Broadway Rose Presents Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Treasured Hits in a Grand Musical Revue
Broadway Rose Theatre Company continues its 2019 Season of Musicals with A Grand Night For Singing, at the Broadway Rose New Stage. Preview performance is Thursday, March 28 with opening night on Friday, March 29, and performances continuing through April 28, 2019. Evening performances are Thursday through Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. Matinees are at 2 p.m. on Sundays, and on Saturdays, April 6, 13, 20 and 27. Performances are held at the New Stage located at 12850 SW Grant Avenue in Tigard. Tickets are priced from $30 to $48 for adults (depending on date). Tickets in the upper section for ages 6-18 are $20 and ages 1930 are $25. Discounts are available for groups of 10 or more. $5 tickets are available for Oregon Trail Card holders through the Arts for All program. For a full listing of show performances or to order tickets visit www.broadwayrose.org, call 503.620.5262, or visit the box office at 12850 SW Grant Ave., Tigard.
Many of the most beloved, uplifting, and romantic songs in musical theatre history have one thing in common: The incomparable writing team of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. A Grand Night For Singing collects over 30 treasured hits from Rodgers and Hammerstein shows such as Oklahoma!, South Pacific, The Sound of Music, Carousel, The King and I, and Cinderella; and invites audiences to experience these classics anew through artful arrangements and clever interpretations. It’s “something wonderful” for any lover of classic musical theatre.
Music by Richard Rodgers; lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II; musical arrangements by Fred Wells; orchestration by Michael Gibson and Jonathan Tunick. The musical revue was conceived by Walter Bobbie and originally produced by Roundabout Theatre Company, New York City, in 1993.
Broadway Rose’s production is directed by Sharon Maroney, with music direction from Jeffrey Childs. The creative team includes Dan Murphy (Choreographer) Braden Graves (Set Designer), Darrin J. Pufall (Costume Designer), Gene Dent (Lighting Designer), Brian K. Moen (Sound Designer), Jeff Duncan (Prop Designer), and Jessica Junor (Production Stage Manager).
The cast comprises Kelly Sina, Deborah Mae Hill, Caitlin Brooke, Joey Côté, and Joe Theissen.
Broadway Rose Theatre Company is Oregon’s premier musical theatre company. Under the artistic direction of Sharon Maroney, Broadway Rose has been producing professional musical theatre in the Portland area since 1992, enriching the region’s cultural life and increasing opportunities for Oregonians to participate in the arts. Broadway Rose is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit committed to keeping live theatre affordable and making its productions accessible to all members of the community.
Mask & Mirror Presents ‘The Boys Next Door’ – Dignity Despite Disabilities
Mask & Mirror Community Theatre proudly presents their production of Tom Griffin’s comedy-drama “The Boys Next Door” on The Stage at Calvin Church, 10445 SW Canterbury Lane, Tigard, opening March 2. Shows play Saturday at 7:30pm and Sunday at 2:30pm through March 24. There are no Friday performances for this show. Tickets are available online at www.MaskandMirror.com, and are only $15 adults, $12 seniors, students and military.
“The Boys Next Door” explores the triumphs and tears of four disabled men living together in a group home, and their social worker caretaker, who is slowly getting burned out by his job. You’ll fall in love with “The Boys” as the play tells the story of their daily lives, where little things sometimes become momentous (and often very funny). There are moments of great poignancy when we are reminded that the handicapped, like the rest of us, want only to love and laugh and find some meaning and purpose in their lives.
The play is directed by Gary Romans, one of the Founders of Mask & Mirror, now in its eighth season. “The play is superbly written,” says Gary. “Each of the boys have their successes and crises, but retain their dignity and humanity. They invite us to laugh along with them – not at them – as they try to navigate a somewhat confusing world.”
“The Boys Next Door” was one of the most produced play in the U.S. in the 1980’s, and is still current, except for some language used that is no longer politically correct.
History has shown that some audiences are uncomfortable with some of the situations depicted, and are afraid to laugh. To help the audience understand the context of the play, Mask & Mirror will host a talkback with the director at each performance; held 15 minutes before the doors normally open.
Mask & Mirror Community Theatre is now in its 8th season of presenting high quality and affordable (no tickets are more than $15) live theatre to the citizens of Tigard and Tualatin – using all-volunteer actors, stage crew and administrators.
Participation and membership is open to all. We welcome experienced performers and theatre “wannabes” – we’ll train you!
