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Rome

Rachel in Rome

Study abroad was something that I always dreamed of doing, and a major reason why I chose to attend Michigan State University. Michigan State’s education abroad program is one of the top ranked nationally, and somewhere within one of the hundreds of options.

View over Corse

There are many facts that contribute to that choice that may contribute to what program you choose. For me, it was important that I addressed a few requirements within both of my majors. My primary major is Arts and Humanities here through RCAH, and throughout my research and planning process I had to make sure that my chosen program was approved to count for the experiential learning opportunity and language proficiency requirements. It was also a huge plus for me to be on a program that could engage my other major: Public Relations.

An evening at the Colosseum

The act of searching for programs is fairly straightforward with Michigan State’s Education Abroad portal, and it wasn’t long before I found my program: Advertising and Public Relations a la Mediterranean.

Fontana del Tritone

Advertising and Public Relations a la Mediterranean is a program run through the Advertising + Public Relations (AD+PR) in the College of Communication Arts and Sciences. Most of the program takes place in Rome, Italy- in which you take classes taught by MSU AD+PR department professors at the American University of Rome in Rome, Italy. Most of the courses offered focus on international communications strategy, but there are also additional options to take Italian language or culture classes.

The other portion of the program takes place in Cannes, France where participants have the opportunity to attend the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity: a global event for creative communications professionals with a plethora of events and awards by some of the top professionals in the industry.

The Pantheon

Being able to attend this study abroad is a dream come true, and something I couldnt do without the support of my family here and RCAH and CommArts. I’m excited to share this journey all with you here!

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Cami Hancock

My Favorite Theatre Moments of 2019

Yep, it’s true—2019 is almost over and I can’t believe it. As always, this year has flown by. I have recently seen theatre critics releasing articles about their favorite shows of 2019, and I decided I wanted to do the same thing, but with a twist. I didn’t feel as if simply showcasing my favorite shows would be conclusive enough of 2019. This year, I got to visit New York City three times, see dozens of shows on Broadway and off, and I started my first job in the theatre industry. This list includes my favorite theatre moments (shows, experiences, events, and encounters) of 2019.

Attending the Tony Awards And Seeing History Be Made

If you’ve been reading my blog since this summer, you already know that I attended the Tony Awards, but I couldn’t sum up my favorite 2019 theatre moments and not mention it. The Tony Awards are always my favorite day of the year, but this year I was fortunate enough to attend them in person for the first time. It was surreal. I got to get dressed up, go to Radio City Music Hall, and be surrounded by the best of Broadway’s performers and creatives. There, Hadestown made history by being the first musical with an all-female creative team to win Best Musical, and Ali Stroker made history as the first actress in a wheelchair to win a Tony. It felt like I was living in a dream, but it’s a moment that I will remember and cherish forever.

Attending the Tony Awards

Meeting Lin-Manuel Miranda

If you’ve known me for a while, you would know that Lin-Manuel Miranda has been my theatre god for the past four years. He transformed theatre forever by creating Hamilton, and since then he has used his success to make the arts accessible to all people (i.e. bringing Hamilton to Puerto Rico and raising $2 million for arts programs there). He is a legend and a true gift to our world.

In November, I was attending Little Shop of Horrors Off-Broadway with my mom, and at intermission, we overheard someone say that Lin was in the lobby. We bolted out of our chairs and rushed to meet him. I can happily report that he is as great in person as I had hoped. I got the chance to thank him for his contributions to the arts, and despite the fact that I’m sure he gets bombarded by fans every day, he was so gracious. Meeting him was a moment I’ve dreamed of for years. I believe our world is unworthy of someone as good as him.

Sadly I didn’t get a picture with Lin—but he took this photo with Jonathan Groff the day I met him

Seeing In the Heights And Meeting Its Movie’s Stars

Before there was Hamilton, there was In the Heights—Lin-Manuel Miranda’s (no, I will never stop talking about him) first Broadway show. During 2019, In the Heights was one of my most listened-to cast albums, and its score has become one of my all-time favorites. In June, my mom and I located where they were filming the movie version in Inwood, New York, and we got to meet the movie’s stars and director and watch some of their filming.

