Monmouth College, BCA present ‘A Christmas Carol’
Release Date: November 29, 2005
MONMOUTH, Ill. — In an effort to forge a stronger partnership
between Monmouth College and the community, the Monmouth College
theater department and the Buchanan Center for the Arts have combined
their talents and resources to present a stage adaptation of the
Dickens holiday classic, “A Christmas Carol.”
Performances in the college’s Wells Theater will be on Dec. 8, 9
and 10 at 7:30 p.m., with a special matinee performance on Dec. 10 at
2 p.m.
Tickets are $4 for MC students, $5 for students and senior citizens
and $6 for adults. A special family ticket, good for up to four
admissions, is also available for $15. Tickets may be reserved by
contacting the Buchanan Center for the Arts at 309-734-3033 or by
e-mailing bca@frontiernet.net.
Tickets, if available, may be purchased at the door, but since seating
is limited, patrons are encouraged to reserve tickets early.
According to Bill Wallace, professor of communication and theater
arts (CATA) and director of the community production, the cast
features more than 70 actors, dancers, carolers and musicians, and is
“the largest cast anyone can remember” in college history. “This is a
true college and community endeavor, and we think the Buchanan Center
for the Arts and the MC theater make a great team.”
He added, “The show is a delight and is a wonderful way for
families and friends to spend a bit of time together during the hectic
holiday season.”
Providing set design for the show is Doug Rankin, CATA professor
and resident designer and technical director. Serving as assistant
directors are freshman Samantha Briones of Brookfield, sophomore Holly
Sanders of Bartonville and sophomore Lauren Swanson of Oak Forest.
The show will feature a musical trio composed of sophomore Holly
Butz of Des Plaines on violin, senior Holly Trotter of Elk Grove
Village on viola and Monmouth-Roseville High School student Melissa
O’Neal of Monmouth on cello. Featured players include junior Chris
Walljasper of Donnellson, Iowa, as Scrooge; freshman Brain Rowe of Des
Plaines as Bob Cratchet; and Kristin Larson, visiting assistant
professor of psychology, as Mrs. Cratchet.
Adding appropriate airs of mystery are sophomore Traci Ratliff of
Sterling as the Ghost of Christmas Past, sophomore Bryan Blanks of
Kewanee as the Ghost of Christmas Present and sophomore Danielle
Prince of Morris as the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come.
“Everyone is working very hard on the show, and we hope our
audience has as much fun with this as we have had putting it
together,” said Wallace. “We look forward to sharing this message of
hope and redemption with our community.”
When written in 1843, “A Christmas Carol” was heralded for
rekindling the joy of Christmas in Britain and America. Its message is
as clear today as when it was first published – that people need to
cut through the materialistic trappings that have become so much a
part of Christmas and get to the heart and soul of the holidays.
Dickens described his “Carol Philosophy” as “a good time: a kind,
forgiving, charitable, pleasant time: the only time I know of in the
long calendar of the year when men and women seem by one consent to
open their shut-up hearts freely, and to think of other people below
them as if they really were fellow passengers to the grave, and not
another race of creatures bound on other journeys.”
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