9.30.2008

Volunteer Movement Sweeps Boston

            BOSTON, Mass. (09/30/2007) -- “I started volunteering through my fraternity, Sigma Chi, in college,” said Rick Wallwork, the Associate Director of Boston Cares, “it’s great exposure…it shows people another aspect of the community.”

            Boston Cares is an organization that works with a variety of non-profit community outreaches throughout the Boston area to aide them in finding volunteers to meet their needs. With over 4,000 volunteers in 2007, the organization is centered around a team-based concept, which walks each volunteer through an orientation and then enables them with access to their website (bostoncares.org), where members can sign up to work at certain events.

            This program is one of hundreds of new organizations that caters to the needs of the modern businessman or woman who is on a tight schedule and may not have a huge amount of free time. Instead of demanding a long-term volunteering commitment when volunteering, these new programs allow people who are not able to regularly sacrifice their time, to still participate within their community.

            “I keep thinking about the word ‘service’ and how in our culture it is better to sacrifice rather than filling ourselves,” said The Option Institute co-founder, Barry Neil Kaufman. Kaufman, who started this alternative volunteering organization, said, “There is clearly something wondrous about giving and requiring nothing in return. The wondrous experience is in the giving. And it’s the same…because the giving or the service is the same as loving.”

            With short-term volunteer opportunities at the American Heart Association, The Greater Boston Food Bank, Vista Care, Cambridge Family and Children’s Service, The Esplanade Association, Reach out and Read, Red Sox Mentoring Challenge, The AIDS Action Committee, and The New England Aquarium Volunteer Program, to name only a few; it is evident that there is a diverse range of volunteer opportunities available in the local Boston area. People are needed to help in all different venues from medical practice to childcare, which allows them to offer up their service in the field of their expertise.

             When asked why she was running a table at the Boston Cares Volunteer Fair on September 12, 2007, in downtown Government Center, Krista Bishop from the Make a Wish Foundation said, “(that her primary goal was) to get the word out there about Make a Wish.” Bishop made a point to state that short-term volunteer options are open, not only to working citizens, but also to the 200,000 college students who are enrolled in the 50 colleges within the Boston area.

            Student volunteers often act as Wish Granters; the intermediaries who speak directly to the terminally ill children with whom the organization works. The primary goal of the wish granters is to find out each child’s life long wish, in the hopes that the organization can help this dream come true. Student volunteers can also act as special events coordinators, planners of large fundraising functions, as well as interns for the organization itself.

            Not only are students and citizens becoming more aware of the need to volunteer, but large business corporations are also stepping up to the plate, and supporting the efforts of non-profit organizations. “Fidelity is a huge supporter for Make A Wish,” said Bishop when asked about the Make A Wish Foundation’s fifteen-year history with Fidelity Investments financial planning company. “We think it’s important to give back to the community where we have a presence,” said Veronica Johnson-Eghan, the Senior Manager at Fidelity Investments. Fidelity Investments provides financial services internationally, as well as 401K Plans, retirement plans, and they also place a large emphasis on community outreach through their volunteer branch, Fidelity Cares.

            The two organizations Fidelity Investments and Boston Cares have a long business history together, dating back almost fifteen years. Encouraging people to get out there and volunteer is only one aspect of their services to the Boston region. Both Companies are also active in the field of education. Boston Cares is busy piloting a new program called Campus Initiative that is opening this Saturday on the campuses of three local universities. Fidelity Investments has partnered with the local Emerson and Nathan Hale Elementary Schools in Roxbury, as well as Umana Barnes Middle School in East Boston, to promote community service within the younger generations.

            Boston Cares’ goal is to “replace the traditional means of volunteering- an ongoing commitment- with a richly diverse and wholly flexible volunteer program that allows people to volunteer when they can and for what they care about…(it) empowers people to make volunteering a part of their lives.” Boston Cares claims that not only is this beneficial to the local non- profit organizations in need of help and to the people they serve, but it is also an asset to the volunteers themselves. The organization further states that, in general, volunteering allows for people to create new perspectives, beliefs, and approaches to their lives.

By CATHERINE MOORE

 

           

A Memoir

            WAITSFIELD, Vermont. (12/12/2007) -- She reaches her arm to the ceiling, in order to hang the glass ornament on the branch of the 14-foot, home-cut, balsam Christmas tree. Her warm, open living room smells of baking bread and the clock ticks out the minutes loudly in my ear as I steady her while she trims her tree. Her stark-white hair falls into a loose bun at the nape of her neck, contrasting her dark, sun-tanned skin-the result of years of work in her gardens. She wobbles a bit and then she rights herself, as the last European ornament gets placed on a branch. She turns to me and asks what it is that I want her to tell me about this time.