Expecting a great turnout of bluebirds and call for volunteers
The Prescott Bluebird Recovery Project is a 501 (c)(3) nonprofit volunteer organization dedicated to the recovery, restoration, and enhancement of the Western Bluebird. Since the 1970’s the Prescott Bluebird Recovery Project (PBRP) has been working to help restore the Western Bluebird in portions of Clackamas, Marion, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill counties. The major reasons for the decline of the Western Bluebird are: loss of habitat; competition from non-native house sparrows and starlings; and reduction of insects due to the use of pesticides.
During the 2018 nesting season, more young Western Bluebirds were hatched & fledged from nestboxes placed in appropriate bluebird habitat by PBRP than any time in the past 5 years. We anticipate there could be a similar explosion of nesting success in 2019. As always, we have had some retirements from our volunteer corps and are seeking new volunteers.
A workshop will take place in early March for returning volunteers and those interested in becoming new monitors. The bluebird nesting season, and volunteer commitment, runs from early April until late August. Will you help us monitor and record bluebird nesting activity and maintain a group of nestboxes? You will have a Team Leader who will assist you with orientation, field training, questions you may have, and assembling the end of year reports for your route.
Join us at our workshop where you will learn about the project and about the bluebirds.
For More information, please see prescottbluebird.com.
Make a Difference for Bluebirds
Join the volunteers of Prescott Bluebird Recovery Project
Monitor a bluebird trail! Announcing the Spring Workshop for new Volunteer Monitors: SATURDAY, MARCH 2
9:30 am until noon
Champoeg State Heritage Area Visitors’ Center Auditorium
To register, visit our web site or E mail directly to us at info@prescottbluebird.com.
Please include your name, physical address, and telephone contact number. We will be in touch to confirm your registration.
Cub Scout Pack 35 donates to victims of Paradise Camp Fire
This holiday season local Cub Scouts from the Cascade Pacific Scout Council and their families collected toys, books, household goods and cash donations totaling an estimated $3,000 to help families displaced by the Camp fire that devastated Paradise, CA in November.
Tualatin Cub Scout Pack 35 held a Holiday Pack Meeting at Edward Byrom Elementary School on December 20th to collect donations. On Saturday, December 22nd, a volunteer family from the Cub Scout Pack loaded up a truck with the donations and traveled the 500 miles to Chico, CA. They meet with volunteers from the local Golden Empire Scout Council to deliver the donations to a local warehouse which displaced families could come and take what they need.
This was a great thing that our Cub Scouts decided to do for other families, it was done in the spirit of Scouting: Service above self.
At Pack 35 we believe in the Cub Scout principle of “fun with a purpose.”
The aim of Cub Scouting and Pack 35 is to help children grow physically, mentally and socially into good citizens who are strong in character and personally fit – all while having fun. As parents you will be amazed by your child’s achievements through the Scouts! We are an active pack with excellent resources, activities and volunteers. We remain active throughout the year, providing our scouts with many fantastic opportunities to grow and learn.
Our program is for boys and girls K – 5th grades and charter by the Byrom Elementary PSO.
Mask & Mirror UnMasked Presents ‘Doubt, A Parable’ at the Tualatin Heritage Center
“What actually happens in life is beyond interpretation. The truth makes for a bad sermon. It tends to be confusing and have no clear conclusion” –Father Flynn
Mask & Mirror Community Theatre opens “Doubt, A Parable” at the Tualatin Heritage Center on January 18, 2019. In this brilliant and powerful drama, Sister Aloysius, a Bronx parochial school principal, takes matters into her own hands when she suspects the young Father Flynn of improper relations with one of the male students. It is a gripping story of suspicion cast on a priest’s behavior that is less about scandal than about fascinatingly nuanced questions of moral certainty. The show plays Friday and Saturday at 7:30pm, and Sunday at 2:30pm until closing on January 27. All tickets are $10 and are available online at www.MaskandMirror.com/box-office. Advance purchase is suggested due to the small, intimate theatre space. Discretion should be used in bringing children to this play due to the themes explored.
Aaron Morrow, a first time director for Mask & Mirror, has assembled a stellar cast of experienced local actors to bring this amazing show to life, including Kathleen Silloway – a Tualatin resident last seen at Mask & Mirror in last season’s Eleemosynary – as Sister Aloysius, and Amelia Michaels – last seen here in The Receptionist – as Sister James. Jalena Montrond Scott as Mrs. Muller, and Chris Murphy as Father Flynn also appear.
