Oregon Children's Theatre Dec/Nov | Page 45

shooting. The age limit is 15 and up, our highest yet. The phenomenon of school shootings is new and perplexing. How does someone go unnoticed and then suddenly emerge as a shooter? I want us to be proactive, to talk about the bad stuff before it happens [again]. hat are some misconceptions about “children’s theatre?” That it’s somehow “less than,” that it’s just clowns tying balloons onstage. If that was ever true, it’s not anymore. Writers whose work has been on Broadway also write for child audiences. We believe good acting is good acting, and a good play is a good play. Our audiences are ready to suspend their disbelief, and they deserve high-caliber productions. That it’s [necessarily] fairytales or old stories. We think kids want to see their stories; that’s why we have more of a contemporary literature bent than a classic one. That it’s for younger kids. Internationally, “youth theatre” spans from age 4 all the way up to 25. Children’s theatre is so new in the U.S. It’s only really been widespread for about the last 50 years. Tell us about the upcoming shows. Ramona Quimby, I see as a great Portland story. Of course Beverly Cleary is an Oregon writer, so the setting already feels appropriate ... but more than that, Ramona’s a person, an individual. She’s mischievous, and she reacts to things in her own way. That’s why little girls like her. I personally sympathize with her sister Beezus, who is a reasonable human being trying to cope with a sibling who takes up her whole family’ ́