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To Revive a Mockingbird

The author of To Kill a Mockingbird is famously reclusive. She rarely speaks in public, and her novel—about Atticus Finch’s defense of a black man wrongly accused of raping a white woman in the segregated South—is the only work she’s ever had published. But a high-school stage version of Mockingbird, in her home state of Alabama, was evidently enough to bring Harper Lee out of hiding. The play was mounted just across the street from the Montgomery bus stop that made Rosa Parks famous, and Lee had been invited by arts and education officials seeking to honor her work. But the 80-year-old, who simply waved to the audience during a standing O, saved her comments for the students afterward, during a private reception. The cast of 60 comes from two public schools—one in a wealthy, mostly white community, the other in a poorer, mostly black district. The schools’ theater and choir directors thought the show, first staged last August, would be a good way to bridge a cultural divide. And, indeed, a bond between kids who previously knew very little about each other has developed. After the Montgomery performance, Kimberly Agee, who plays the Finches’ maid, put her arm around Regan Stevens, who plays Scout, and said, “These right here—these are friends for life.”

Comments

If more of our young adults can be brought togther through the use of Fine Arts then I for one say, "Do It!" I, for one, have been trying to build up the Fine Arts programs in our public schools--wih not much of a reception from the Directors in charge.

Even when it involves putting money back into THEIR Fine Art programs--still no response. The use of Fine Arts can be intertwined with English, History, Math, Science and Reading to--name a few.

It helps the better half, of our up and coming generation, to realize that the only difference between them and there counterparts is their zip codes.

This is a book that will be read for ages to come. Bravo! to the 60 participants,the teachers that made it happen and for a lesson in life well learned by our youth. That is education.

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