            Looking at me with deep, tired eyes, my grandmother slowly lowers herself into her green chair, treating this interview as if it were a task, not an honor. She does not like to talk to me about her life as a von Trapp. She has never liked to dwell on the fact that she is one of the children portrayed in Roger and Hammerstein’s The Sound of Music.  Although, she always manages to convey to me the pride that she has in her heritage, she is not proud of her fame and fortune.

             Instead of telling the story of her life as a child star, singing in the Von Trapp Family Choir, she asks if she can tell me about the terror that she felt under the Nazi regime. She wants to describe the struggle that her father, as well as many other Austrians faced, in maintaining their country’s identity. I sigh, because this is not really the story that I want to hear, but I have no choice. Eleanor von Trapp Campbell, known by friends as Lorli, does not adhere to public interest; she does not give the sappy story that people crave. Instead, she gives an alternative story, the one that needs to be told—minus the drama, the romance, and the emotion. She tells it like it is: a didactic tale of hardship and sacrifice that lead to her family’s fame and fortune.

            “The Nazis were frightening,” Lorli begins, the lines in her forehead deepening as she reminisces. She is reliving the invasion of her home country, Austria, in the 1930s. “You know, the Germans wanted to send the message that they were too powerful to be defeated. The noise of the German air force was deafening. The planes would fly overhead and drop leaflets in support of the Nazis cause. We (the ten von Trapp children) would be told to run around and collect them and then they would all be burned. My father, Captain Georg von Trapp, could not stand the sight of the Nazis propaganda. He saw through their lies and he refused to fight for their cause.” Lorli shifts her weight from one foot to the other; she folds her hands in her lap. It is as if she is trying to shake off an uncomfortable shiver that has raced up her spine.

It gives me the goose bumps to hear her speak about the large black, spider –like Swastika flag.

“One time,” Lorli leans in closer to me and whispers into my ear, “I announced loudly that the Nazi flag looked like an ugly black spider. We were in a crowded train station and a total stranger leaned down and told me to be careful because there were many ears all around me and I could get myself in trouble saying something like that about the Nazi symbol.”

            “Another time,” Lorli continues, “An official from the German National Army came to our house and demanded to see where we were displaying the Swastika flag. My father asked why we needed it. The officer replied, ‘To decorate your house’ and my father answered, ‘Oh, I have oriental rugs for that.’” This bit of humor cracks a slight smile on her lips and lines creep up her faced, originating from the corners of her mouth. She says that it is from this example of strong ethical beliefs that she emerged as the woman of character that she is today. Her father was her ultimate example. She later used this strength to help her survive an abnormal life as a child performer.

            Lorli’s vulnerability in speaking about her strange childhood is evident in her face, as she tells her story to me. I can almost picture the period of political turmoil during which she grew up. Born in Austria in 1931, at the brink of World War II, Lorli’s development as a child-star started right around the time when the Nazis invaded Austria. With pressing financial obligations, the family choir’s performances would soon become crucial to its survival.

             Lorli began singing with her family for small crowds at mass or at the village church. Yet, as time progressed and the Nazis power grew stronger, Captain Georg von Trapp continued to rebel against the regime, refusing to fight for their cause. A World War One hero and commander of an Austro-Hungarian U-boat, the Captain was wary of the Nazi agenda. As the result of her father’s unwillingness to cooperate, the von Trapp family lost a large percentage of their wealth that was invested in the Austrian banks.  With German control over their finances and no way to retrieve their fortune, the family began to sing for a living. Lorli, along with her nine siblings and her mother, began to sing at scheduled performances in front of larger audiences. Touring under the guidance of a former priest, Father Wasner, the family began to create a repertoire of Christian hymns, as well as Mozart and Haydn. In 1936, the Von Trapp Family Singers won the Salzburg Music Festival and soon gathered its own group of enthusiasts.

            Yet, life of the stage was new to young Lorli. She comments that she was only five years old at the time of her family’s musical debut on stage. She remembers when she first learned how to play different musical instruments, including the recorder and the oboe, as well as when she began receiving vocal training from Father Wasner, the family agent. As young as she was at age five, Lorli was expected to perform flawlessly within the family ensemble. It did not matter that most of her siblings were twice her age and that she was already working an adult’s portion of the day at age five. “I wasn’t allowed to play as a normal child of five.” Instead, she had to sing, to complete the family picture.

