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Elliot Trainor, Seymour the plant, and 'The Urchins' Lanishya Garrett, Taina Figueroa, and Aaliyah Johnson rehearse 'Little Shop of Horrors' at Pittsfield High School.

PHS Theatre Presents Dark Comedy With 'Little Shop of Horrors'

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Pittsfield High School's spring production will include singing, dancing, and a man-eating plant.

The PHS Proteus Theatre will present "Little Shop of Horrors" on April 28-29 and May 5-6 at 7:30 p.m.
and on April 30 and May 7 at 2:30 p.m.

The dark comedy is based on a 1986 movie by the same name and follows Seymour Krelborn, the protagonist, who discovers a "strange and interesting plant" that he soon realizes needs blood to survive.

"He's kind of down on his luck, he hasn't had the greatest opportunities in life, he works at a flower shop and he's really into strange plants," theater teacher and director Kyla Blocker said.

"He finds a strange plant one day that no one has ever seen before and it's a big hit, brings him a lot of success but he finds out that the plant eats blood so he has to figure out a way to keep the plant growing and happy so we see him grapple with those decisions throughout the show and we kind of want to answer the question 'How far are we willing to go to get what we want?'"

Elliot Trainor, who is a junior, said playing Seymour has been a very fun process.

"It's a lot of work obviously, with school and rehearsals and everything but I think it's really fulfilling. I think it's really worth it," he explained. "I've never really had a very large role in a show before but I've been acting pretty much my whole life."

Summer Lawton, also a junior, plays Seymour's love interest Audrey and is the choreographer for the production.

"It's a lot of fun working with all of my friends," she said. "I think we're all really close-knit and it's fun having them support me through this because it's my first year being choreographer and everyone's been really supportive and helpful."

Blocker explained that the play was chosen from a gut feeling.

"I think about the group that I have and what type of show would kind of fit the group that I have," she said.

"This show is so fun. It is very dark in some ways, but it is at its core comedy and I felt like it had some stuff that this group could really dig into, some really fun characters that they could like really sink their teeth into."

Fifteen students will showcase their talents in the production and about 25 students have worked on the play from grades 9 through 12. Rehearsals began over February break.

Audrey II, the carnivorous plant modeled after a Venus fly trap, was rented from Berkshire Arts & Technology Public Charter School. Making Audrey II come to life takes two cast members: Dea Wood as the voice and Brooke Tripicco as the puppeteer.


The two have to coordinate dialogue and movements while Wood is offstage.

"It's very different acting off stage because the only way I can act to the audience is with my voice," she explained.

"So I have never used my voice in a way that had to be like that before because I've always been able to use body language and moving around but for this, I'm over off stage so I have to portray everything through the way I speak."

Wood also has stage time as a featured dancer.

Tripicco said maneuvering the puppet is a mixture of instinct and practice. She had to learn both how to operate the puppet, which there are multiple, and when to operate it.

"It's learning the lines for the plant so we're in sync with the puppet and the voice, there's also an aspect of kind of having a loose understanding of other people's blocking because I have to be able to use the puppet to track them as they move," Tripicco explained.

"So that is part instinct, that's just listening, there is a lot of listening involved.  For lines and stuff, we both have to know the lines and we have to know them exactly as written and we have to have the same exact way every time."

The teacher who originally made Audrey II provided training for the mechanics of the puppet.

Senior Colin McKinney plays Mr. Mushnik, the owner of the flower shop. He feels that it is a fun and hardworking process that is well worth it.

"What you get out of it is just a fun experience with friends and it's just such a learning experience, I feel, too," he said. "You learn so much about singing, music, and stuff like that.  You get a lot out of it."

 McKinney added that Mushnik is a very interesting character and he has found ways to play the role to make it fun and delightful while also being serious and nasty towards Seymour.

Jessica Healey is a featured dancer and part of the ensemble.

"It was very fun to learn," she said about the choreography. "We picked it up really quickly, which I was very surprised about. I'm glad we were able to pick it up that quickly."

