Missoula Children’s Theater to stage ‘The Wizard of Oz’ Friday and Saturday
JOEL MARTIN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 1 year, 9 months AGO
Joel Martin has been with the Columbia Basin Herald for more than 25 years in a variety of roles and is the most-tenured employee in the building. Martin is a married father of eight and enjoys spending time with his children and his wife, Christina. He is passionate about the paper’s mission of informing the people of the Columbia Basin because he knows it is important to record the history of the communities the publication serves. | August 8, 2024 2:40 AM
OTHELLO — Missoula Children’s Theatre will present “The Wizard of Oz” on Friday and Saturday at Bailie Memorial Youth Ranch, starring 64 local children from Adams and Franklin counties.
“They have people from Warden, Royal (City), Othello, Mesa, Pasco, Kennewick, Hawaii and, I think, Idaho,” said Charity Miller of Othello, the mother of one of the young actors who will be participating. “We have kids from all over the place.”
MCT, based in Missoula, Montana, does week-long trips to towns all over the U.S. and occasionally Canada, casting local children 5-14 years old into a musical performance of a well-known story.
“They send a two-person acting (team), and they have all the props and the stage in the back of their truck,” Miller said. “They have auditions starting on Monday, and at the end of two hours, each kid is cast in a role.”
Depending on the role, the children rehearse as much as four hours a day Monday through Thursday and finish up with two performances, she said.
The story of “The Wizard of Oz” is well known to just about everybody: A Kansas girl is swept up in a tornado and deposited in a magical land. With the help of a scarecrow, a tin woodman and a cowardly lion, and pursued by a wicked witch, she seeks out the eponymous wizard in the hope that he can send her home. The 1939 film version has been a staple of TV for decades, and most people can sing at least some of the songs from it by heart.
The songs in the MCT production aren’t the same ones, according to MCT’s website, but they’ll strike a familiar chord anyway. Songs like “Rainbow,” “Raspberry Muffins” and “Follow Your Feet” tell the story and are easy for kids of all ages to memorize and sing.
MCT is a regular staple of the Columbia Basin Allied Arts season in Moses Lake and had come to Royal City in the past as well, Miller said. But this year the Royal Parent-Teacher Organization found the tour too expensive, much to the disappointment of Miller’s 10-year-old daughter Taiya.
“I spent two months trying to find somebody who wanted to do a project and bring Missoula Children’s Theatre to our area, and everyone was like ‘Oh, that sounds like a fabulous idea, but not this year,’” Miller said. “Finally we talked to Sally (Cottrell, administrator of Bailie Memorial Youth Ranch) and she opened up her gym to us and ended up funding it as well.”
“The Wizard of Oz” will be performed at Bailie Memorial Youth Ranch on Friday at 6 p.m. and Saturday at 1:30 p.m. Bailie Memorial Youth Ranch is located at 131 Memorial Lane, just off Sagehill Road between Othello and Basin City.
ARTICLES BY JOEL MARTIN
Mail carriers to collect food Saturday
MOSES LAKE — Mail carriers in Moses Lake will collect food for the Moses Lake Food Bank Saturday, part of the annual Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive. “(We’re asking) for a small donation of non-perishable food by your mailbox,” said carrier Michelle Schmidt, who’s coordinating the drive this year for Moses Lake. “And then on Saturday when we’re delivering, we’ll be picking up the food as we go along our route.” Schmidt suggested marking the food donation clearly, so carriers don’t pick up someone’s delivery order from a store. Anyone wanting more information can ask their mail carrier. The drive, put on by the National Association of Letter Carriers the second Saturday in May, has been going on since 1993, according to the NALC’s website.
NCWJLS kicks off livestock show season
MOSES LAKE — Young animal growers started the season March 19-21 at the North Central Washington Junior Livestock, held at the Grant County Fairgrounds in Moses Lake. “We are the first (show) of the year,” said Michelle Farrer, show manager for the NCWJLS. “So we’re the first opportunity for kids to get their animals in the show ring and work those jitters out and practice for larger shows around the area, including county shows.” The sale is a three-day affair, Farrer said. The exhibitors weigh in Thursday afternoon, show their animals all day Friday, and then they’re judged on Saturday morning. Also Saturday morning is a meat judging contest, Farrer said.
Vanderhoff named Apple Blossom Citizen of the Year
WENATCHEE — Delbert Vanderhoff of Wenatchee had no idea he’d been named the 2026 Apple Blossom Citizen of the Year. “I can’t believe they did that,” Vanderhoff said. “I’ve always told my kids, ‘This is a small town. I know everybody. You can probably do things, but you need to understand that I will find out.’ When Darci (Christopherson) came in and surprised me, I said, ‘I can’t believe you kept it a secret.’” Christopherson, the Apple Blossom Festival coordinator, said Vanderhoff was selected by a board made up of past winners, who look for things like community involvement, commitment to furthering the industry and mentoring the next generation of growers. “(Vanderhoff) has been in the business since he graduated high school,” Christopherson said. “He’s very passionate about it.