            With a deep sigh, Lorli sets down her tea mug and sits up a bit higher in her recliner. She refolds her hands and then her countenance changes. She begins to describe what she calls a turning point in her life, when she realized that her family was not just singing for show. “We were asked to sing in honor of Hitler on a national radio station and my father had declined the offer,” said Lorli. This was a direct defiance of the Nazi party’s authority and Lorli’s father’s actions were not going unnoticed. This stand that he took against the Nazi regime, along with many other moral decisions that the Captain had made, forced his family to eventually leave Austria. Lorli’s voice rises as she quickly explains, “But we did not leave by climbing the Alps.” Referring to the romantic escape of the von Trapp family over the mountains into Italy as is falsely depicted in the film. Lorli chuckles to herself and adds, “The movie’s wrong. If we had escaped over the mountains, we would have ended up smack in the middle of a Nazi encampment!”

            Reshaping the public perception of The Sound of Music story, Lorli elaborates on her life after her escape from Austria, the part that not many people get to hear about. As immigrants in the United States, the von Trapp family was faced with the same problems that every typical immigrant family faced—they needed to find a way to provide food for the family to eat and a place for them to create a home. Fortunately, the von Trapps were already equipped with their ready-made family choir, whose name had preceded them. Immediately after landing on Ellis Island in New York City in 1938, the von Trapp family began to pursue the American dream of success and happiness, through music.

            Because Lorli and her older sister, Rosemary, were considered too young and too much of a hassle to tour the States with the von Trapp family choir, the girls were shipped off to boarding school while the family sought their fame on the stage. Despite feeling left out of her family unit, Lorli grimaces when she adds that sadly her schooling did not last long. Soon she would be expected to perform regularly with her family and only be able to continue her studies through minimal home-schooling efforts provided by her elder siblings.

            Once old enough to perform as a member of The Von Trapp Family Singers, Lorli had a large role to fill. Not only was she expected to perform on stage, but she was also expected to take care of her younger brother and to work on the farm that the family was starting in Stowe, Vermont. She was expected to put all of her energy into her family life, leaving no room for her own dreams and aspirations.

            With a blush, Lorli recounts that she was not allowed to attend college upon reaching the appropriate age. Despite the fact that her brothers were allowed to go off to war and to pursue a further education, Lorli and her sisters were expected to stay at the family lodge to run the farm. Even after they stopped singing on tour, the family held summer music camps and concerts, which Lorli was expected to participate in.

This predetermined path that had been set out for Lorli never allowed her to make her own decisions. “We did not have the choice of going to college,” Lorli said, “My sister Rosemary tried to go to university and my parents were furious. They tried to use shock-therapy to end her ‘rebellion.’”

At this point in the conversation, Lorli cannot remain seated any longer. She abruptly stands and straightens her skirt. She moves towards the kitchen, while calling out to me that she is just checking on the bread in the oven. I can hear her putting the tea kettle back on the burner.

The essence of the von Trapp family unit was the fame that surrounded the name in its identity as a whole. If one child left the nest to go off on his or her own, the entire family income would suffer. The family had to stay together; they had no choice. The development of Lorli’s identity as a child-star was forced upon her; it was not of her own doing.

Weeks later, I sit in the same green chair that my grandmother had occupied when I had listened to her tell me the story of her life. My family surrounds me sitting in complete darkness, circling the base of my grandparent’s giant, now perfectly decorated Christmas tree. My grandmother breaks the silence as she sings out the opening line of “Stille Nacht,” and the rest of my family chimes in. Lorli’s face glows as my grandfather lights the first candle on the tree with his long, slender lighter, which reaches all the way to the tip-top of the balsam.

By CATHERINE MOORE                        

                        

What the Fluff?

 

            SOMERVILLE, Mass. (09/28/08) -- This is the 3 year that the town of Somerville has celebrated its claim to fame: Archibald Query’s invention of Marshmallow Fluff, over ninety years ago. The Union Square Main Streets (USMS) organization started the Fluff festival in 2006 as a means of bringing people together in the community through history, food, and games.

            Despite the rain delay, over 150 people appeared, decked out with rain boots and umbrellas, thirty minutes after the festival opened. The carnival-style festival squeezed itself into the small cobblestone parcel of land between the Union Square storefronts and the busy road running through the center of Somerville.

