Not a grumpy Earth Day
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Marisa O’Neil
When it comes to the rainforest, don’t be a grump.
California Elementary School second- and third-graders turned
Forrest Grump, not to be confused with Forrest Gump, from a
mean-spirited litterbug into an environmental activist during a
Thursday assembly. The students performed the musical “Forrest Grump”
to highlight an appropriate message for Earth Day.
“This [performance] was special because it’s about saving the
environment,” writer and director Kathleen Chapman said.
Elaborate trees and greenery, made from colored paper, framed the
stage in the multipurpose room and paper monkeys, birds and a snake
completed the decorations. Children in the musical wore smocks, each
decorated with a different flower, animal or plant.
They told the story of the rainforest and a Grumpy Gus named
Forrest who disrespected it and even burned it down with a careless
toss of a match.
“When he ran away, we knew he was a creepy jerk,” 9-year-old Ben
Beck’s character said.
But, the characters realize, Forrest Grump doesn’t know that
littering is bad. With a little education on the subject, as well as
about endangered species and water conservation, he goes from a
Forrest Grump to a Forrest Friend.
“Sometimes you see trash and stuff around,” 8-year-old Ilene
Umansky said after the show. “We want to teach people to pick up.”
The children in the play are part of an after-school drama club
with Chapman. They have practiced every Tuesday for the past 14 weeks
to get ready for their performance for two groups of students and an
evening show for parents and community members.
Scheduling the show for Earth Day gave Chapman a chance to teach
the students about the rainforest and environment in general as they
rehearsed their roles.
“If you keep cutting down plants and trees it won’t be how it was
before,” 9-year-old Chad Fackler said. “It leaves a big hole.”
The actors also learned how to make a difference closer to home.
“Pick up trash and pull weeds and plant new seeds,” Ilene
suggested.
Earth Day has added significance for Ben -- it’s also his
birthday.
“We don’t want anybody to step on plants or anything,” he said.
“If you don’t have trees, you don’t have oxygen.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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