Telling Stories At An Intimate Country Theater

A rural performance hall, they call it — which sums it up very nicely, I’d say. The Ancram Opera House started life as Ancram Grange #955 in 1927, a place to address the social, educational, economic and, likely, political concerns of farmers cultivating crops and cows and families in these rolling hills.

Now this building, a Colonial clapboard imaginatively topped by a Mansard roof, draws people to the arts: music, plays, cabarets and stories.

This latest life for the building began when Jeffrey Mousseau, director/producer, and Paul Ricciardo, actor, vocal coach and teacher, discovered it back in 2006 while weekending in Hudson. They came to the opera house to see a production of “The Turn of the Screw,” and something about the place stirred their imaginations.

It was such an intimate setting, they would say to each other. In the country. What a beautiful little theater. Wouldn’t it be great to direct something there?

So last year they bought it.

This is the kind of situation theater people dream of. Their own playhouse. Their own ideas. And these two have been theater people for quite a while. Mousseau says he was always fascinated by make believe. “I finally found my home in creating theater.”

Ricciardo grew up in a working-class family in Chelmsford, Mass., with no interest in the arts. 

“I was an outsider, growing up, finding refuge in dreams. Somehow, I ended up in an audition and got a role. I loved the collaboration, and from age 12 on I was always in a play.” 

But after college, Ricciardo put that life on hold. “As a young gay man I felt a need to get involved in the AIDs crisis.” He got a job in HIV-AIDs services in New York, met Mousseau and gradually moved back into stage work and teaching theater.

“Now I know I am a good actor. But I am an excellent teacher,” Ricciardo tells me, which gets us into an interesting facet of the Ancram Opera House productions. Storytelling, as in NPR’s Moth Radio Hour. The name comes from Moth creator George Dawes Green, who grew up in rural Georgia, spinning stories on the front porch with friends on hot summer nights, while moths flitted in and out of the fading light. The idea is about first-person story telling, and while many people have riveting tales to tell, they may not be riveting at getting that story across. That’s where coach and teacher Ricciardo comes in.

Just as the Moth radio show does it, the Ancram Opera House has a phone number for people to pitch their true story. They have a minute to do it. And if Mousseau and Ricciardo like what they hear, the callers are invited to come in and work on their storytelling skills. As the coaching progresses, so do the stories, morphing, sometimes, into very different tales. 

The next storytelling event at the Ancram Opera House (“Real People, Real Stories”) will be Dec.17 at 3 p.m. And the phone number for anyone aiming to pitch a story for an event next year is 518-250-9791. The number for anyone reserving tickets for the show is 518-329-0114.

To celebrate their first year at the theater, Mousseau and Ricciardo are hosting a Thanksgiving Weekend Open House on Nov. 26, from 3 to 5 p.m. It’s at the opera house, 1330 County Route 7, Ancram, N.Y. There will be music and refreshments, and the event is free, but RSVPs are appreciated: call 518-329-0114.

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