Page 2A // The Brunswick News // Friday, March 9,...
Transcript of Page 2A // The Brunswick News // Friday, March 9,...
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You are invited to the ordination
service for Dr. Lucy F. Shaw
at St. James Baptist Church
located at 1505 F Street (corner
of F Street and MLK). The service
will be held on Sunday March
11, 2018 at 3:00 p.m. God has
truly been in the blessing business
with me. I am truly thankful that
He chose me for the duties of His
ministry. Please come out and help
me celebrate this joyous occasion
in my life. For further information
call (912) 571-2224.
Dr. Lucy F. Shaw
God’s Blessings,
WOMEN’S CONFERENCECHOSEN: To Lead, To Serve, To Empower
MARCH 17, 2018 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM
St. Andrews CME Church2101 Albany Street, Brunswick, GA 31520
Presenters: Dr. Markisha Butler, Regional Apprenticeship Coordinator
Ms. Elaine Griffin, DesignerMrs. Terri Evans, Executive Director, Coastal Coalition for Children
Mrs. Saroyi Morris, District Program Manager
The Word: Pastor Debbie Travis
Concert following lunch:
Golden Isles Youth EnsembleCHOSEN of Atlanta GA
Registration: $20 (Light Breakfast and Lunch included)
Rev. George A. Jackson – Pastor
WWW.EVENTBRITE.COM/E/WOMENS-CONFERENCE-CHOSEN-
TO-LEAD-TO-SERVE-TO-EMPOWER-TICKETS-43611864260
A Romantic Comedyby Norm Foster
Directed by Jackie Santoro
Produced by Robin McMillan
March 2, 3, 9, 10, 16, 17 at 7:30 p.m.
Matinées: March 4, 11, 18 at 3:00 p.m.
Adults $20 • College Students, Active Military $10
Students (18 and under) $5
Tickets may be purchased at the theatre on the
day of the performance, or on the website
www.theislandplayers.com.
Website ticket purchases must be made at least 3 hours prior to the performance
for which they will be used. Tickets purchased on the website
will be held at the “Will Call” table.
The Affections of May was originally produced at Theatre New Brunswick in 1990.
It is staged by arrangement with Pam Winter, Gary Goddard Agency,
www.garygoddardagency.com
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con tac t M ike Lynch i n B runsw ick a t 912-506-2673 .
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Page 2A // The Brunswick News // Friday, March 9, 2018
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By LAUREN [email protected]
Just over a year ago, Vince Vawter, the award-winning author of “Paperboy,” mailed a copy of his book and a note to Jim Wann, a Tony-nomi-nated composer whom he’d never met.
In the note, Vawter asked Wann to read his book and to consider how it might be transformed into a musical.
The pair have worked on the project for a year now. Wann is a resident of Tybee Island, and Vawter lives in Knoxville, Tenn. Across that distance, they’ve exchanged ideas and song samples, craft-ing the musical.
That work led them to Fred-erica Academy on Wednes-day, when the two men un-veiled pieces of the play for the fi rst time to a group of students.
“This is the fi rst time we’ve told the public about it,” Vaw-ter said.
Vawter fi rst visited Fred-erica’s students in the fall of 2016, when he talked with
them about his book “Pa-perboy” and its inspirations. Many students at the school have been assigned to read the book.
“I had a great experience with the students the last time, and I thought that it might help that some had read the book,” Vawter said. “… This is such a friendly campus, I felt like we could have a dia-logue with the students, and they would give us their hon-est feedback about what they thought about the songs and what they thought about our idea.”
“Paperboy” is set in Mem-phis in 1959, and it tells the story of an 11-year-old boy who struggles with a stutter. The boy takes over a paper route one summer, forcing him to communicate with the customers along the route. He uses his typewriter to fi nd his voice.
The novel’s protagonist represents Vawter as a young boy.
When Vawter began to con-sider turning the book into a play, he shared the idea with
a friend, who recommended he make “Paperboy” into a musical.