            “I wanted to be involved with people who share my love of fluff,” said Rebecca Martin, 27. Martin, along with her roommate, Brittany Lawabee, also 27, is a new resident in Somerville, Massachusetts. She saw Sunday’s “What the Fluff” Festival held in Union Square as the “perfect excuse” to get involved in the community and to meet people. Martin said, “I’m new to the area and I want to get out there.”

            The Festival itself featured vendor booths with fluff related foods, and games such as Bowling with Fluff containers, Bean Bag toss into Fluff containers, and a taste testing “Fluff Fear Factor” booth.

            “I just love how cool the games are and how creative everything is,” said Cristen Hamel, as she waited in line with her daughter at the Pin the “F” on the Fluff Boy booth. Hamel’s husband and sister-in-law play in the Patsy Hamel Band that played as entertainment during the festival. Madeline, Hamel’s 5 year-old daughter, had high hopes for the festival. “I want to be crowned Pharaoh of Fluff” said Madeline. “Because I’m sweet, just like Fluff.”  The Pharaoh of Fluff receives a Doctor Seuss look-a-like hat to wear, along with the honor of making an “acceptance speech” at the end of the Fluff Festival.

            Canadian born Michael Adler said that he had never heard of Fluff until today. Adler and his wife, Elissa, reside in Newton, Massachusetts and run a Tropical Plant rental business out of Waltham. The Adlers were returning from eating brunch at the Neighborhood restaurant, when they drove past the Fluff Festival in Union Square and decided to stop and check it out.

            “I grew up on Fluff,” said Elissa Adler. “When we went to summer camp I used to eat fluffer-nutters.” Michael Adler, however, declined the many free Fluff taste-testing opportunities saying that he enjoyed simply walking around the festival with his wife and their two German Shepherds.

            Mike Katz, a 53 year-old MIT professor, attended the festival as the Fluff creator, himself. Dressed up in neon green pants, a polka dot tie, and misshapen hat, Katz introduced himself to everyone he met as, Archibald Query, causing spectators to take a double take.            

            Kat lives in Somerville, himself, and finds it very important to participate in community events, such as the Fluff Festival. “As a community, the Fluff Festival is an expression of the joy of Somerville. We celebrate a diversity that many other communities just don’t have,” said Katz.

            Katz works as the Technical Director for MIT Theatre Arts. “I actually have a show today, but because of the rain date, I had to be here,” said Katz. Katz then told the Globe that he doesn’t mind missing his show. Pointing to his costume, Katz said, “Who else can do this?”

By CATHERINE MOORE

Immigration: Is it a Question?

            BOSTON, Mass. (09/23/08) – Alfredo Carranza’s parents left Mexico 25 years ago to take their shot at attaining the American Dream. Now, after raises two sons, they are thinking of moving back.

            Carranza, 18, spent most of his life in Phoenix, Arizona, and now attends the University of Arizona as a freshman. He said that his parents, Alfredo and Maria Carranza, immigrated to the United States for him.

            Over a phone interview Sunday, Carranza said that the couple left their hometown of Sonora, Mexico 25 years ago to find “a better life and more opportunities.” Like many other immigrants to America, Carranza said that his parents were searching for a place where their children could grow up with more opportunities. They wanted “more for their son,” he said.

            “My father came here before he married my mother,” said Carranza. “He felt like he could accomplish more here than in Mexico.”

            Carranza said that after his younger brother finishes college, his parents will probably return to Mexico. “My parents have always thought about it,” said Carranza. “But I cannot see myself there. I was born and raise here. I am an American.”

            According to the 2000 US Census, the number of Mexican immigrants more than quadrupled from around 2 million foreign-born Mexicans within the United States in 1980 to more than 9 million by 2000. This influx of Mexican immigrants has created social issues that have forced American citizens to pay close attention to US immigration policy.

Chuck Foss, a retired US Border Patrol Agent, has worked to secure American borders with Canada, Mexico, and along Eastern and Western coastal regions. Foss and his family have been working and living in El Paso, Texas, a town bordering Juarez, Mexico, for about seven years. After retiring at 57, Foss was rehired for the US Border Patrol when the United States Government implemented an unprecedented increase in border patrol.

            In the summer of 2006, President Bush ordered the Border Patrol to hire 6,000 new agents by December 2008 in order to raise security measures. Foss said that the US Border Patrol has never, in its 84 year history, increased its size to this extreme. Although the US Department of Homeland Security website does not back this statement, it does state that after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the US, “Border security became a topic of increased interest in Washington.”

