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"Performance with Passion & Purpose"

PO Box 2491 - Eugene, OR 97402 / (503) 335-3876 - DickensChristmasCarol.net

NEWS RELEASE


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:  Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Media Contact: Al LePage, Actor/Producer, Great Stories Alive! / 503-335-3876 / Al.LePage@SpireTech.com

"A Classic Dickens' Christmas Carol"
to help feed the hungry close to home
Dickens script and acting style come to life at a dramatic reading performance in Boston, the city
 the author first read it in America in 1867, all proceeds to benefit The Greater Boston Food Bank

Al LePage performs Dickens' Christmas Carol to help prevent hunger close to home
                                                                                                                                          Photo Credit:  David Krapes
Al LePage lights the way for his one-man show of Dickens' Christmas Carol

Performer Al LePage presents A Classic Dickens' Christmas Carol! on Sunday, Dec. 11 at 2PM in the historic Press Room at the Omni Parker House, 60 School Street, Boston.  It is performed as Charles Dickens did, as a dramatic reading one-man show using only voice, facial expressions and gestures to create the story's 26 characters.  The performance also uses Dickens' very own public reading script and also takes place in the same city where the famed author first presented it in America in 1867 -- Boston, MA.  The ticket price is $25/person both for children and adults and 100% of all proceeds will go to benefit The Greater Boston Food Bank.  Mince tarts and warm spiced cider are also included during the intermission.  Tickets may be reserved in advance either online through BrownPaperTickets.com or by calling their 24/7 toll-free number, 1-800-838-3006, and if still available, at the door the day of event.  Dickens performances were meant for adult audiences, but mature children age 10 and older should also be able to appreciate this version and will be admitted.  Doors open at 1:30PM and the performance is generously being hosted and fully sponsored by the Omni Parker House.

Al LePage as Scrooge!                                  Photo Credit: David Krapes  
Performer Al LePage brings his one man show to the OMNI Parker House Hotel to help prevent hunger close to home"From Scrooge to Tiny Tim, from Marley's Ghost to Mrs. Cratchit," begins actor Al LePage, "there's howls and growls, bangs and bongs, a dance with a song, lively laughter and heartfelt tears.  And when I perform, watch out, I love to improvise on the spot.  Maybe just a conversation with someone in the audience, but with everyone listening in, of course!  Oh yes, I do believe in seizing the moment, and even I don't always know what's going to happen next.  I'll also briefly share some history about Charles Dickens own dramatic reading performances in America during 1867-68.  Every show is unique, spontaneous and full of surprises, too!  One surprise may be a gift for you,” adds LePage "they'll definitely be at least one special gift given away to some lucky person."

But there's also a serious side to LePage and why he does so many of his shows to benefit hunger organizations.  As a young man the school he'd been working at as a teacher in Boston unexpectedly closed down for good over the winter holiday break, and through no fault of his own found himself without a job, without a paycheck.  His savings were meager, and deciding not to go on unemployment at the time, struggled to make ends meet.  He paid his bills but had little money left over for food.  So, he got hungry for really the first time in his life.  He was not starving, of course, but he remembers it being winter and spring, feeling cold and hungry, and figures he may even have been slightly malnourished as time went on, too. That experience has stuck with him ever since, and that's why his primary focus is to donate 100% of the proceeds from his shows to organizations that help prevent hunger close to home.  His Boston performance benefits The Greater Boston Food Bank, which includes Framingham as part of its service area, where LePage was born and lived for much of his early life.

Hunger close to home has been and continues to be a serious issue both locally and nationally.  At any given time, people sometimes have to make choices between food and other critical survival factors such as heat, housing, medical care or transportation.  In Massachusetts alone over 210,000 children are effected, that's over 1 in every 4 people facing hunger within the state are children, and it's estimated that just over 33% of people don't qualify for government programs like food stamps or free school lunches simply because they earn too much money.  All that's based on the specific Massachusetts estimates of Map the Meal Gap, the most recent 2016 report (2014 data) published by the national network of food banks, Feeding America. One of their past reports has also noted that children who don't eat what they need for strong healthy brain development may never recover their lost potential for cognitive growth.  It also had gone on to note that besides stunting their intellectual capacity, it could also affect learning, social interaction and productivity, diminishing what could have been a child's eventual contributions to society.   And according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) report just released this September 2016, Household Food Security in the United States in 2015, an "estimated 12.7 percent of American households (that's over one in seven) were food insecure at least some time during the year in 2015, meaning they lacked access to enough food for an active, healthy life for all household members." The report's summary also noted, though, that "the estimated percentage of U.S. households that were food insecure in 2015 declined" by 1.1 percent of the 2014 estimate.

The Greater Boston Food Bank (GBFB)
is the largest hunger-relief organization in New England and among the largest food banks in the country. Last year, they distributed more than 51 million pounds of food, enough to provide healthy meals to as many as 545,000 people. The Greater Boston Food Bank is committed to increasing their food distribution to provide at least ONE MEAL A DAY to every person in need in eastern Massachusetts.


