There are some disadvantages to being an actor. Waiting by the phone like a fifteen-year-old girl is one. However, it does have its advantages. Like participating in the Big Shows of the Young Storytellers Foundation, which are an absolute blast.
There are some disadvantages to being an actor. Waiting by the phone like a fifteen-year-old girl is one. However, it does have its advantages. Like participating in the Big Shows of the Young Storytellers Foundation, which are an absolute blast.
World Elder Abuse Awareness Day is held annually on June 15. As part of the events surrounding this call-to-action, the National Center on Elder Abuse is once again running my PSA on the issue in movie theatres around the country. (A short article on that is here.) The PSA on YouTube is here, and my post last year on the PSA is here.
A couple articles on World Elder Abuse Awareness Day are here and here.
(Apparently, I have to get this out of my system today, so: herehearhierheerhareherehearheearheeeeerrrrreee. Whew.)
And some FAQs on Elder Abuse are here. Here’s perhaps the most important one, a general definition of elder abuse. If you see elder abuse, or evidence of it, please report it to the authorities immediately.
Does it count as charity or helping if it’s so much fun that you’d pay to do it?
That’s the question asked by most actors and writers who work with the LA-based Young Storytellers Foundation. Mentors from the group guide young, at-risk students as they write a short play for six weeks, and then a number of the plays are performed by actors at a Big Show before parents and other students. Check out the list of actors who’ve participated here.
The Foundation targets Title 1 schools with little or no arts education, and it doesn’t take a Maurice Sendak to imagine the thrill the kids get at creating a work of their own and then seeing adults perform it.
Before the show starts, all the actors line up. Then, one by one, the mentors bring their student-writers up to the stage and the student ask the actors to play different parts. I’m not sure I’ve ever been so excited about being cast as at Big Shows.
So a couple days ago I finally got the opportunity to participate again in a Big Show after too long off. I was cast in almost all the plays and had these roles: an over-adventurous baby dragon, a stern schoolyard officer, a grateful mayor, a disappearing ancient Egyptian thug, a proud dad, a bullied younger brother, and — perhaps my favorite — I narrated the tale of the evil gerbil Billy, who was nearly thwarted by the Gerbil Protection Program.
If you’re an actor or writer, try it: It’s a ball, trust me. And if you’re neither but love the idea, the YSF is a 501c3 non-profit organization, so your donation is tax-deductible.
Go on: Helping others is allowed to be fun. (And this is from someone who survived sixteen years of Catholic school.)
This weekend I’ll be in lovely Williamsburg, VA on the campus of William & Mary. The occasion is the 2010 Int’l Mercury Expo, subtitled ‘A hazard without borders.’ I’m scheduled to speak to the acting students (poor things) at lunch on Saturday, and that evening I’ll be talking to student and the public on social activism. The schedule is here, the school calendar page here, and the Facebook page for the event is here.
Some of you may recall that I’m a spokesperson for the cause of Elder Abuse awareness.
This piece from the DOJ site helps explain why this issue needs to be addressed as quickly as possible:
“In the United States, the issue of elder mistreatment is garnering the attention of the law enforcement, medical, and research communities as more people are living longer than ever before. This trend is expected to increase, as the U.S. Census Bureau projects that more than 62 million Americans will be age 65 or older in 2025, an increase of 78 percent from 2001, and more than 7.4 million will be age 85 or older, an increase of nearly 68 percent from 2001.[1] This aging population will require more care and protection than is currently available or possible.”
For help and information, please visit the Natl Center on Elder Abuse Awareness, at www.ncea.aoa.gov/.
Finally, I just learned from the NCEA that the PSA’s I shot for which played in a number of movie theatres last summer will also run this year, from late May to late June. My original post on them is here.