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Arts Night highlight:
Milton alums from the World War II era connect
with students as they shape a remarkable performance
Arts Night—an annual favorite—showcases
Milton artists of all types and levels of experience in venues
all over campus. Students love sharing their work with one
another in music, dance, drama, speech, painting, sculpture,
creative writing and artistic ventures of many kinds.
This year a unique event will unfold before the audience,
a distillation of interviews between 10 students in Advanced
Oral Interpretation and 33 Milton alumni, who answered students’
questions with their stories about Milton during World War
II years. “Milton Generations: A World War II Oral History
Project” will take place at 6 p.m. on Arts Night, April
20, in King Theatre.
David Ball of the history department (and academic dean) had
for some time been harboring the idea of an oral history project
with WWII-era alums. Peter Parisi of the performing arts department
was planning to teach Advanced Oral Interpretation. The two
collaborated to develop the course that culminates in Friday’s
performance, and that drew students into experiences that
they could hardly have predicted last September.
Members of the alumni relations office served as the bridge
between the idea and the people, locating individuals from
classes beginning in the Class of 1934 who lived close enough
to be accessible, explaining the project to the alumni, and
ultimately helping to drive students to the interviews.
Students prepared for the course by reading Studs Terkel’s
The Good War. Peter Parisi and David Ball helped
students learn about the people they would interview through
trips to the Milton archives; and two local alumni—Brad
Richardson ’48 and Paul Robinson ’52—welcomed
the task of giving practice interviews.
Interviews began with questions about the graduates' personal
experiences at Milton and moved to questions about what Milton
was like during the war years. After many interviews, students
transcribed the conversations and the resulting 700-page oeuvre
became the source for discerning what Peter labeled the “performative”
sections. Students found recurring themes, like service, boy-girl
relationships, and teachers, and the themes suggested the
shape of the performance.
A final question for the faculty members involved framing
the challenge for student performers: Should they try to become
the octogenarian whose face lit up as he told his story, try
to tell the story with the images that hovered in his imagination?
Peter agrees with David when he expresses his central hope
that the students are able to express the youth, vitality
and emotion that the people had when they were living these
stories.
Arts Night is Friday, April 20, in the Kellner Performing
Arts Center beginning at 6 p.m.
Schedule of performances
6–6:50 p.m.
Advanced Oral Interpretation
King Theatre
Creative Writing
Orchestra Room
7–7:30 p.m.
Jazz
King Theatre
Drama
Studio Theatre
Speech Team
Kellner 233
7:45–8:15 p.m.
Jazz
King Theatre
Dance
Dance Studio
8:30–9:40 p.m.
Big Splash
Piano
Moving Image
Drama
Dance
Improv
King Theatre
9:30 p.m.
Artists Reception
Pieh Commons
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