I see Meryl Streep is on her way to yet another Oscar nomination
for the painfully bad film, “Strings of My Heart.” In the film Meryl emotes
her way through the trials and tribulations of a white woman trying to save
poor black children by teaching them the joy of music. A real tear jerker. I
am still waiting for the film in which the noble black woman teaches the
poor white children the value of music in their lives. But I digress …
Meryl’s latest aside, I agree that music and the performing arts are
invaluable to us all. Music and theater improve my life. It is where
emotions can be expressed without consequence. Face facts, emotions are
like flatulence, you have to release them or they can upset the whole system.
If I get angry at the phone company and take it out by yelling at
my ever lovin’ husband, I can spread the anger like butter on hot toast. This
produces an angry family, at each other’s throats, but it does not help me
with the phone company.
But I can vent my frustration in the context of a performance. I can
cheer when Mel, Sly or Arnold gets revenge on a faceless bureaucrat. I leave
the theater feeling like I have been released from the burden of anger. I
can face the phone company calmly and in a focused manner. For children,
the need for emotional release and expression is critical.
Children, and especially teens, are just learning how to cope with
the emotional storm inside them. They cannot ignore it and hope it goes
away. They need a release and music, dance, and acting are great tools. The
exploration of feelings and mimicking of reactions is an ideal device for
teens to learn appropriate expression for raging emotions.
But maybe I am out of step with everyone. If we agree that the arts
are important, why have we, as a community, let the kids down. We have
not made an effort to support them in their quest. We have allowed the only
performing arts facility in the whole Lower Valley to go unfinished
for years. We have shown by our inaction that we don’t think the arts are
important to our kids or our neighborhoods.
I guess we don’t care that the curtain is homemade and doesn’t work.
I guess we don’t care that the electrical system is inadequate at best. I
guess we don’t care that half the stage is being taken up for storage. Gee,
do they really need lights?
Or maybe we do care. The Duvall Foundation for the Arts and the
Duvall Arts Commission have been holding sold-out performances on the stage
for two years running. Dance, music and drama classes in the schools and in
the Valley are bursting at the seams. I know of a ballroom dance class
that is packed with woman and men! We must want the performing arts in
our lives.
It is time to stop dawdling and cough up a little cash. We can vote
yes on the Performing Arts Center Completion Bond. For less than
the cost of a case of Bud or a box of wine, we can finish this facility properly.
We are talking seven cents per “thou” here; that works out to $14 per
year for two years and we are done. (This assumption is based on the owner of
a home valued at $200,000.)
By providing the students the proper tools for the job, and
providing our community with an essential facility, we are setting the stage
(pun intended) for success. Who knows, maybe down the road we will be
crying with our own Meryl Streep or cheering our own Mel Gibson.
Or maybe we will just be enjoying the Seattle Symphony on a rainy
Sunday afternoon without having to go downtown. Stranger things have happened.
Kate Russell lives between Carnation and Duvall. You can reach
her at Katemo1@msn.com.