NOTE: This post was mistakenly published on Friday, along with another post, creating too much to read for one day. I have no idea what's happening. I go away from ten days and I completely lose my mind. Hopefully, it will come back shortly. In the meantime, if you read this on Friday, read it again. If you didn't, look! A new post!
It intrigued me that an Amish organization was putting on
musicals.
Upfront Apology: Not being a reporter and being too shy to act
like one, I did not investigate the underlying situation. Plus, for me, it is more fun to make things
up than to actually find things out.
This part is true.
There is an Amish community living in and around Nappanee Indiana about
an hour’s drive from our cabin, unless you get lost going there which we always
do, in which case it’s longer.
“Amish Acres”, about a mile West of Nappanee, is a kind of Disneyland with beards and bonnets
(although the only “ride” they provide is a horse-drawn carriage.) There you
can experience a religious community shunning modernity, get a glimpse into the
Amish lifestyle and purchase homegrown confections (such as Apple Butter and the
“Bread of the Month”) as well as Amish-themed souvenirs, manufactured, most
likely though I did not check to make certain, in Asia.
There is also an expansive dining hall where you can partake
of authentic, hyper-carb Amish cuisine
(Dr. M’s chicken and noodles was served over a generous helping of mashed
potatoes), which includes a gravy so thick, it will clog your arteries before
dessert.
Speaking of dessert, “Amish Acres’” signature dessert is
“Shoo-Fly Pie”, so named because it is so sweet, it attracts flies, and… that’s
right – you have to shoo them away.
(This factoid came to me courtesy of my pilates teacher who though a Calvinist, she nonetheless seemed to
know.)
I enjoy dining at “Amish Acres.” Though I find it a Divine Irony that The Good
Lord made food that can stop your heart dead in its tracks taste so incredibly delicious.
Also on the “Amish Acres” premises – incongruously to my
uneducated understanding – is The Round
Barn Theater, a transplanted 60-foot high former agricultural facility that
is now the home of what the complimentary program touts as “the best of
Broadway’s Golden Age of Musical Theater.”
A bold claim, one would think, considering how many “Golden Age of Musical
Theater” revivals there are running on the actual Broadway.
Our local Michiana
theater, the Dunes, which is only a
quarter of a mile from our cabin, having fallen on hard financial times, has
been reduced to mounting only a single production (rather than an entire
season), playing later in the summer. Looking
to assuage my regional theater appetite, I was inevitably attracted to “Amish
Acres’” Round Barn’s Theater
production of Footloose – The Musical.
And here’s where the
speculation begins.
“The Round Barn Theater” is a part of the “Amish Acres”
presentation. Blending in, both structurally
and paint-color-wise, with the fellowship’s non-urban motif, it would appear to
be an integral component of the overall operation.
Mid-Post Confession: Virtually everything I know about the Amish
comes from the Harrison Ford movie “The Witness” (1985.) Being Amish, however, it is doubtful that all
that much about them has changed over the past 29 years. Or possibly ever.
Meaning no religious disparagement, merely responding to the
(cinematically derived) evidence, the Amish appear to be an austere
organization who reject current conveniences, and, I assume, current morality
as well.
And yet here they are, hosting a production of a musical (based
on the movie of the same name) whose dramatic thrust involves a rebellion
against a behavior code that proscribes – among other illicit activities – dancing.
Frankly, this contiguity of Amish and musical theater confuses
me. First of all, as a practical matter,
if the Amish themselves are not allowed to dance, who exactly is dancing in their musicals? Where, I wondered, did they find people who
are going to hell to take on the dancing roles in their production?
I imagined the conversation:
“Wouldst thou be interested in dancing in our musical?”
“Am I still going to hell?”
“Absolutely. But
since thou wouldst be going to hell in any
case, thou wouldst be losing nothing by doing so, whilst at the same time helping
us out with our production.” (NOTE: I don’t even know if they talk like that. If they don’t, I apologize for
misrepresenting their patios for comedic purposes.)
This reminded me of what my grandmother used to tell me
about religious Jews hiring neighborhood Gentiles to turn on the electricity
for them on the Sabbath, avoiding perdition by sparing them from having to
engage in that unacceptable behavior themselves. The situations seemed similar. In one case, it was lighting the oven. This time, it was surrogate dancing.
I double-checked this apparent conundrum with my daughter
Anna, who immediately set me straight.
ANNA: “The Amish can dance.”
ME: “Who can’t dance?”
ANNA: “Quakers.”
The two of us, in our ignorance, embroiled in a conversation
akin to two monkeys discussing the Internet.
MONKEY ONE: “Does it have anything to do with bananas?”
MONKEY TWO: “I don’t think so.”
MONKEY ONE: “Then I have absolutely no idea.”
The monkeys exhibiting a level of humility entirely absent from the conversation between
myself and my daughter.
Unanswered questions abound.
Why are the Amish putting on musicals?
Why are they doing this specific
musical, which is a direct contradiction to their fundamental(ist)
beliefs? And what about the
costumes? Will the minister’s rebellious
teenaged daughter kick up her heels wearing a handmade dress that goes down to
the floor?
For all I knew, this was some kind of “Amishized” adaptation of Footloose – The Musical, one in which the unbending minister
persuades the outsider-newly- arrived-in-town to stop dancing. Or perhaps
they appended a cautionary coda to
the production, possibly as simple as an actor in a “Devil” costume peering
through the window at the climactic debauchery, rubbing his hands together and cackling
maniacally.
I had no idea. But I
was curious. BSo I persuaded Dr. M to
go, a woman who dislikes virtually all
musicals and was unlikely to be won over by a semi-professional rendering brought
to life by the Amish.
Disappointing Resolution Pretty Much On All Counts
(So you know I
know.)
Footloose – The
Musical was only marginally enjoyable.
(The performers, I later learned, were in fact not Amish at all, but were
recruited via auditions conducted earlier in New York City.)
For some reason, the ”Amish Acres” presentation houses (and
shares financially, I would imagine) an enterprise that mounts musicals, some
of them like the Amish-themed Plain and
Fancy (1955) for which The Round Barn
Theater is reputedly the “national home” as the show has been playing there
regularly since 1986; others, musicals (like the current one) that are directly
oppositional to traditional Amish doctrine.
(Which I repeat I know nothing about, but having witnessed the suggestive
choreography in Footloose – The Musical,
I cannot see how the Amish people would approve.)
I departed this experience harboring more questions than
answers. Dr. M, on the other hand, had
only one question:
“Why did we drive two hours (because we got lost for an
hour) for this?
Having instigated it, I accepted responsibility for this
less than satisfying experience. But
deep down, I, at least to some extent, blamed our local playhouse, the Dunes.
If they had not fallen into financial insolvency, we would
not have had to resort to the Amish for our theatrical entertainment.
2 comments:
Well, it is re-run season. I enjoyed "Witness" & in fact, I may re-watch it now that you've put it near the forefront of my nearly empty mind!
One of the scenes I really enjoyed in Witness was when the young Amish boy was looking around at all the strange sights and foreign people in the Philadelphia train station (before he became The Witness) and happening to see what he thought was an Amish man in the distance. As he comes around to see the man's face, we see he is is an ultra-Orthodox Jewish man who is dressed similarly to the Amish.
So many religions have groups who want to stop progress in order to prove they are devout. But it always interests me in how they decide which time it is that is the "correct" time to stop progress.
I think I may be sounding like the monkeys discussing the Internet, though.
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