"I'm reminded of a short but very powerful scene in Dicken's story when I learned about what could happen to children who don't get enough to eat," starts LePage.  "Scrooge sees something under the robe of the Ghost of Christmas Present, and two wretched children appear.  Scrooge then asks him who they belong to.  The ghost's reply, though usually warm and kind quickly becomes cold and reprimanding. 'They are Man’s,' is his response, 'This boy is Ignorance. This girl is Want. Beware them both, and all of their degree, but most of all beware this boy, for on his brow I see that written which is Doom, unless the writing be erased. Deny it!'  But, on a more positive note," adds LePage, "I'm also reminded of lines from two other scenes, one at the beginning from Scrooge's nephew Fred and near the very end from the narrator of the story, that when combined sum up my hope both for the present and future.  'But I am sure I have always thought of Christmas time as a good time; a kind, forgiving, charitable, pleasant time . . .' and . . . 'it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well, if any man alive possessed the knowledge. May that be truly said of us, and all of us!' 
And when people who buy tickets attend my performances, since all the proceeds will go to benefit charity, the present becomes the future with everyone helping out to deal with the issue of hunger in Boston and other local communities close to home."
 
   Photo Credit: David Krapes
Performer Al LePage uses his Voice, Hands and EVERY Bone in his Body to Bring this Great Story Alive
"One of the most special places in the world to connect with Charles Dickens," says LePage, "is Boston itself.  Not only did the famed author stay in the city, essentially living at the original Parker House Hotel during his 1867-68 American tour, he also gave his very first dramatic reading of his classic holiday story, A Christmas Carol, on location just next door at what was then known as 'Tremont Temple,' eventually rebuilt and known today as Converse Hall.   In fact, the original mirror that Dickens used to rehearse his facial expressions that was in the hotel room he stayed now adorns the hallway just outside today's Press Room, too! 

LePage, a native of Framingham, began bringing history to life through improvised portrayals of real people from the past for over seven years at historic sites, museums, and other venues throughout the Pacific Northwest. He's written and produced his own historical dramas as one-man shows, appeared on the nationally televised PBS “History Detectives” series in roles ranging from a bartender to Robert E. Lee.  Oregon Public Broadcasting Radio produced and premiered LePage's own shortened version just last year of Dickens' Christmas Carol as his own one man one-hour radio program.  He's been giving performances of the Carol to benefit charity in the United States, Canada and England since 2006.  In 2011 he traveled to England to perform there for the first time beginning in the same place and for the same charity that Dickens himself did his first public reading of the Carol in Birmingham in 1853, with his last performance at the historic 16th century coaching inn in Framlingham, England itself, the very same town after which Framingham, MA was so named.  This year he will be giving his 6th year of performance at the Omni Parker House in Boston.

LePage has not only researched Dickens and the famed author's own performances, but also when he traveled to England in 2011, he not only visited the only surviving home of Dickens in London, but also went to the very locations in the city where various scenes took place in the Christmas Carol story itself!
This way he could soak up the sights and sounds and whatever else he could, not only to better transport himself, but also audience members, back in time and tell the Carol in the very best way possible. 
 
Charles Dickens arrived in Boston on Tuesday, November 19th, 1867, and took up residence at an earlier version of today's Omni Parker House.  The author had just traveled by ship from England to America to do a public reading tour of dramatic scenes from some of his works.  His manager had arranged for him to recover from his sea voyage with two weeks rest, which soon frustrated the impatient Dickens, who wanted to perform.  He was invited to this and that function, but like any serious actor he knew he needed to rehearse, and apparently used it as both a valid reason and an excuse to be left alone.  He did, though, attend at least one dinner at the historic Parker House Hotel itself on Saturday, November 30th with "The Saturday Club," a group of men the likes of which included, Emerson and Longfellow, among others.

Just two days later, on Monday evening, December 2nd, he gave his first public reading performance at 88 Tremont Street in the original location where the old Tremont Theater once stood, known in 1867 as Tremont Temple.  Boston apparently had an early snowstorm that very morning, but later in the day all was clear and the carriages lined up and down Tremont Street and beyond to see and hear him.  The event went well, very well indeed, and he did three more performances on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday that same week in Boston, heading off for New York by train for more performances thereafter.  Both the original "Parker House Hotel," where Dickens stayed while in Boston, and the venue where the original theater (today's Converse Hall) once stood were eventually rebuilt, but are still located at the very same locations today.  In fact, today's Omni Parker House has even kept some of the artifacts that Dickens actually used, such as the marble fire place mantle, now in today's Dickens' Room, and the mirror in the hallway just outside today's Press Room is the very same one that Dickens apparently used to rehearse and practice his facial expressions and gestures to achieve the greatest dramatic effect.

(Click here for more details -- essentially in Dickens very own words -- about his experiences while in Boston and New York during November and December 1867.)

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The Greater Boston Food Bank (GBFB) is the largest hunger-relief organization in New England and among the largest food banks in the country. Last year, they distributed more than 51 million pounds of food, enough to provide healthy meals to as many as 545,000 people. The Greater Boston Food Bank is committed to increasing their food distribution to provide at least ONE MEAL A DAY to every person in need in eastern Massachusetts. You can learn more about the GBFB and help make a difference in the fight against hunger by visiting their website at www.gbfb.org or by calling 617-427-5200.
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NOTE TO MEDIA:  Embedded images are high resolution and offered for free use by the print media for stories related to these performances and may be cropped and color-balanced as needed.    Please credit the photographers as follows:
“David Krapes”

CAPTION SUGGESTION for IMAGES without captions: Performer Al LePage is sure to bring lots of  laughter, and hopefully some tears, during his upcoming dramatic reading performances of Dickens' classic A Christmas Carol.