Great
Stories Alive
!
"Performance with
Passion &
Purpose"
PO
Box 2491 - Eugene, OR
97402 / (503) 335-3876 - DickensChristmasCarol.net
NEWS
RELEASE
FOR
IMMEDIATE
RELEASE: Tuesday, November 21, 2017
Media
Contacts:
Al
LePage,
Actor/Producer, Great
Stories Alive!/
503-335-3876 / Al.LePage@SpireTech.com
Rev.
Dr. Dianne Carpenter, Minister/Organist / Franklin
United
Methodist Church/
774-212-0520 /
PastorDianne@Verizon.net
"A
Christmas Carol, Done Like Dickens!"
Performances commemorate 150th
anniversary of Charles Dickens' 1867-68 American tour,
all proceeds benefit charities to help the hungry and for
historic preservation
"Charles Dickens as he appears when reading" Boston, December 1867
Image
Credit: Harper's Weekly, v. 11, no. 571, 7 December 1867, p. 777. ( Public domain image)
Dramatic
reading performances of Dickens' Christmas Carol at Longfellow's
Wayside Inn, Dec. 8, 9, Subury, MA, the Omni Parker House Hotel, Dec.
10, Boston, MA, and a private event for Skeene Manor Preservation,
Inc., Dec. 4, Whitehall, NY will commemorate Charles Dickens 1867-68
American tour. Presented as a one-man show by performer Al
LePage, the text is based on Dickens' own historic public reading
script and also done in the style of Dickens himself, using only voice,
facial expressions and gestures to create up to 26
characters.
The Dec. 9 Wayside Inn show will also feature organist Dianne Carpenter
playing traditional Victorian-era Christmas carols. All
proceeds
benefit charity, the Historic Site Preservation Fund for the Wayside
Inn, The Greater Boston Food Bank relative to the Parker House
event. Tickets can be purchased for Wayside Inn
events by
calling 978-443-1776, and for the Parker House event either online at Dickens150.BrownPaperTickets.com
or by calling 1-800-838-3006.
Photo
Credit: David Krapes
"Charles
Dickens came to Boston one hundred and fifty years ago," begins
performer Al LePage, "and it's time to commemorate his historic
American performance tour! I'm doing my part by offering
one-man
shows not only of the author's classic Christmas Carol story, but also
doing it in the style Dickens did, using his full historic script or a
shorter version based on it, and wrapping up my east coast tour in the
city where it all began, Boston itself. It's a special time,
and
each event will begin with a special introduction of what happened
while the famed author was in Boston from the time he arrived until he
returned after his first performances in New York."
"Dickens' arrived in Boston on November 18,
1867," says
LePage, "and headed straight for the Parker House Hotel, which became
his home away from home in America while he toured the east coast of
the United States. His first public reading was right next
door
on Monday, December 2nd, at a place then known as Tremont Temple, the
location of today's Converse Hall. Every ticket had been sold
and
two thousand people packed the house. The audience included
his
long-time friend Henry Wordsworh Longfellow, with whom he had dined at
his home in Cambridge for Thanksgiving dinner, and other literary
elites such as Oliver Wendall Holmes, James Russell Lowell and Charles
Elliot Norton, to name but a few. When Dickens came strutting
across the stage the welcome was incredible! When Dickens
began
his "reading" it soon became apparent that Dickens was not only a
highly skilled author, but also an accomplished performer,
too!
He literally brought the characters of A Christmas Carol alive
dramatically by only using his facial expressions, tone of voice, and
gestures. The audience loved it. They laughed, they
cried,
the applause was fantastic! Dickens was energized, and he
went on
with his public reading with the Trial from Pickwick. When he
was
finished that night the response went beyond all expectations!"
(Image: Al LePage as
Scrooge)
Dickens
went on to do more shows in Boston that week, then off to Steinway Hall
in New York City, then back to Boston for more shows before the new
year. He traveled the east coast from Portland, Maine to
Washington D.C. during the next four months, giving 76 performances and
grossing more than three million dollars in today's currency,
but after taking a
serious loss to exchange civil war greenbacks into gold it was
decreased to about two million dollars. His American tour was a
great financial success.
"Dickens'
Christmas Carol was meant for adult audiences, and historically, 'done
like Dickens' means it's strictly a dramatic reading
performance," says LePage. "So I decided to offer a shorter version, still based on Dickens'
historic script, but also combined with organ music to make it more
family-friendly, too! It works beautifully, with traditional
Victorian-era Christmas carols setting the tone for selected upcoming
scenes. I like to call it 'A Christmas Carol Times Two!' since it
literally is, Dickens Christmas Carol plus Christmas carols.
And
I'm joined by organist Dianne Carpenter at the Wayside Inn for the
Saturday matinee performance on Dec. 9."
Dianne
Carpenter
started playing piano at age 6, took up the
violin a few years later, and by the time she was a junior in high
school landed her first job as a church organist! She pursued
her
music education degree from Lowell
State College, went on to
teach
music in area schools, but always remained a church organist or choir
director as that "teachers second job" to make ends meet. She
eventually decided to get even more serious about her life in "music
ministry," went back to school to receive a Masters of Sacred Music
from Boston
University, but
continued to teach school. A few
years later, though, the economic situation for funding education
statewide in Massachusetts took a turn for the worse and teaching jobs
were threatened. All this forced her to do some
soul-searching,
and in the end she decided her journey was now to be the path of
pastoral ministry. She sold her house, went back to school
yet
again, and eventually earned both a Masters of Divinity from Andover
Newton Theological School and
a PhD in Christian Social Ethics
from
Boston
University Graduate School.