“I was first introduced to ‘Doubt, a Parable,’ doing research for a scene study that I was directing,” says Aaron. “I was drawn in by the power of the climactic confrontation between two of the characters. During preparation for bringing the scene to life, I was struck by the way even a small change in motivation or intent of a character could lead an observer to draw a much different conclusion of who was right and who was wrong. In many ways, that is a reflection of the power of uncertainty in our social interactions – how do we individually assess those whom we warily regard with suspicion, and those to whom we graciously provide the benefit of the doubt?”
“Doubt, A Parable” is the first show of this season’s UnMasked presentations at the Tualatin Heritage Center. UnMasked shows are selected to present unique plays of merit not usually produced by all-volunteer, nonprofit community theatre; especially plays that are edgy: having a bold, provocative, or unconventional quality. They are presented in partnership with the Tualatin Historical Society and funded in part by grants from the Cultural Coalition of Washington County; the Oregon Cultural Trust; and the City of Tualatin Arts Advisory Committee.
Mask & Mirror Community Theatre also presents three family friendly plays each season on their main stage at Calvin Presbyterian Church in Tigard. “The Boys Next Door,” a dramedy about living with a disability by Tom Griffin, opens there on March 2, 2019.
Mask & Mirror Community Theatre is now in its 8th season of presenting high quality and affordable (no tickets are more than $15) live theatre to the citizens of Tigard and Tualatin – using all-volunteer actors, stage crew and administrators.
Participation and membership is open to all. We welcome experienced performers and theatre “wannabes” – we’ll train you!
Helping You Navigate Your Journey Through Parenting: Parenting with the End in Mind
Entertain me with a short visualization: Fast forward in time and picture your front door. You hear a knock on the door. Knock, knock! Who’s there? It’s your child all grown up standing right before you. Imagine your child comes back for a visit at 18, 25, 34 years old. Who do you want to be standing there? What characteristics do you want your child to have as an adult?
If you’ve ever attended one of my parenting classes or workshops, you’ve probably heard me talk about Parenting with the End in Mind. This is how I usually start most of my classes and workshops. Then, we brainstorm altogether and write the characteristics on a white board. Some of the words that come up are: kind, empathetic, competent, loving, confident, respectful, cooperative, educated, hardworking, resilient, self-disciplined, happy, successful, content, funny, etc. There are no wrong answers here, only ones you may value more than others. I’ve had clients sitting in the same room where one of them places great value on their child attaining a high-level college degree and the other doesn’t give a hoot about their child getting a college education. I’ll have someone say that it’s really important that their child grow up to have a sense of humor, and someone else say that’s not even on their radar of importance.
This is a very individual exercise that you and your partner can do at home together as parents of a young child. Post that list of characteristics where you will see them. The list will help you in your parenting. It will help you remember your long-term goals, instead of only immediate results. For example, the long-term goals of developing life skills such as problem solving, respect, communication and self-control rather than outside control can be attained faster when punishment is out of the mix. If my toddler repeatedly draws all over the wall and I repeatedly yell, slap his hand, throw the crayons away, and put him in his room for a long time out, what is he really learning and how will those tactics help shape him into the person I long for him to grow up to be? Of course it is easier to do the above to quickly distinguish the unwanted behavior or to rectify things in the moment. But, have intention and thought for what those long-term goals are… be mindful. Parent with the end in mind.
If those lifelong skills of problem solving, respect, communication and self-control are truly what I’m aiming for, perhaps I will choose other means of disciplining my child. I might talk to him, acknowledge how much fun it is to have a large blank canvas to draw on, and explain that walls are for hanging pictures and putting furniture against. I might brainstorm with him all the other things crayons can be used on plain paper, poster board, coloring books, construction paper, paper on the easel, etc. We might talk about what to do if he really feels like coloring, but he can’t find any appropriate paper. He might come ask a parent for help, he might keep looking himself, or he might decide to do something else entirely. And, yes, he would absolutely be helping me to scrub the crayon off the wall, and I would even thank him for cooperating and helping. The next time he wants to use crayons, I would model what that looks like and remind myself that parenting with the end in mind is my goal and parenting is a marathon. It is not a sprint. It is a marathon that extends well beyond the age of 18 and high school graduation. Run the race as parents knowing what your “end in-mind” is. Knowing this will help guide you in making the kind of decisions to raise the person that will be at your front door in the not so distant future. Use your list as a map of sorts to guide you and help you navigate this most important work of parenting. Start fresh… it’s a new year with new beginnings.