In July, I saw that a professional theatre in Saugatuck was putting on a production of it, and my mom and I knew that we had to go. It was amazing to finally see Lin’s music come to life on stage. I should also note that I ended up being extremely sick on the day I saw In the Heights (seriously, I probably should have gone to the ER because I couldn’t breathe) but the show was so absorbing that I refused to leave. That’s how you know it’s an amazing show.

Meeting Anthony Ramos and Melissa Barrera, the stars of In the Heights

I Stopped Overlooking Off-Broadway Shows

For years now, my life has been completely devoted to researching and seeing Broadway shows. I did, and still do, consider Broadway to be one of the best things that exists in the world. However, 2019 was the year that I realized other great NYC theatre exists—particularly Off-Broadway. Officially, Off-Broadway means that it’s a show taking place in New York City theater with 99-499 seats (Broadway is 500+). In 2019, I attended some amazing Off-Broadway shows (including Little Shop of Horrors, The Wrong Man, The Secret Life of Bees) that rivaled the Broadway shows I saw. I’ve found that Off-Broadway as just as good as, if not better than, Broadway. Often times, Off-Broadway shows feature Broadway actors, but in smaller and more intimate spaces. In 2020, my goal is to give more Off-Broadway and even more remote theatre a try. Just because it’s not Broadway doesn’t mean that it can’t still be life-changing.

Seeing Little Shop of Horrors off-Broadway

Discovering a New Musical That Made Me Feel Seen

I was lucky enough to see Be More Chill on Broadway twice this year, first in March and then again in June when I brought my mom back with me. The first time I saw it, I was not emotionally prepared for the impact it had on me. I loved its quirky characters and catchy score, but most of all I loved George Salzar’s performance of “Michael in the Bathroom” in the show’s second act. It was a moment where I was completely absorbed by the show and the rest of the world was drowned out. I felt like Michael Mell was speaking directly to me, and it provided some healing that I’ve needed for years now. Be More Chill (unfairly) received many negative reviews, and it closed early, but it will forever remain in my heart and as a favorite on my Broadway playlist. It made me feel validated and heard, and it was the musical that had the most formative impact on my life in 2019.

Seeing Be More Chill.

I Started Working in My Dream Industry

When I entered Michigan State in the fall of 2017, I expected I would graduate in five years as an elementary education major. Although I think I would have been fine in this career, my life’s passion of theatre could not be denied. At the end of freshman year, I dropped my education major and have since been avidly working towards my goal of working in professional side of the theatre industry after college. In January, I was hired to be Wharton Center’s Marketing and Communications Intern for their Broadway series. Since then, I have been working with Wharton Center’s marketing department on every Broadway show. I’ve already learned so much, and it makes me confident that when I graduate in a year and a half, I will be fully prepared to enter the professional theatre industry. It’s been amazing to put my Broadway knowledge to use and to learn how to market to a specific community. Above all, I love that my job allows me to share the thing I love most, theatre, with others.

Interviewing Julie Jordan of Come From Away—an opportunity I got from working at Wharton Center

2019 has undoubtedly been one of the best years of my life thus far—both personally and professionally. My knowledge and experience of the theatre is blossoming every day, and I’m grateful for all the opportunities I’ve had this year. 2019 is going to be a tough year to beat, but I’m optimistic that 2020 is going to hold even more amazing theatrical opportunities.

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Cami Hancock

Review: Disney’s Aladdin Has More Heart Than Ever Before

By Cami Hancock

“But, oh, to be free! Such a thing would be greater than all the magic and all the treasures in all the world!”

Spoken by the vivacious Genie in the show’s first act, this sentiment is also the driving force behind Disney’s Aladdin, a musical I had the opportunity to attend on Friday at Wharton Center. Having already seen The Lion King and Frozen onstage, I was eager to see the third and final Disney show currently running on Broadway. Much to my delight, the stage production added more depth and background to the characters we already know and love.

Photo by Deen van Meer

This shared desire for freedom is what connects Aladdin, Jasmine, and Genie, and it’s a theme I hadn’t previously noticed while watching the 1992 movie as a child. Near the top of the show, Aladdin, played by Jonah Ho’okano, sings his “I Want” song: “Proud of Your Boy.” This number was newly-created for the Broadway production, and it was one of the highlights of the show for me. It’s a sweeping ballad about his desire to reinvent himself and his wish to make his mother proud of the person he’s yet to become. This number provides a backstory and emotional depth to Aladdin that was stronger than in the original movie.

