Date: Fri 13-Jun-1997
Date: Fri 13-Jun-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
Mark-Twain-St-Rose-Gerth
Full Text:
`Young Authors Day'- Mark Twain Inspires St. Rose Writers
(with photos)
BY DOROTHY EVANS
As it happened, "Young Authors Day" at St. Rose School on Monday, June 9, was
a rollicking success, mainly because the main event included a visit by
someone who (despite rumors to the contrary) died 87 years ago: Mark Twain.
Well, it wasn't really Mark Twain or the mythical writer's real-life creator,
Samuel Clemens, who visited to St. Rose.
It was his lookalike, modern-day reincarnation, actor and entertainer James
Gerth.
Dressed and made up for the part, Mr Gerth spent the morning with the St. Rose
youngsters in their all-purpose room, telling them a number of Mark Twain
stories in a non-stop, animated monologue.
His delivery contained so much energy and humor that nobody cared if he wasn't
the real thing.
The Mark Twain stories, as related by Mr Gerth, were spoken using the author's
words complete with dramatic gestures and facial grimaces.
As the actor strode back and forth in front of his audience, alternately
shouting, cajoling, thundering and whining, the St Rose children became
completely engrossed.
They imagined life on the Mississippi 150 years ago, and they learned about
the fine difference between a Lecture and a Speech. For a Lecture, you got
paid, Mark Twain wrote. For a Speech, you got "not a cent."
(After some consideration, Mr Gerth decided the St. Rose event was a Little
Talk, and the delicate issue of money wasn't raised.)
The students laughed out loud during the Tale of The Mexican Plug, about a
cranky old Carson City horse that succeeded in totally discombobulating its
rider.
And they shuddered in revulsion while imagining Roughing It, which involved a
bunk house encounter with an entire band of tarantula spiders, each having an
array of "large, hairy, muscular legs."
Mr Gerth's one-man show was part of an educational enrichment program at St
Rose designed to stimulate students' imagination. Teacher Kathy Whinton said
she also hoped his performance might entice the students to pick up a Mark
Twain novel on their own and start reading those famous tales for themselves.
Youngest Writers Dictate Stories
Mrs Whinton said that to prepare for their morning with Mark Twain, the St.
Rose sixth and seventh graders have been writing and illustrating their own
tales of humor and imagination.
On Monday morning, they read their stories to the first and second graders,
who were also taking part in "Young Authors Day."
"We've even had some sharing among siblings" across different classes, Mrs
Whinton remarked.
In addition to that activity, the older students helped the youngest ones by
writing down stories for them, as dictated.
Printing slowly and carefully on the faded blue-lined paper, the older
students took painstaking care to record the details as they heard them.
They knew that, eventually, those stories would be read by these budding
authors who had plenty of tales to tell, but couldn't read or write yet.