            With US Census statistics showing that an estimated one out of every 10 workers in Arizona is Hispanic, the American population, as well as the 2008 presidential candidates, is addressing US immigration policy with a new emphasis on their own ideas of reform and/or reinforcement.

            Both presidential candidates, Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain endorsed a temporary worker program in 2007 titled the “Pathway to Citizenship.” Support for the integration of illegal immigrants into American society is one of the few topics that the two candidates can agree on, Richard Simon reported for the Los Angeles Times June 29, 2008.

            Obama claims to being more committed to helping the Latino immigrant population than his Republican counterpart. Obama stated his position in a speech to a crowd of Hispanic leaders at the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute on September 10. The Americans for Legal Immigration Political Action Committee (ALIPAC) reported that Obama said, “This election is about the 12 million people living in the shadows…they are counting on us to stop the hateful rhetoric filling our airwaves, and rise above the fear.”

            Obama also pointed out in his speech that Arizona native, John McCain, has reversed his position, having recently pledged to tackle border security before any other changes are made to immigration policy as a whole.

            Foss commented that the candidates’ positions on US immigration policy may be a determining factor in the upcoming November election. “Both Obama and McCain are close on the issue,” said Foss about the candidates’ dedication to helping illegal immigrants attain US citizenship. “I don’t feel that it’s a compulsion. I think priority should be to first gain control of the border.”

            Foss voiced the fears and concerns of many Americans who worry that the continual increase of Mexican immigrants will overload the struggling US economy.

“I think that we have an obligation to protect our borders and prevent people from coming in the back door.” Foss said. “We (the US Border Patrol Agents) are sworn to uphold the Constitution of the United States. Part of that is protecting the citizens of the United States from illegal immigrants.”

            Carranza, on the other hand, said that he believes that most immigrants are in the United States for the purpose that America was founded upon, to achieve the American Dream.

            “I have a couple of friends who came over illegally, but they aren’t hurting anyone,” said Carranza, referring to his Mexican friends who came into the US through the “back door.” “It is not right to kick people out who work really hard and aren’t harming anyone. They just want a better life.”

            Doctor Ivan Light, UCLA professor and author of the Russell Sage Foundation 2006 publication Deflecting Immigration, spoke Tuesday on immigration policy at Boston University’s Department of Sociology.

            Light explained American anti-immigrant sentiment with a microcosm. He illustrated the acronym NIMBY, which stands for “not in my back yard.” Nimbyism, a term that is often used in demographic sociology, describes what Light calls a common social movement. Nimbyism occurs when people are concerned about immigration development within their own residential areas. Light said that the Nimbyist movement has often prevented the implementation of integration, housing, and educational programs for immigrants within suburban areas due to the negative response of Americans living in the neighborhoods.

            “Now people are thinking about what municipalities can do to deflect the influx of migration,” said Light. “In Missouri and other states they take the State Police and they ask them to enforce immigration laws.” Light said that such a move was the reason for unconstitutional roadside citizenship checkpoints.

            “It is intended by these second tier municipalities to deflect immigration,” Light said. “It is their hope that those who are illegal will go somewhere else.”

            Light speculated on the present American economy, referencing statistics that show historically that there is often slowed immigration during periods of economic strain within the United States. Light said, “If we are moving into an economical depression, as we well may be, then people aren’t going to want to come here.” He said that he foresees a temporary decline in immigration, due to the present lows within the US economy.

            Foss said that he sees the present state of the American economy as all the more reason to protect the United States’ borders against intruders. “The United States is the most generous country towards immigrants. We allow more immigrants to enter our country than the total aggregate number of the rest of the world,” said Foss. “But, we do want immigration. Immigration is what has made America what it is today.”

            Foss concluded that despite this resolve, the United States has to have some way to preserve its job market, economy, and education system, by asking immigrants to go through the legal immigration process. “All we are asking people to do is to knock on the front door, instead of hopping through the back window,” said Foss.

By CATHERINE MOORE

camoore@bu.edu

It's Not the Wang, but It's Right Next Door


BOSTON, Mass. (09/14/2008) -- The colorful murals that enliven every square foot of the theatre ceilings, along with gold leaf lined banisters and elegant red carpeting gives the Cutler Majestic Theatre its nickname as the “House of Gold.”

Sunday, September 14, the Cutler Majestic Theatre opened its doors to the general public for an afternoon of entertainment, food, and relaxation. The theatre hosted an open house from one to five p.m. featuring live opera performances and serving hors d’oeuvres from local restaurants in the Boston Theatre District.

