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Young actors show off their talent in wrap-up performance

A group of young actors strutted their stuff on stage last Friday. July 10 was the final day of practice and the date of the performance for the first of several classes participating in the 2015 Souris Valley Summer Theatre Camp.
Souris Valley Theatre Camp 2015 Actors
From left, Addison Shiels, Kaylee Rosengren, Amarra Pine, Adeon Sullivan, Isabella Semenuik, Alex Gillies, and Tobin Johnson perform onstage at the final day of the age six to eight class at the Souris Valley Theatre Camp. Photo courtesy of Bruce Duncan.

A group of young actors strutted their stuff on stage last Friday. July 10 was the final day of practice and the date of the performance for the first of several classes participating in the 2015 Souris Valley Summer Theatre Camp. Seventeen students in the ages six to eight class, the first of several set to take place in the coming weeks, took to the stage and performed a play they crafted up together from their own imaginations.

鈥淚 like this year better than the first year I attended, because we can make up our own stories. Last year there were lines for us and we only got to say a couple of lines,鈥 said returning student Isabelle Semeniuk. 鈥淲e also get to decorate our own costumes.鈥

Matthew Gillies, another camp-goer, agreed: 鈥淚 like that we get to choose our own line and choose our characters. I like that we also have lots of games out here.鈥

This performance was the result of spending the week, heading up to that point, hard at work practicing all the necessary techniques and aspects of acting under the guidance of camp coordinators Josh Pel茅 and Blair Wrubleski.

Before the lunchtime performance by the class, Pel茅 expressed how impressed he was with the creativity of all the participants. He and Wrubleski worked with the students all week and found them to be quite talented.

鈥淚t鈥檚 incredible, seeing some of the returning students this year, and how much they鈥檝e improved throughout the years. They came up with this show; all of the lines they say in the show, they made up themselves,鈥 said Pel茅. 鈥淭hey even wrote a song this year, at the end of the show. The amount of talent in these 6 to 8 year-olds is just insane.鈥

Friday鈥檚 performance was a unique mix of several fairy tales: a group of humans ended up getting stranded in a mythical realm of Candy Land, searching for treasure with the help of a wolf and the local gummy-bears.

The prior week鈥檚 camp activities were focused on the cultivation of skills, with instructors and students working as a team, playing games with the specific goal in mind of building necessary skills for performance arts.

The games were meant to build skills in character development and voice projection. They included the 鈥淪ound Machine,鈥 in which students were instructed to make a sequence of noises together, practicing being heard, while properly projecting their voices.

Another game practiced was 鈥淲ink Murderer,鈥 a game that required participants to practice their sleuthing skills to figure out the identity of a secret 鈥渕urderer,鈥 who makes others lie down with a quick wink.

The camp is currently in its first of three weeks for the ages nine to 13 class, the ages 13-16 class, and the new Encore Camp, a camp for those aged 10 to 16, who missed prior camps.

鈥淭he other camps are going to be a bit different, working on individual skills, rather than creating a group collective piece,鈥 said Pel茅. 鈥淲e鈥檒l still have a big performance at the end, but it鈥檒l be more of a variety show than a collective piece all together.鈥

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