Get involved with Tualatin Youth Softball
Registrations are flowing in and the Tualatin Softball Board is working hard to kick off the 2019 Season. We know it’s hard to think about a spring sport in January, but like any sport things need to be lined up & planned out before practices start, which for all levels except T-Ball is the first week of March. Until registrations are mostly complete, we don’t know the number of teams at each level, how many coaches we need, equipment, uniforms, fields, etc. Please get registered.
In 2018 we invested a lot in the fields at Byrom, and with your support hope to continue the improvements. Can you believe that TuHS Softball went 30-0 as the undefeated 6A State Champ last year? What a fun ride it was to watch players that have grown up in our community and got their start here playing T-Ball and working their way up through the ages/levels. Let’s hope they reload for 2019 and we continue to develop players to feed into the High School program. For Youth Softball we really had a great group of coaches last year, we ran a series of pre-season clinics that everyone gave great feedback on, and the season went great!
Speaking of coaches, we frequently hear from people who hesitate to volunteer because they don’t think they have the skills & experience. While we of course seek out the experienced softball coaches, we also know it’s really about the Attitude & Effort put into it. If you’re willing to learn, put in the effort, and have a positive attitude approach – you will have a positive impact on the players.
Coaching is kind of like having kids, it can be a lot of work, and a pain sometimes, but is also very rewarding. Years ago I was tossed into coaching when my daughter’s soccer coach quit the Wednesday before their first game. The next year I was the head coach, and was also pulled into Coaching Softball. From there I was off and running; coaching multiple teams and multiple sports at the same time, and sometimes as many as four teams (yes, that was nuts!)
Now things are slowing down as my kids are getting older, but I wouldn’t trade those experiences for anything. There is no greater joy than teaching a player something in practice and then seeing them apply it in a game. Those moments like the first pop-fly they catch, first hard hit to the outfield, pitchers first strike out, stealing home, catcher throwing a runner out trying to steal 2nd, turning two on a grounder to short stop, a walk-off hit to win it, backpicking a runner on the cut-off, and so on. So many memories, and only a few about wins & losses – the majority are about when kids worked hard to learn something and then went out and did it.
If there is one thing I want players to learn from sports, is that if you put in the work you will achieve. People will ask me about what my favorite season was, and while I hope those are still in front of me, I could talk about the (rare) undefeated seasons, or about getting to the 2015 LL Softball World Series; but in all honesty my best memories are from the seasons where things weren’t going so well, where the players really had to work to learn & get better to be competitive, had to overcome obstacles, or come together as a team. When I started I bugged the coaches with non-stop questions about things like bunt coverage, how to teach this or that, had other coaches come out and run drills to help us all learn base running, or bunting, and read everything I could about teaching the game. It does take awhile to develop your own groove and style, but it is forever a process of learning and finding new & better ways to help the kids learn.
If you have the time I would strongly encourage getting involved, if not as a head coach then as an assistant. One of the best things about softball is the friendships developed among a group of assistant coaches and helpers so practices can have many stations, is help for field prep and clean up, etc. Will it be easy? Maybe not, and there are some challenges to deal with for any coach, but if you have the right ATTITUDE and put in the EFFORT, there are a lot of experienced coaches in the league that can help you out on almost any topic, any challenge, or any skill you want to teach. If you have any questions, please reach out, would love to pass on the things that so many others have helped me to learn.
Registration:
Registration for the 2019 Softball Season is underway. Tualatin is a member of Oregon District 4, the host for the 11-12 Little League Softball World Series played at Alpenrose Dairy in SW Portland (Aug. 7-14 in 2019.) It is one of the truly special events in our area, hosting teams from around the world
The Genetic Roots of Your Health
No doubt you have seen the advertisements for DNA testing to learn about your ancestry. One service promises you can find out how much Neanderthal DNA you possess and offers the ability to track your Y chromosome and mitochondrial DNA into deep history. Ancestry DNA promises that you can learn your heritage, and find your living relatives otherwise unknown to you. 23 & Me started out their business looking at the health secrets found through DNA testing, but was greatly curtailed by the FDA in what they could report. Conventional medicine thinking is that until we have an approved treatment for what is in your DNA, what good can come from you knowing?
What we all learn heritage-wise is that genetic relatives are detectable until about 5 generations back, after that only your ethnic groups are detectable. Go way back, and we learn everyone from Eurasia seems to have come out of East Africa based on the genetic trail that has been discovered from archeological remains and people living today. If your ancestry of the past 5000 years includes people from the Eurasian continent, you also carry Neanderthal DNA, a near certainty.
