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Actors
in The DisAbility Project (standing): Tatum Megli of Wildwood and
Tom Allen of St. Louis; (seated) 1970 Ladue Horton Watkins High
School graduate Laroy Smith of Frontenac and Kelly Baas of University
City.
(Suburban Journals)
Suburban
Journals - West County Journal
Actors raise
students' disability awareness
By Kate Miller
03/02/2003
Students at
Ladue Horton Watkins High School saw a performance of The DisAbility
Project and brought the theater troop to the school Wednesday to
spread awareness about the challenges facing people with disabilities.
The St. Louis-based
theater group is composed partly of people with disabilities.
Joan Lipkin
is the artistic director of That Uppity Theatre Company, which presents
The DisAbility Project.
"We're
really about art and advocacy," Lipkin said.
The skits are
sometimes humorous, sometimes heartbreaking renditions of what people
with disabilities encounter on a daily basis, from finding parking
spaces that haven't been taken by nondisabled people to finding
work or visiting public places that aren't properly accessible to
wheelchairs.
Lipkin said
the skits are based on personal experience.
Seniors Rachel
Rosenfeld, 17, of Frontenac and Mike Lewitt, 18, of Westwood were
instrumental in bringing the group to the school after they saw
them perform last year.
"I was
ignorant to the way people with disabilities live on a daily basis,"
Mike said. "The DisAbility Project is a great illustration
of that."
Student organizations
helped raise money to bring the troop to the school's stage because
they thought it was important for other students to understand the
challenges involved with having a disability from birth defects
arising from illness or injury.
The group educates
audiences with scenes but also mentions facts, such as how derogatory
words and gestures can be hurtful, and how most people with disabilities
live below the poverty line because they have a difficult time finding
work.
"People
often overlook the discrimination involved with people with disabilities,"
Rachel said. "The manner in which The DisAbilty Project presented
it was really moving."
Lipkin said
spreading awareness through theater with laugher as well
as seriousness serves a greater educational purpose.
"It's a
preach-free zone," she said.
Students gave
the actors a standing ovation after the one-hour performance.
"We hope
Ladue students will think twice before they take a disabled parking
space or something of that nature," Rachel said.
The DisAbilty
Project will perform in the Monsanto Room at the Maryville University
Library Building, 13550 Conway Road in Creve Coeur, at 4:30 p.m.
March 18. For reservations, call (314) 529-9488.
Copyright
2003 Suburban Journals
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