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JOHN LONG Class of 1964 US English Teacher, 1971–2005 Over the years I was drafted into several school plays at Charles Wright, never while I was a student, only when I returned to school as a teacher. I played a drunken Pole sitting at a bar in Saroyan’s Time of Your Life, directed by Donn Laughlin. With few lines (Laughlin knew my limitations), I had to fill a couple of hours of stage time each night while resisting Lyle Peniston’s attempts to crack me up. This play was performed in the old Bus Shed next to Lower School. About the same time I was cast in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, playing a psychiatrist, again with few lines. In the early seventies with stage makeup I could pass for an adult in low light. That play, with stunning lead performances by Kevin O’Rourke, Mary Dupuis, and Don Dobler, was performed on the senior stage in the commons. My next play was Fiddler on the Roof, where I played a rabbi. I guess that director Ruth Palmerlee spotted a special spiritual quality in me that fit the role. The rest of the world has yet to spot it. That play we didn’t even perform at CWA; we rented the theater at Steilacoom High School. Most recently I played a cross-dressing drama critic in The Farndale Avenue Housing Estate Townswomen's Guild Dramatic Society's Production of Macbeth, directed by John Forier and featuring Andrew Evans. That play was done in what I still call the study hall but is currently the band room. Of four plays in which I had a part, we were in a real theater only once and that was when we went to Steilacoom. Charles Wright has a proud history of theater, but has never really had the facilities to support the program. This campaign is an exciting time for many of us who over the years remember those great productions in those inadequate spaces. The same could be said for the music program. If they were to beg me to return for just the right role …. Just kidding. |