“All of the Boston community is struggling to find a way to reengage audiences,” said Julie Hennrikus, the general manager of Emerson Stage. Emerson Stage, the producing arm of the Department of Performing Arts at Emerson College, is one of the many musical organizations that makes its home at the Cutler Majestic Theatre at 219 Tremont Street in Downtown Boston.

Emerson sophomore Justin Nako works as a front receptionist at the Majestic. With 3 years experience selling merchandise at Broadway shows, Nako told the Globe that the Majestic theatre is unique, not only because of its gold vaulted ceilings and historical revelry, but because of the comfortable work atmosphere that accompanies its quaintness. Compared to the more ostentatious Wang Theatre one block down the street, Nako said that the Majestic sees a surprisingly diverse assortment of performing groups throughout the year. “You get a wide array here,” said Nako. “Yes, Legally Blonde

(the Broadway production) won’t be playing here, but there will be a lot of other stuff.”

The Cutler Majestic Theatre, built in 1903, is one of the oldest theatres in Boston—second only to the Colonial Theater. Designed by John Galen Howard in the Beaux Arts style, it blends Victorian classical tradition with exotic romance. Thirty years after Emerson College installed drop ceilings, the college renovated the building and found intricate overhead murals covering all of the original ceiling, painted by William deLeftwich Dodge.

During the Sunday open house, more than 75 people gathered in the Majestic theatre to explore the building. Open house guests were allowed to climb on stage, walk underneath the Opera pit, and explore the multiple dressing rooms in the intestines of the Majestic.

Nako explained to the Globe that the theatre was experimenting with a way to reach out to the public. “The open house is meant to help foster a better sense of community,” said Nako.

Representatives from different performance groups who are featured at the theatre throughout the year were invited to set up vendor tables within the auditorium. Performing Groups such as Emerson Stage, Opera Boston, the Boston Early Music Festival, and the New England Conservatory offered information on their upcoming seasons and encouraged visitors to attend performances at the Majestic.

The theatre also held several silent raffles for open house visitors to enter, featuring prizes such as weekend stays at the Courtyard Marriott Boston Tremont and tickets to upcoming Broadway shows touring through Boston.

During the afternoon performance, the buzz of the open house quieted down as people found seats in the auditorium and settled themselves to listen to the performers sing. Sitting up in an exclusive balcony alcove in the Mezzanine, Dorothy and Tom Prendergast listened to the live performance of New England Conservatory’s Paul Brennan, an Opera Boston singer who will be featured during the Majestic’s upcoming season.

The Prendergasts, both retired and living in Bedford, Massachusetts, took the MBTA from Alewife into downtown Boston for the Majestic Theatre’s open house. Despite the rain, Tom Prendergast said that they were determined not to miss the event.

“This theatre is lovely,” said Dorothy Prendergast, a retired schoolteacher. “It’s more intimate than the others.” Tom Prendergast agreed, saying that although they were enjoying the opera performance, he prefers to see musical theatre when he comes to the Majestic. Frequent visitors to Boston theaters, the Prendergasts are anticipating attending upcoming performances of both A Chorus Line and Chicago in the city.

After the open house performance was concluded, audience members left their seats and began to mill around the vendor tables once again. Several groups of elderly visitors left the auditorium with a theater receptionist who was giving hourly-guided tours.

The theatre open house offered the general public a chance to step onto the stage and explore the world of performing arts. The “no-doors-barred” open house, as described in the theatre pamphlet, created an atmosphere that allowed little girls to dance on the massive stage. A backstage manager explained the dynamics of the stage equipment to a small audience and a tall, blonde woman in a long beige raincoat took a spontaneous bow, front and center, to an imaginary full house. “That would be so much fun!” she mused, as her husband gently led her away.

The Cutler Majestic Theatre’s 2008-2009 calendar features performances by history teacher and comedian Robert Wuhl in October, Giuseppe Verdi’s opera Aida in and Carnivale by Cirque Le Masque in January, and a Celebrity Series by the Hubbard Street Dance Chicago company in February. The Majestic will also be welcoming the Moiseev Russian Classical Ballet in April to perform Swan Lake.

With more than 23 scheduled performance during the upcoming season, the Majestic hopes to encourage people throughout the year to venture downtown for an evening of musical enrichment. Tickets can be purchased at www.MAJ.org or the theatre encourages guests to call 617-824-8000 for further information on upcoming events.

By CATHERINE MOORE