Region One Arts Day is 20 and counting

LAKEVILLE — Region One Arts Day began its 20th year at The Hotchkiss School on Wednesday, March 12, with puppeteer Leslie Carrara-Rudolph’s high-energy warm-up show — featuring her friends Slax and Lolly Landpop.Using the puppets and adopting a variety of personas, she had the fourth-graders fully engaged by the end of her show.The children broke into smaller groups and went off for the first round of workshops. Joel Schapira’s group, with about 12 students, was absolutely still as the children concentrated on their cigar-box rooms.“This is the sign of a good workshop,” whispered Schapira. “It’s quiet, peaceful and industrious.“My daughter Rachel [who was helping] said, ‘Hey Dad, let’s just leave.’”Carrara-Rudolph had a puppet-making workshop, where students got a closer look at Slax.One activity, with groups of four or five children, involved a bag with an assortment of items. The groups had a few minutes to assemble a puppet from things such as a badminton racket, a couple of bell-like tassels on strings and some green hairy stuff of indeterminate origin.Working quickly, the group produced “Slimebush.” Then the entire group moved on to dragons, made from manila envelopes and green plastic wrap.Joe Brien was hosting a hand-puppet workshop. Holding up an unadorned puppet made from foam rubber, he asked, “What is the puppet missing?”The children responded: Hair, arms, clothes.“So we’ll make the puppet body and then personalize,” continued Brien.Florence Budge has been principal of Kent Center School — and chairman of the Arts Day committee — for two years. She said, “This is the most organized event ever. The teachers and committee members are phenomenal and the kids have such a good time.”Brad Faus, an art teacher at The Hotchkiss School and chairman of the board of directors for the Arts Fund for Region One (which is a fund of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation), helps organize the event every year. He has been working on Arts Day for 20 years, but gives credit to the committee and thanks to The Hotchkiss School for allowing the use of the campus.“It’s great because of the committee,” he said, taking a short break from helping shepherd youngsters from room to room.“I’m the operational guy and I recruit the main stage performers. “It’s a very popular event for our artists, they love the idea of it, it’s an immersion in the visual and performing arts. We try to make the performances relevant, fun and enjoyable for the age group. “Leslie Cararra-Rudolph sets an incredible imagination-centered starting point for the day. She’s a Sesame Street puppeteer. She’s from Brooklyn and shoots on the Sesame Street schedule, which is about eight weeks a year, and she has her own production company. We found her through another puppeteer. She does a lot of music, and her focus is on kids in the 8-to-12 age group. “We have the Housatonic Musical Theater kids here too, and they do some numbers from ‘Hello, Dolly.’ We do a ‘how do you audition’ workshop with them. We find that a lot of kids from the area do try out for shows. There’s been a big bump in the number of kids who audition, and we can track it back to our workshops. At this point, most of the Musical Theater Society performers took part in Arts Day when they were in fourth grade, and they enjoy coming back. And the younger kids often recognize the older kids. The workshop helps them see the next step they can take with participating in the arts. “We do underwriting for this program, at about $9,000 for the day. We try to get local businesses to contribute. With the economy, that’s become more and more of a challenge. It tends to be the same generous donors. The Arts Fund also helps with summer study in the arts for area students; we often have 30 to 40 students who get some funding. “Arts Day is so wonderfully embraced by the schools and the performers. The teachers have been a central part of it, and this almost runs itself. We do need to and love to think this could keep on going, even when the original participants are no longer taking part. We would hope that the Arts Fund and Arts Day transcend the individuals; we hope the passion will continue. “Hotchkiss is generous in offering us the facility, and they help with some of the expenses. We would love to have a couple of really big donations … maybe $30,000 or $40,000 a year. If we could do that, we could go on forever.”

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