Tickets are now on sale online.


Tags: high school musical,   

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Letter: Homelessness May Have Contributed to Murder of Pittsfield Resident

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor:

At the turn of the century, I returned to Berkshire County, where I had grown up. I had been gone a score of years, starting just after high school. It is hard to impress how halcyon Pittsfield was in the '60s-'80s. Crime was virtually unheard of. I remember a big "news story" in The Berkshire Eagle about teenagers drinking beer in the woods by fires. During the '90s, when Pittsfield was in the very beginning of its economic downturn brought on by GE downsizing, there was little crime in Pittsfield. Historians generally agree that the 1990s represented a national high-water mark from crime, but the Berkshires by and large ducked it.

I remember sitting at the kitchen table as a child and my father talking about the one murder he knew of in Pittsfield. Apparently, sometime in the '40s, a man was having an affair with a married Lakewood woman. The husband of the adulterous wife knew that the man his wife cheated with commuted to GE going over the Newell Street Bridge over the Housatonic. The husband laid in wait, and as his wife's paramour was about to cross the bridge, the husband blew his brains out with a shotgun. Though it is an unresearched belief which should be taken with some skepticism, I believe for decades prior to the turn of the century, this was the only murder in Pittsfield. At least it was the only one that my parents seemed to know of. A quick search of the Internet reveals an unsolved murder of a "May Fosburgh [who] was found dead in her home on Tyler Street in Pittsfield, early in the morning of August 19, 1900." Perhaps a local historian could unearth other murders, but pre-2000, I suspect murders and shootings generally were relatively rare in the Berkshires. Research shows about six unsolved Berkshire murders in the entire 20th century. Today, on Merrill Street in Pittsfield, down the street from the Boys and Girls' Club where I played hockey as a kid, is a memorial for a murder victim in front of the old Notre Dame church.

I remember my father taking me and my siblings to Boston to Fenway Park. That was my first personal exposure to homelessness. The unhoused were called "derelicts" in those days: believe it or not, that benighted term was supposed to be the "polite" substitute for "bum." I spent much of the '80s and early '90s in Boston, when homelessness started to take off, but it was absent in the Berkshires upon my many returns. Then around the turn of the century, the unhoused population appeared at Park Square in Pittsfield and drive islands of shopping mall entrances. Then their numbers grew.

Then over the past five years I experienced a new phenomenon — several of the homeless people I met started to be people I personally first knew when they were part of the housed population. One of those beautiful but hapless people was Chris Hairston, the Pittsfield resident that was murdered while in Greenfield. A mutual friend and community leader Nicole Fecteau wrote on Facebook, "While it may never be known for sure, I believe the altercation that led to his murder at this apartment in Greenfield was Chris's attempt to find yet another couch for the night." When you don't have proper housing, you find yourself in questionable living circumstances.

Sure, Chris had his demons. Fecteau wrote, "I believe the chronic homelessness was the largest impedance to his ability to heal fully." As a nation, we have other priorities than homelessness: Congress just released $95 billion in foreign aid for wars.

Reading the Berkshire Eagle archives, you see a 2011 story about Chris appearing at a drum expo in Berkshire County: Chris was a drummer for many bands and drum circles. There is a 2007 story about Chris being a "Berkshire State Qualifier" in high school wrestling for Taconic in the 152-pound division. Chris in every normal sense was a part of our community.

I have a memory of many years ago, the Berkshire Fatherhood Coalition was in Pittsfield's Fourth of July Parade. I remember somewhere in the middle of North Street as our float progressed, marionetter Dion Robbins-Zust yelled to Chris. I remember Chris donning a Taconic band uniform with his drum. Chris was returning up North Street after the band was done. Dion yelled to Chris to get on the float. Chris, then young and buff, hopped on the float without hesitation, and smiled the whole way down the parade route for his second time, banging his drum and shouting glee to others. Chris was pure joie de vivre. On that day, with his future ahead of him, Chris was perfect, beautiful, and one of us. We should do better.

Rinaldo Del Gallo

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