A theatrical lesson
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Marisa O’Neil
South Coast Repertory Theatre took the show on the road to
Newport-Mesa schools this week.
The performers brought “The Pride of Weedpatch Camp,” which tells
the story of an Oklahoma family looking for work in California during
the Great Depression, to students at Newport Heights Elementary
School on Friday. Members of the Schmidt family, including 9-year-old
Deenie -- played by Megan Goodchild -- faced poverty and
discrimination in the play when they moved out West to escape the
Dust Bowl. The family worked as migrant farmers before settling at a
government work camp nicknamed Weedpatch Camp.
They worked long hours for little pay and got ridiculed by the
locals, who called them Okies. To top it off, there was no room for
Deenie at the local school.
“I learned how people struggled a long time ago,” 11-year-old
Aislinn Anaya said after the play.
The play was part of the theater’s educational program. It also
visited California, Mariners and Newport elementary schools this week
and will be touring schools in other local districts. South Coast
Repertory offers study guides to help teachers tailor lessons to the
production, which fits into arts, history and social science
curriculums.
Luke Dawson, 10, said that he and his class read a book about the
Dust Bowl before the play. But his favorite part was when the actors
danced to a song called “Stone Soup,” about making something out of
nothing.
At Weedpatch Camp, that something was a school built by Deenie and
the other children with the help of Leo B. Hart, superintendent of
Kern County schools, from donated supplies.
Once the school was built and filled with children, people in town
didn’t see them as ignorant “Okies” any more.
“You shouldn’t make fun of people,” 10-year-old Chelsie Delameter
learned. “That was mean.”
“My relatives live in Oklahoma,” Tyler Campbell, 11, chipped in.
“But nobody calls them Okies.”
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