by a children’s choir directed by Mary
McCraney; an adult choir directed by Virginia Richardson; and four
pianists, a drummer and several other instrumentalists. Its mood
moved from lighthearted to poignant and from playful to reflective.
The children’s choir rocked and shoo-bah-bopped to “Celebrate the
United States.” They remembered the American frontier with a lively
“Davy Crockett,” while Brandon McClintock mimed a strapping Crockett
in fringed deerskins and a coonskin cap.
The 80-voice adult choir sang Alexander Shriner’s haunting
arrangement of “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” Part gospel, part
march, the music brought a hush over the room.
The children sang “The Wright Brothers” over a slide show of the
brothers’ plane and flight. Soloist Diana Rose, backed by The
McCraney Sisters, Mallory, Cassidy and Delaney, sang “Space Shuttle
Columbia” a tribute to the space program and a tender homage to its
fallen astronauts. “They died serving all mankind, living out our
dream,” Rose sang.
Jacobs, Purdy and Shinedling harmonized a snappy “Don’t Sit Under
the Apple Tree” and, to the tune of “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” 30
children, ages 2 to 5, dressed in red, white and blue, paraded down a
catwalk off center stage, waving tiny American flags.
Twenty-four teenagers swing danced to “American Patrol.” Dressed
true the era, the boys wore pleated trousers, white shirts and
suspenders. The girls wore soft dresses with gathered bodices and
flirty, flounced hems, all handmade in the week before the show.
“None of the dancers had any real experience,” said Matthews, who
had only a handful of rehearsals to teach them the number. The
couples wowed the audience and won applause with tricky pull-throughs
and flips, some of swing dance’s signature moves.
After saluting Bob Hope with a video retrospective and the
nostalgic song, “Thanks For the Memory,” the show, as it does every
year, saluted the U.S. armed forces.
Four church members took the stage, one-by-one, to represent the
Army, the Air Force, the Marines and the Navy: Sgt. Craig O’Connor,
Cadet 3rd Class Zachary Parker, Major David Jones and Lieutenant
Ritchie Blake.
Veterans of the armed forces in the audience were asked to stand
to be recognized. The show’s cast and the audience sang the Army
Song, the Air Force Song, the Song of the Navy and the Marine Corps
Hymn. The tribute drew a standing ovation.
“They don’t stand up [every day] and say, ‘Hey, I did this great
thing’,” Matthews said. “I like having the opportunity to give them
some respect for their willingness to serve.”
For Busby, who has worked on 18 of 19 shows, they are all about
celebrating the privilege of living in the United States.
“We started doing one show and it got so popular we started having
two shows and they sold out. Last year we added a third show,” said
McCraney.
The church’s 600-seat meetinghouse theater was sold out for the
third year. Busby waved an arm toward the emptying seats after
Friday’s 10 a.m. show.
“Every show was standing room only,” she said, which is how she
hopes it will always be.
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer from Huntington Beach. She
can be reached at [email protected].
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