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« April 08, 2009 - May 08, 2009 »
 
04 / 8
Start: 6:17 pm

North Tahoe Bonanza, by Kyle Magin

From left, Chris Plastiras, Bryan Wallpe, Blane Johnson, Dr. Vinny D'Ascoli and Michael Smith, the "Five Guys Named More," show off their skills during Thursday's Incline Star Follies dress rehearsal.

From left, Chris Plastiras, Bryan Wallpe, Blane Johnson, Dr. Vinny D'Ascoli and Michael Smith, the "Five Guys Named More," show off their skills during Thursday's Incline Star Follies dress rehearsal.
Courtesy Photo-Jen Schmidt

Kira Potter lip-syncs during the "Let's Get Loud" performance during Thursday's dress rehearsal.

Kira Potter lip-syncs during the "Let's Get Loud" performance during Thursday's dress rehearsal.
Courtesy Photo - Jen Schmidt

INCLINE VILLAGE, Nev. —Ticket sales for the 10th annual Incline Star Follies came in under last year’s sales, but above organizers’ expectations.

Follies, the yearly community lip-sync show, raises money annually for the Incline public schools, to buy technology equipment along with other academic expenditures.

Ron Stichter, the show’s organizer, said ticket sales for the four shows over April 2 and 3 at the Cal Neva Casino’s Frank Sinatra Ballroom totaled nearly $30,000, down from about $32,000 from 2008.

Bolstered by a sellout of the 8:30 p.m. Saturday show, Stichter was pleased with ticket sales and even surprised.

“Quite frankly I was expecting sales to be way under (2008’s tally), I was expecting much worse,” Stichter said. “But people still wanted to go see the show, they showed us we still mattered. I think with tough times people stood by us.”

Ticket sales do not account for all of Follies revenue, Stichter said, as the show annually nets anywhere from $80,000-$90,000.

Other revenue sources include the show’s playbill, which sells ads, and community donations.

Stichter said he’d expect those numbers to start coming in later this month to get a final total for the fundraiser.

“Advertising in the program was down this year,” Stichter said. “We just didn’t have as many pages. I think that’s a result of the economy locally and will send our revenues down.”

04 / 9
04 / 10
Start: 6:15 pm

Special to the Bonanza, by Ed Gurowitz

Ed Gurowitz

Ed Gurowitz

Tough times notwithstanding, it’s hard not to be optimistic after attending the Incline Star Follies.

It’s silly — an amateur hour of local people in outlandish costumes, dancing with varying degrees of imprecision and lip-syncing to loud music in a showroom that is a shadow of its former self.

It’s a group of people — adults and children — having the time of their lives working their tails off to support our schools, and having such an infectious good time that you can’t help but enjoy it.

This being Incline, I’m sure there are people who subscribe wholeheartedly to the first view — fortunately those folks don’t come to the show and spoil it for the rest of us.

I think Star Follies has an importance to this community that goes beyond what it does for the schools. Since the early 90s, a group of writers, researchers and educators has been re-examining the profession of psychology’s focus on pathology and trying out the study of what can go right with people and institutions. These thinkers don’t claim to have invented anything new or created a new profession; rather they distinguish themselves by their perspective. The value of positive psychology lies in its uniting of what had been scattered and disparate lines of theory and research about what makes life most worth living, according to Dr. Martin Seligman, a leader of the movement.

This research suggests that optimism actually affects the quality of our lives. Not an unquestioning, “glass half-full” positive thinking, but a healthy optimism, grounded in reality. Not being Pollyanna and thinking everything is wonderful, but making the best of things that happen. To use Star Follies as an example, we can bemoan funding cuts to the schools, blame the government and the economy and be unhappy, or we can seize the opportunity to create a great community event, have a lot of fun, make new friends and raise a bunch of money in the process. Does that make it right or OK that the schools are underfunded? Of course not. But it gives us something positive we can do in the face of an unpleasant situation.

To use a formula developed by Dr. Tal Ben-Shahar, a positive psychologist at Harvard, we can give ourselves permission to be human — to be unhappy about the situation, to feel powerless. Then we can reconstruct the situation — glean learnings from it and search it for opportunities. Then we keep it in perspective — look at how the problem fits into the great scheme of things with respect to the quality of our lives, and, in the case of Star Follies, shift our perspective from “the state and federal governments should do something” to “we as a community can do something on our own.” PRP — Permission, Reconstruction, Perspective — is at the heart of positive psychology.

I think we’re ripe for a revolution in our perspective. Whatever the economic factors, one thing that got us through the Great Depression was American optimism. Optimism became unfashionable after that, for some reason. It came to be called boosterism and cheerleading.