“He said it should be a musi-cal because it’s got the perfect feeling and it’s got the perfect form,” Vawter told Frederica’s students on Wednesday. “And I said, ‘Well OK, but I don’t know anything about music. I don’t know how to write songs. I do know three chords on the guitar, but that’s it.”
So Vawter reached out to Wann, who created and starred in “Pump Boys and Dinettes” on Broadway.
The timing, Wann said, was perfect.
“It just caught me at just the right time,” he said. “I was really ready for a new chal-lenge. And so I read his book and I loved ‘Paperboy.’”
Wann began to send Vaw-ter songs every week. Vawter said he’s been blown away with Wann’s musical cre-ations.
“What Jim does is he takes my story and he doesn’t re-peat the story,” Vawter said. “He adds to it with his songs.”
Wann performed several
of the songs for Frederica’s students, and Vawter read parts of the script to set up the scenes.
They hoped to gauge the students’ initial reactions.
“No one has ever heard these songs. They’re com-pletely new,” Vawter said. “And we think they’re good, but we kind of want to see what other people think about it.”
Vawter will also soon pub-lish “Copyboy,” the sequel to “Paperboy,” at the start of August. Capstone Publishers will publish the book.
“I’m excited about it,” Vaw-ter said. “It continues his sto-ry, although it skips six years … It tells how he has matured with his stutter and with his personality.”
Vawter’s unsure right now how the musical version of “Paperboy” will make it to the stage.
“It’s just evolving purely organically,” he said. “We don’t know what path we’re going to take. We’re kind of hoping that somebody can produce it.”
Author, composer share musical project
Bobby Haven/The Brunswick News
Author Vince Vawter, le� , and composer Jim Wann discuss with Frederica Academy students their collaboration turning Vawter’s book ‘Paperboy’ into a musical.
By LAUREN MCDONALD
The Glynn County Board of Education plans to vote Tuesday on whether to adopt a new strategic plan that has been in the works for several months.
Valerie Whitehead, execu-tive director of strategy and innovation for Glynn Coun-ty Schools, reported to the school board at a work session Thursday that the strategic plan is ready to be approved.
The plan will allow Glynn County Schools to regain fo-cus and ensure that all federal and state guidelines are met, Whitehead said. The plan also aligns with the Georgia Vi-sion Project, a multi-year ini-
tiative to improve the state’s public schools.
“This has been a huge amount of work,” said Virgil Cole, Glynn County Schools superintendent. “It’s great stuff. I think it really puts our district in a good place, and I’m very excited about it.”
Whitehead began in November to craft the plan and seek feedback.
The school system posted the plan on the district web-site, had school staff review the plan and sought commu-nity feedback at meetings.
The plan includes a balance scorecard to provide progress updates and a literacy score-card to show Lexile score progress at each school.
It also offers an effective
leadership structure guide-line.
“She’s done a lot of work getting a lot of stakeholder feedback, and we really feel like it’s really research-based good practices,” Cole said. “It’s going to be a great way to communicate with (the school board) as well.”
The school board also plans to vote Tuesday on whether to approve the Golden Isles College and Career Academy charter renewal request.
If the school board approves it, the request will be sent to the Georgia Department of Education, to be discussed and potentially approved in May.
“We don’t expect any snags during the renewal process,”
said Rick Townsend, GIC-CA’s chief executive.
This will be a fi ve-year charter, rather than GICCA’s original 10-year charter.
In other business, a recom-mendation was made Thurs-day for R.H. Tyson Construc-tion to receive approval for its bid proposal to complete the modernization of Glynn Academy’s Sidney Lanier building.
The school board will decide Tuesday whether to approve R.H. Tyson’s bid of more than $4,683,000.
The Sidney Lanier build-ing is the next one on Glynn Academy’s campus in line for renovation, as part of a plan to renovate several older build-ings on campus.
School board to adopt strategic plan