Grand tour
JOEL MARTIN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 3 months, 1 week 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. | April 8, 2026 6:47 PM
SOAP LAKE — There’s adventure, comedy and mystery in the Masquers Theater’s production of “Around the World in 80 Days,” opening Friday.
“You have elephants, you have typhoons, you have a (scene in India) where they’re being chased by people who are shooting at them,” said director Cynthia Beyer. “A lot of action.”
“Around the World in 80 Days” has 32 characters and was originally written for a cast of six people, Beyer said. That was a little bit much for the Masquers to take on, she said.
“One actor was supposed to do 15 parts, another was supposed to do 12,” she said. “And I’m like, yeah, we’re not professionals here. We’re community theater.”
The Masquers production has 10 actors, most of whom have three or four roles. In addition, the characters take turns doing narration between scenes.
The play, by Mark Brown, is adapted from the classic Jules Verne novel. In 1872, wealthy businessman Phileas Fogg (Blane Schafer) makes a 20,000-pound bet that by steamship and train, he can travel to India, Hong Kong, Japan, and the U.S. and arrive back in London exactly 80 days later. Fogg is accompanied by his French manservant Passepartout (Patrick Rosman) and dogged by Detective Fix (Tina Ferrill), who is convinced Fogg is a wanted bank robber. Along the way, Fogg and Passepartout sail through a storm, purchase an elephant, fight off Native Americans in a wind-driven wagon and rescue Princess Aouda (Kristina Allman) from being burned alive.
“I’m the damsel in distress,” said Allman, who plays two other characters besides the princess. “It’s a slow build. At first, (Aouda) is very timid, very shy, doesn’t say much. But toward the end she starts speaking her mind, telling the men who’s really in charge here.”
“Shooting the Apaches,” Dave Stearns interjected. Stearns plays four roles himself, as well as narrating between – and sometimes in the middle of – scenes.
“This play breaks the fourth wall quite a bit,” Stearns said. “We’re always coming straight out and addressing the audience.”
All told, there are 29 set changes, Beyer said, made possible by the stage manager, Beyer’s daughter Mistya Zaleski.
“She is a miracle worker when it comes to being a stage manager,” Beyer said. “We have ship railings, ship wheels, a judge’s bench, a train. It’s a whole bunch of (locations).”
“Our techies are amazing,” Allman said. “This show would not happen without them.”
There’s a lot for the actors to learn for “Around the World in 80 Days,” Beyer said.
“It’s a very wordy play,” she said. “You don’t realize it until you actually start listening to it or reading it. It’s a lot of words and there’s a lot of places and dates and times that you have to remember.”
Beyer helps the audience keep the places straight with signs indicating where the characters are heading next, she said: London to Suez, Egypt; Suez to Bombay, India; Bombay to Calcutta.
“The way people describe what is happening and what we are seeing, it’s really easy to get lost in that imagery,” Allman said.
‘Around the World in 80 Days’
Directed by Cynthia Beyer
April 10-26
Fridays and Saturdays 7:30 p.m.
Sundays 2 p.m.
Masquers Theater
322 E. Main Ave., Soap Lake
Tickets and info: www.masquers.com
Cast:
Blane Schafer: Phileas Fogg
Patrick Rosman: Passepartout
Tina Ferrill: John Sullivan, Detective Fix
Kristina Allman: James Forster, Priest, Princess Aouda
Theseus Barry: Gauthier Ralph, British Consul, Director of Police, Clerk, Priest
Randy Martin: Sir Francis, Judge Obadiah, Chinese Broker, Ship Clerk
Dave Stearns: Bunsby, Proctor, Engineer, Mudge
Kathleen Rath: Speedy, Ship Engineer, Train Clerk
Jesse Casey: Andrew Stuart, Indian Conductor, Elephant Owner, Young Parsi, U.S. Conductor
Virginia Stearns: Priest, Oysterpuff, Rev. Wilson’s Servant, Newspaperman
ARTICLES BY JOEL MARTIN
Alleged assault on officer, paramedic lands man in jail
MOSES LAKE — A man was arrested Tuesday after he allegedly assaulted a paramedic and a Moses Lake Police Officer, according to a statement from the MLPD. Jared Blake Hunter, 34, was booked into Grant County Jail on charges of third-degree assault – law enforcement officer, according to Grant County Jail records.
Man arrested in Moses Lake for drive-by shooting
MOSES LAKE — A Moses Lake man was arrested in a drive-by shooting incident in the Cascade Valley area of Moses Lake Tuesday night, according to a statement from the Grant County Sheriff’s Office. Austin Bennett, 27, was booked into jail on suspicion of drive-by shooting, according to the Grant County Jail roster. As of Wednesday morning, he did not have a listed bail amount. At about 9:10 p.m. Tuesday, GCSO deputies and Moses Lake Police officers responded to reports of shots fired in the 7900 block of Stanley Road Northeast, according to the statement. Investigators collected evidence at the scene, including a spent .223-caliber cartridge casing.
National Night Out
Police departments prepare to meet the public next month
MOSES LAKE — The Ephrata Police Department will host its first National Night Out this year, joining several other Basin communities. “We’ll have static vehicle displays: one of our patrol cars, the fire truck, (and) Lifeline is hopefully going to be joining us with an ambulance,” EPD Office manager Jennifer Hansen said. “We’ll be serving free hot dogs and everyone is invited for a free swim.” The event will be held Aug. 4 at Splash Zone, the city water park, according to Hansen, who took the lead in planning the event. It’s long been a priority of the department to get to where it could host National Night Out, and although this is the first year, Hansen said, it won’t be the last.