As the country got more “sophisticated” after World War II, as the pseudo-sophistication of pessimism came into vogue, optimism came to be seen as naïve and “Midwestern.” As much as we may make fun of the French with their veneer of boredom and existential angst, their relationship to the world became our model, at least for those of us who wanted to appear “smart.” Optimism was relegated to the realm of the quaint, and as early as 1949 in South Pacific, Rodgers and Hammerstein poked fun at the “cockeyed optimist, immature and incurably green”

Well, maybe we lost something in “growing up” as a country, and maybe a lot of the ills and malaise of our culture are the national equivalent of a depressive neurosis.

Maybe being “stuck like a dope with a thing called hope” is not such a bad thing. In fact, research in positive psychology shows that pessimism may put people at risk for chronic physical and mental illnesses and an earlier death than their optimistic counterparts.

So let’s give ourselves permission to be human — scared, worried, discouraged; let’s reconstruct — rather than hoping against hope that things will get back to where they were, let’s look for a reset to a more reasonable, sane level; and let’s keep things in perspective — we live in the most beautiful place on earth, we are alive and thriving and we have in our midst people like the producers, directors, cast and crew of Star Follies who are working to make our community a better place and not waiting for “them” to fix it.

Ed Gurowitz has a doctorate in psychology and is a management consultant. He has lived in Incline Village since 1995 and is active in the Democratic Party. He can be reached for comment at egurowitz@gurowitz.com. His columns can be found at www.egurowitz.blogspot.com.

04 / 11
04 / 12
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04 / 14
04 / 15
04 / 16
04 / 17
Start: 3:38 pm

Special to the Bonanza

By Claudia Andersen

Community, what is it exactly? It is certainly more than common
geography. Is it a concept, a feeling, an experience? There are
probably as many answers to that question as there are individuals
living in our “neck of the woods.” Having said that, I bet most would
agree that while they might not be able to describe it in words, they
know it when they see it, feel it or experience it. And there is a lot
of “it” going around lately.

I had the pleasure of
experiencing my first Incline Star Follies show this year and you could
certainly feel community in the air. Young, old, short, tall, show biz
savvy and beginner alike — the fellowship and good wishes were
palpable. All of these stars came together and practiced like crazy
while still keeping up with their daily routines with the goal of
benefiting our children’s education and future.

I was reminded
of being a child and getting such a kick out of seeing adults behave a
little wacky, especially when it was my parents. So thank you Bryan
Wallpe for your Five Guys Named Moe dancing, Alan LeBard for nailing
Beyoncé’s “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It),” Mary Jurkonis and her
fellow “Dolls” in “The Big Dollhouse for hamming it up, to the school
of kids for swimming seamlessly together in your fish hats for “Under
the Sea” and every other performer, producer and behind the scenes crew
member that put your all into creating fun for us in the audience. I
and I’m sure the rest of my fellow audience members, left the theatre
that evening with a feeling of true community in our hearts.

It
might not be as entertaining as a star studded extravaganza, but in
observing the 21 brave souls that are giving of their time and talents
on the Incline Schools Reflective Task Force Committee one can see the
concept of community in action. They are asking hard questions and
tackling tough challenges — not the least of which is coming up with
recommendations for future opportunities for Incline Schools after only
a handful of meetings. Even without a crystal ball, they are
conscientiously working together to research options and make quality
suggestions to the Washoe County School Board designed to ensure a
healthy future for Incline Schools. I invite you to join me in the
community member gallery for the next meeting of the task force to see
for yourself.

I know another place for a truly innovative
community experience. Visit the Donald W. Reynolds Community Non-Profit
Center the second Wednesday morning of any month and immerse yourself
in community collaboration. This is where the member organizations of
the Parasol Community Collaboration and their partners gather together
to do much more than network. Rather, nonprofit agencies, businesses
and community members park their egos at the door, roll up their
sleeves and work toward the common goal of creating a better community
for all of us while effectively using limited community resources.
Since words can’t describe this amazing process, you will have to come
and experience this style of community engagement for yourself.

No
matter how you view community, if you haven’t already, I encourage you
to get involved. This is one spectacular neighborhood where any
individual can have a strong, positive impact. Plus it’s not just any
community — it’s yours.

We at the Parasol Tahoe Community Foundation support an engaged and healthy community in all its forms. E-mail us at info@parasol.org to tell us your positive stories of community.

Claudia Andersen is the president of the Parasol Tahoe Community Foundation. 

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