Pina Bausch was a German choreographer who combined potent drama and dreamlike movement to create a powerful form of dance theater. Her work influenced generations of dance-makers. The music in these videos is from Henry Purcell’s The Fairy Queen, “O, Let Me Weep.”

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Bombtrack – Spring Music Festival Video
Fifth grade students, Ethan and Owen, and their teacher, Devin Flynt, perform “Bombtrack,” at Hope Academy’s 2010 Spring Music Festival.
Richard III Field Trips for Shakespeare Students
This should be no problem for home schoolers. All others will need to evaluate whether or not their schools would be willing to excuse them for an educational field trip. We need to RSVP for this so please let us know by April 1 whether or not you can come (call Ms. Norma at 412-441-3800 x11)
About Richard III
Spring Music Festival Photos
Congratulations to everyone who participated in Saturday’s Spring Music Festival.
Happy Doesn’t Have to Have an Ending – Animation
If you missed yesterday’s Spring Music Festival, here is the video that our Wednesday Animation Club created with Michelle Carello from Squonk Opera. Lots of photos and videos from yesterday’s marathon event coming soon. Keep checking back!
Don’t Miss Federico & Alia Musica
Put Something in the Hat and Bake Some Cookies – We Need Your Help
It costs over $1,000 to rent the Kelly-Strayhorn Theater for the daylong Spring Music Festival.
Instead of charging admission, we will be “passing the hat” to collect donations. It sounds like a lot of money to raise but if each student donates $10 we will cover our costs.
We will also have a bake sale to defray the costs, and provide sustenance – so please consider volunteering to help throughout the day (call Norma at 412-441-3800 x11 to schedule a time). And of course, we need your delicious baked goods! Just drop them off at the theater. Thank you.
Spring Music Festival – Saturday, March 27
- Recitals at 1:30 and 3:00 pm, click here for studios during each time period
- Shakespeare Monologue and Scene Sharing at 5:30 pm
- Evening Ensemble* Performances at 7:00 pm
*Voices of Hope Singing and Drumming, EL CEO, HAT Co, Pearl Dance, Squonk Animation
Pastoral Message, March 2010
Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe recently published a new book of essays. Achebe is internationally known for his classic 1958 novel “Things Fall Apart.”” It is the story of Okonkwo, a wrestler and husband living in a Nigerian village and trying to make sense of his changing world shaped by Igbo culture, British colonialism, and Christian missionaries. The title of his novel comes from a poem by W.B. Yeats, which contains the famous lines: “Things fall apart; the center cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.”
It is a compelling image, this idea that things are changing and risk collapsing upon themselves when the “center cannot hold.” We are living in incredible times, in which change happens dramatically and exponentially. Growth in areas of technology and communication are unfolding around us with dizzying speed. I recently saw a short video by Sony, which pointed out that it took 38 years for radio to reach 50 million listeners and 13 years for television to reach 50 million viewers. But the same threshold of 50 million users was reached by the Internet in only four years, by the iPod in three years, and by Facebook in just two years. It also suggested that the top ten in-demand jobs today did not even exist in 2004, so that students today are actually being trained for work that will use technology not even invented yet. It boggles the mind!
Given both the speed and nature of change today, it is realistic to wonder whether the “center” can hold things together. I would define the “center” as the core values, ethics, and faith perspectives that unite humankind. We believe in God who is Lord of all times, and who commands us to love the Lord and love our neighbor as ourselves. We believe that a commitment to sacrificial love, coupled with the gift of God’s grace, are the two things that give shape to our lives and hope for the future. This wonderful truth was fully embodied in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. In our lives as Christians, it is this “center” that holds things together.
Yet, are the changing times weakening our grasp of the “center”? Are we more influenced by the latest technology than guided by a God who never gets outdated? In Achebe’s new book, he makes this astute observation: “Without doubt, the times in which we live influence our behavior, but the best or merely the better among us … are never held hostage by their times.”
That is the sentiment of Lent, the church season we are now celebrating. Lent is a time to re-focus on the “center” of things in a world spinning and changing at ever-increasing speeds. Lent is a time to see all that is around us through the lens of Christ’s story. Lent is a time to remember that the best among us are never held hostage by their times. That last statement is for you and me. For in Christ, we are “the best or merely the better among us,” not by our own efforts, but thanks to the indwelling grace of God. If it seems that anarchy is loosed upon the world, don’t forget that God’s spirit also is loose to make sure that God’s will, will be done. The center holds! Trust that, with God, all things are possible!
Fireflies! For the Spring Music Festival
Our youngest Voices of Hope kids will be singing their favorite song, “Fireflies,” in the Spring Music Festival at the Kelly-Strayhorn Theater on Saturday, March 27. Here is the PS 22 choir singing it — watch it and practice!