Emporia State’s Theatre Department is ending the theater season with Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen’s psychological drama “HeddaGabler.” The play will run April 21-24 and April 27-May 1 in the Frederickson Theatre. All performances begin at 7:30 p.m.
“There aren’t a whole lot of bells and whistles and a whole lot of broad action, it’s a psychological play, and it demands maturity,” Jim Ryan, director of “Hedda” and professor of communications and theatre said.
Ryan said the play centers around one character, a woman by the name of HeddaGabler, played by Kelsey Fredericks, and the interactions other characters have with her. He said the play was a part of Ibsen’s realist phase in his writing and deals with the influence of heredity and environment on behavior.
“(She) was raised by a real strict, domineering, military man named General Gabbler and it’s sort of shaped the way she deals with other people. It’s her story and those individuals who come in contact with her. It’s her desire to have power over others and influence other people,” Ryan said.
Senior theatre major Scott Swezey plays Hedda’s husband, George Tessman. He said his character gets manipulated by his wife, but continues to see the good in her and not the bad. He said to show how his character was influenced by heredity, he worked with costar Brianne Simon, who plays his aunt, to mirror each other’s mannerisms and show congruity between the two characters.
“I guess a lot of what I did was I looked at his background and the thing that the director really wanted to stress with us is that these characters were products of their upbringing,” Swezey said.
Ryan said Ibsen is a truly important playwright in history and that Hedda is one of his most important plays. He said it is a challenge for actors and because it is in the Frederickson theatre, which is a smaller space, it demands subtle acting.
“It’s one of the truly important plays in the canon of dramatic literature, it’s a play that had a great affect on the development of dramatic literature and the techniques of writing realistic plays,” Ryan said.
Senior theatre major Lindsay Roland, who plays TheaElvstead, said the play is not very plot driven, so it’s easy for the audience to get caught up in the characters and their problems.
“I would encourage people to come because this isn’t a show that they’re going to get to see very often,” Roland said.
Swezey said Ibsen is regarded nationally as the second best playwright to William Shakespeare because during the 1800s when he was writing, no one knew what he was doing because he was ahead of his time.
“It would be like today, an Eskimo revolutionizing theater and no one would know what it is because no one at the time read Norwegian drama,” Swezey said.
Ryan said a few new things have been brought to the text and that the overall quality of the play will be interesting. He said anyone who comes will be intrigued by the story. Swezey said the acting is going to be phenomenal.
“It’s sexy, it’s dark, it’s violent – it’s basically everything that modern drama is in film,” Swezey said.
Tickets for the play are $5 for students, $8 for seniors and $10 for adults and are available from the university box office at 620-341-6378 or toll free at 877-341-6378.
Oceanside pet store animals faring well, officials say.
North County Times (Escondido, CA) August 17, 2007 Byline: Marga Kellogg Aug. 17–OCEANSIDE —- A family-run pet store that displays puppies, kittens and other animals in brightly colored cages outside its front door on South Coast Highway is not abusing or neglecting its animals, an officer with the North County Humane Society said Thursday, despite complaints from some area residents. go to site escondido humane society
“There are no huge discrepancies,” Humane Society officer Seth Heilig said, after inspecting the Furry Friends pet shop at 1021 S. Coast Highway. “The biggest thing is they put the animals in the public eye and (because of that) the animals have to be kept at a higher standard.” The pet shop owner said the complaints are unfounded and have been generated by a couple of overly sensitive residents.
“There are a few people who come by here and just start screaming,” said the shop’s owner, a woman named Michelle, who declined to give her last name. “They come by and harass me. I have happy customers, so I don’t know what they think they’re doing.” Heilig said he visited the pet shop in response to complaints from residents Mickie Maxwell and Marie Myers, who alleged that animals at the pet store don’t have proper water, food or ventilation and are left outside on hot cement.
The women also filed complaints with city code enforcement, stating the store owner was violating city codes with her display of cages.
“I’ve been watching them for almost two weeks now,” Myers said of the animals. “The condition of the animals was pathetic the first time I went there. They’re just not being paid attention to and are left outside all day.” On Thursday, city code enforcement officials said they gave the store a warning because the animal cages took up too much of the area in front of the store.
“You can have stuff out there, but it has to meet certain guidelines,” said David Manley, the city’s code enforcement manager.
Manley said such displays cannot extend farther than 5 feet from the front of a store and lengthwise, cannot cover more than 50 percent of the store front.
Heilig said that during his visit to the shop, he told the store owners to put hanging water bottles in the cages —- rather than bowls of water —- so they don’t collect debris.
“As long as she has a business license and paperwork in order, I can’t complain about the animals being out there,” he said.
After the visit from the city, however, the store immediately moved the puppies, kittens, turtles and birds inside, senior code enforcement Officer Tom Currier said. site escondido humane society
“She was very cooperative and just moved everything immediately while I was still there,” he said.
Michelle, who said she has been involved in animal rescue for 15 years, attributes the complaints to the fact that the pets are visible from the street.
“When you put an animal in a cage, you have emotions —- you have people who want to rescue them,” she said. She added that that’s what the pet shop does —- some of the animals she sells have been rescued from various places; others have been purchased from breeders.
“We have a health guarantee,” she said.
To improve the situation, Michelle said, she has plans to develop her patio much like those in front of many restaurants with a fence and plexiglass.
“Hopefully that will happen because it will help keep my animals from being stolen and I can position them anywhere I want,” she said. “I think it might work out.” Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.