She's been a minister in the
New
England Conference of the United
Methodist Church for nearly
two
decades, serving in Natick, Spencer, Belmont, Hamilton and Brewster
Massachussetts. She currrently serves as minister of
the United
Methodist Church
in
Franklin, MA, and continues to publicly
perform both on organ and piano, typically now only playing the violin
for her own enjoyment. (Image: Dianne Carpenter weaves
organ music into the special Saturday matinee show.)
LePage has
been refining his shows and sharpeing his skills as a performer of
Dickens' Christmas Carol for over a decade, and besides enjoying his
craft, especially loves the story's messages of personal transformation
and generosity, both of which he can relate to in a very personal way.
"I've
had some pretty tough times in my life," says LePage, "and I knew I had
to change to become the kind of person I am today. I'm still
definitely a work-in-progress, but being as kind as possible in what I
think and say, in what I do, is the intent of my daily
practice.
I've always liked being generous, and as I get older, I really love
giving even more of my time, energy and other resources not only to
help people but all creatures great and small. Doing Dickens
Carol is a great way to reach people, and to 'preach what I practice'
you could say. So this year a dollar for dollar match up to the
full amount of the performance fee of contributions
donated by my audiences during my shows in Massachusetts is being
offered by organist Dianne Carpenter and myself up to a total of $500. And
the funds will be donated to a A Place to Turn, an emergency food
pantry close to where I grew up, and used to buy food to help feed
people locally."
"We all have gifts, and God wants us to be generous with those gifts,
asking us to share them," begins Rev. Dr. Dianne Carpenter, pastor at
Franklin
United Methodist Church.
"And this event is an
opportunity for the community not only to be entertained, but also
become aware of the real meaning of Christmas, God's passion for the
entire world as reflected in providing the resources needed by the food
pantry so everyone served can celebrate the season, too."
LePage, a native of Framingham, who
also lived briefly in Holliston as a young child, 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 of Dickens'
Christmas Carol as his own one man one-hour radio program in 2010, its
fourth annual broadcast once again this year on Christmas eve
itself. 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, and LePage's last performance that year was in the old stables of
the historic 16th century coaching inn in Framlingham, England itself,
the very same town after which Framingham, MA was so named.
He
always strives to give his best, reaching beyond mere performance to
create a unique experience for his audiences.
From Scrooge to Tiny Tim, from Marley's Ghost to Mrs. Cratchit,
there's howls and growls, bangs and bongs, a DANCE WITH A SONG, lively
laughter and heartfelt tears. Join Al for another season of special
shows -- and Dianne for the special Saturday matinee -- on the 150th
Anniversary
of Charles Dickens 1867-68 American tour!
#####
Longfellow's
Wayside Inn
is a
Massachusetts Historic Landmark and the oldest Inn in the United
States, continuing to provide food and lodging along-side the old
Boston Post Road since 1716. As a 501(c)3 non-profit corporation, the
Wayside Inn is dedicated to the preservation of its 125-acre historic
campus and outbuildings, which include the old Howe Tavern, the Martha
Mary Chapel, the Redstone School, and the world famous water-powered
Wayside Inn Grist Mill. Countless individuals, school groups and civic
organizations take advantage of the property's educational programs
each year, which focus on the site's colonial past as well as its more
recent history as the country's first living history museum while under
the ownership of industrialist Henry Ford from 1923 to 1945. The site
is funded with revenue generated from its restaurant and overnight
guest rooms, fundraising initiatives, corporate and public
donations, through historic preservation grants, and their own
Historic Site Preservation Fund. The Wayside Inn Historic Site
is on the National Register of Historic Places. For further
information, visit www.Wayside.org
or phone
978-443-1776.
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 in 2016, they distributed
more
than 57.7 million pounds of food, equivalent to 48.1 million meals.
Through their network of partners, 142,000 people eat
something from GBFB each month, creating a compassionate and
sustainable solution to hunger.One in ten people in
Eastern Massachusetts struggles with hunger.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. A Place to Turn
is a non-profit organization that has been serving the needs of the
Metrowest community since the late 1970's. The emergency food pantry
was created by a group of local residents troubled both by poverty and
the lack of emergency assistance in the local area. It has
and
continues to provide emergency groceries and clothing to individuals
and families in need. Funding and support come from many
sources, with food donations from a wide
variety of groups and local
businesses, and financial assistance from individuals, corporations and
foundations.
People can participate in a variety of ways and besides much
appreciated financial support, the organization also values the time
and talents of volunteers, plus donations of non-perishable food and
other essential items. Serving over 12,000 people in over 30
cities and towns in Metrowest in 2017, the majority of clients are from
Framingham, Marlborough, and Natick. For further information,
visit their webiste at www.APlacetoTurn-Natick.org
or phone (508)
655-8868.
Whitehall
Skene Manor Preservation, Inc.
is dedicated to historically restoring Skene Manor to its former
beauty. The Manor is a Victorian Gothic-style mansion in Whitehall, New
York. Restoration is ongoing and made possible through donations and
the efforts of volunteers. For further information, visit www.SkeneManor.org
or phone 518-499-1906.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________
NOTE
TO MEDIA:Embedded
images are offered for free use by the print media
for
stories related to these performances and may be cropped and
color-balanced as needed.
CAPTION
ALTERNATE
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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.