Granddaughter Taylor Bera’s odyssey, which started in August last year when she walked into a rehearsal hall in New York City, is near an end. She joins the cast of “Little House on the Prairie The Musical” for one last trip on the trail this week.
But first, she gets an answer to the question that she asked her stage parents when playing the littlest Ingalls sister Carrie. Nightly, before the family packed up the wagon train and started their trek, Carrie asked them, “Where is West?”
On Wednesday, we’ll head almost as far Northwest as the continental United States allows, when we go to Spokane, WA, for six shows.
Then we’ll head back to New Jersey and Taylor will return to family and friends and local activities. Who would have thought eight months ago that out “little” Taylor would have grown too tall to play the littlest Ingalls sister?
But it’s true! When she took the stage last week in Appleton, WI, she was nearly as tall as Laura, so it was time to move on even though the producers wanted her to complete the tour in her original role as Ruby and a member of the ensemble. But she was missed at home –eight months is a long time to be away-and her parents didn’t renew her contract.
It’s been a real trip though to get to this point and Little House’s time in Appleton was absolutely great for everyone including Helen and myself.
For those of you who don’t know, Appleton was the boyhood home of magician Harry Houdini then known as Ehrich Weiss. I didn’t know that even though I was a “boy magician” in my youth and dreamed at one time of doing the feats of magic that he and other famous magicians performed. His father was the local Rabbi before the family moved to Milwaukee and then New York City.
Taylor and her classmate, Michael Boxleitner, got to tour the Houdini museum while we were in Appleton as part of their schoolwork. Don’t know who had a better time—me or the kids or their tutor Carolyn Dunning! The kids got to try their hand at some of Houdini’s tricks and escapes including the straitjacket escape that Houdini made famous. Of course, this version used Velcro strips, so Michael had no trouble breaking free. Taylor tried to follow the instructions on how Houdini did it and but was not successful.
The exhibit is housed in Appleton’s History Museum At the Castle which includes exhibits about the works of Edna Ferber, a Pulitzer prize-winning author who grew up in the town and the infamous Sen. Joe McCarthy, who was also born and raised in Appleton. The city’s organized sports were also highlighted in an exhibit. A little known fact is that the Yankees’ current third baseman, Alex Rodriguez, didn’t sit out the 1994 strike—he played for the minor league Appleton Foxes. A portrait of him and a bat he broke while playing are on display in the Castle.
Downtown in Houdini Square is a plaque noting the night when Ehrich and his older brother “pranked” the town by unlocking all of the businesses on College Avenue, the main street in Appleton. The plaque didn’t note the punishment they received but I’m sure the business owners weren’t very happy with the youngsters.
The cast and crew also took a morning to work with the local Habitat for Humanity project. Habitat leaders this time took us to a ReStore outlet—something I had never heard of. ReStore is a retail outlet that accepts donations of new and gently used building materials, which are in turn sold to the public at greatly discounted prices. All of the profits then go to the local Habitat for Humanity’s effort to eliminate substandard housing.
At the Appleton ReStore location, we constructed the floors, walls and roof sections for sheds that will be sold to the public. We did this work inside because it was too cold and windy to work outside at a Habitat construction site where the shed would be built onsite.
Overall the weather in Appleton was much better than anticipated before we got there from the southern climate we had basked in Florida and North Carolina. We had to use winter wear for a couple of the days but the hotel where we stayed was right across the street from the Fox Cities Performing Arts Center where Little House played for the week to large and enthusiastic crowds.
The Arts Center is about 10 years old and was a “performer friendly environment” with large and spacious dressing rooms on the same level as the stage and permitted easy crossover between scenes for the cast. This is not something the cast has been able to enjoy at the other 19 stops so far on the tour.
All of the “kids”—old and young alike-- in the cast and crew got to partake in the indoor pool and hot tub that the hotel offered. The area included ping pong tables and a full workout area that was open all hours of the days and night. It was not something we’ve really had at any other stop.
Overall, Appleton gets an A+ as a tour stop in my book.
Photos from our time in Appleton can be found at:
http://www.kodakgallery.com/gallery/creativeapps/slideShow/Main.jsp?token=563815674803%3A348337530&sourceId=533754321803&cm_mmc=eMail-_-Share-_-Photos-_-Sharer
We’re now enjoying a 10-day break and as I noted earlier, we’ll pack up and head back to the prairie on Wednesday for one last set of performances. I know we’ll come back with lots of memories from the last eight months.
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