As interesting as ancestry information is to learn, the greatest value from having a DNA test done is to learn insights to your own health. This is where the gold mine of
DNA information lies. The way to access what is currently knowable about DNA and health is found by downloading your raw genetic data from the service doing the ancestry testing. You then run it through a 3rd party service that anonymously compares your SNPs (Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms) that is, gene variants, past a database that contains current genetic associations. You download those results as a private, searchable website on your own computer. Then you and your medical providers are able to access your genetic secrets as questions come up.
Many of us are carriers of genetic diseases that show up with much less frequency than do people carrying the gene. Most are recessive, meaning you need two of the carrier genes to have the disease. The gene for Cystic Fibrosis is most common in Northern Europeans, and the gene for Sickle Cell Anemia in people from sub-Saharan Africa. If you are a carrier, it is worth knowing whether you have passed this onto your children, and be aware that the disease could show up in your descendants.
More common SNPs that affect you personally, and that you can do something about are familial hemochromatosis, variants in vitamin D receptors that suggest you need even more, and variants in how well your body processes thyroid hormone, for examples. Knowledge is power to defuse ticking genetic time bombs, and resolve perplexing health symptoms that previously had no obvious cause.
Aging is the other place where knowing what you can about your own DNA can alert you to possibly higher risks of dementia, macular degeneration, and diabetes, to name just three. Why know? So you can deliberately choose lifestyle mitigation strategies that can counter that genetic risk. Most of these topics hiding in your DNA are about increased risks. Most are not curses of certain doom.
Knowing your DNA SNPs can also guide insight to how well you are going to process and tolerate various medications and classes of medications.
This is a new area of insight that is only going to grow as science and medical reporting gain greater insights to what your genes can mean for your health and well being. This information can provide a meaningful guide to the choices you can make now. Knowledge empowers you with the ability to make choices.
The doctors at True Health Medicine have been utilizing genetic testing in diagnosing and devising treatment plans since our day one. I’m excited to expand upon those practices in the New Year by helping people uncover genetic risks and forming healthful mitigation plans wherever possible.
The doctors and staff at True Health Medicine wish everyone a safe, prosperous, healthy and happy New Year!
Column: Aging in Place
Welcome to 2019. The Tualatin Aging Task Force wishes everyone in the Tualatin community Happy New Year. May the warm glow of the holiday season displayed in the outpouring of kindness, giving and sharing with our families, neighbors, friends and those in need continue throughout the year.
January 2019 marks 6 years that the Task Force has been working in the community advocating not only for seniors but all residents of Tualatin. We believe that a community that is better for older adults is a community that is better for everyone. This is the premise that drives the Task Force to continue its work. Some of our accomplishments and involvements over the last 6 years:
• Partnered with the Tualatin Chamber of Commerce to bring Ride Connection to town;
• Led the community grass roots effort to keep the U.S. Post Office at its present location;
• Participated in the city’s focus groups on the Development Code update, the Street Improvement Bond and Parks Master Plan update;
• Partnered with the Chamber of Commerce and city staff and worked for a year with TriMet to increase day time bus service hours to/from Portland on line #96. The new updated Monday through Friday schedule went into effect on December 2, 2018. Check the end of this column for information on how to access the new schedule.
• Worked very closely this past year with the City, Chamber, TriMet and Metro with input on the SW Corridor Project and the light rail terminal at Bridgeport with its impact on the Village Inn. Through another community grass roots effort led by the Task Force,
Tualatin stood up and said ‘keep the Village Inn where it is’ and TriMet is listening. We will know more in the next two months.
• We continue to look at alternate transportation options in and out of Tualatin and affordable housing options to age in place, again working closely with the City and Chamber to be viable and active community partners. As we look to the future of our community, the Task Force wants to stress that age is not a criteria to join our group. We strive to be multi-generational and inclusive. Every opinion, view, input and suggestion is valuable and important. We invite you to join us in our work ahead. We meet the second Monday of each month at 3:00 pm at the Juanita Pohl Center. For questions/concern/information, please contact susancnoack@hotmail.com
Trimet Line #96:
This line is the express bus which now runs Monday through Friday every half hour from 5:15 am to 8:41 pm to Portland with a corresponding return service from Portland. You can go to the TriMet website for a complete schedule and designated stops: www.trimet.org/servicechange. Under “Pick a Line,’ scroll down to Line 96 Tualatin.