Jasmine, played by Kaenaona Iani Kekoaeach, has her own desires for freedom. Being simultaneously fierce, independent, and compassionate (and Disney’s first princess of color, in case you forgot), Jasmine is a female character worthy of being admired even in 2019. After her father’s relentless attempts at matchmaking her with various princes, she expresses her wishes to marry whomever she pleases, and above all, to make her own life decisions without the guidance of a man.

Although often disguised in humor, the Genie, sincerely played by Korie Lee Blossey, opens up to Aladdin and shares that he, too, desires freedom after living a solitary life for 10,000 years inside a cramped lamp. With more depth given to the characters, I had no problem hopping on board Aladdin, Jasmine, and Genie’s journey to obtain their freedom.

While the story’s revamped emotion was my favorite part of Aladdin, the show had other highlights as well. Being a Disney musical, it did not go without some jaw-dropping moments. My heart couldn’t help but swell at the first sounds of tap dancing during the Genie’s act one showstopper, Friend Like Me. There’s not much I love more than a tap-dance number choreographed by Casey Nicholaw, whose work you may recognize from The Book of Mormon, Something Rotten, and Mean Girls. My only wish was that the tap dancing would have lasted longer.

Photo by Deen van Meer

Another highlight was, of course, A Whole New World, a number that exhibited the best of Disney magic. I was not prepared to get chills and tear up when I saw Aladdin and Jasmine cascading through the night sky on their magic carpet, but I most certainly did.

This show offers something for everyone. If you’re a college student debating whether or not to drop the $30 on a student ticket to see Aladdin, I recommend you do it. It simultaneously serves the perfect dose of childhood nostalgia and still manages to feel current. Book writer Chad Beguelin incorporated some fun odes to the 2000s that college kids will recognize (think: “Okurr” and “Ain’t nobody got time for that”). At a time when we’re all stressing for finals, what could be better than getting to escape to Agrabah for a few hours and see some iconic Disney characters back and better than ever before?

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Cami Hancock

What I’ve Learned in My First 2 Years of College

This month I will officially be a junior in college. It feels like I just moved into my freshman dorm room in Snyder Hall, but in reality, that was two years ago. When I first entered MSU, it was one of the most difficult adjustment periods of my life. As an introvert, I think that only made the transition more difficult, but that beginning college comes with unexpected challenges for everyone who experiences it. It’s not all challenging—college has brought me some of my best memories, greatest experiences, and closest friends. But even now, I’m still learning to navigate it and the new challenges that arise every semester. This is what I’ve learned in my first two years:

A young woman (the author, Cami), stands in front of a brick building next to a white and green sign that reads "Welcome to Snyder, Michigan State University."

Moving into my dorm freshman year

You probably won’t meet your best friends right away

I hoped that I would instantly find people I would connect with right away, but that didn’t happen. I honestly didn’t make my first friend until a couple weeks into the school year. This timeline will look different for everyone—and you may make friends sooner than I did—but it’s extremely unlikely that you will meet your best friend the first night of college. To help with this, I would suggest leaving your dorm room door open and try sitting with new people in the cafeteria, which are two things I wish I would have done more often.

Student groups make all the difference

MSU is a huge school, and it can often feel like nobody knows who you are and nobody cares how you’re doing. RCAH is one of the few colleges that is an exception to this because of its small class sizes (RCAH is the best), but it’s still easy to feel lonely if you don’t find a group where you fit in. For me, it wasn’t until joining student groups that I met people I connected with and truly began to feel happy at MSU. I got involved with the Wharton Center Student Marketing Organization, MRULE discussions, and RCAH Ambassadors.

A ground of students holding signs that have lines from the musical "Hamilton" pose for a photo before they walk in a homecoming parade.

Walking in the homecoming parade with the Wharton Center Student Marketing Organization

Go to your professor’s office hours

You probably hear people tell you this a lot, but I’m serious. Going to office hours allows your professors to get to know you and allows for additional learning if you need help in the class. In addition, you never know what your professors may do to help you if they see you consistently attending their office hours. This past year I took biology, and I was struggling. I attended my professor’s office hours repeatedly over the semester and showed him that I was working hard and wanted to be successful in the class. When it was time for grades to be submitted, I calculated that I was only three points short of getting a 4.0 in the class. When I checked my grades, I was shocked to see I had a 4.0 and realized my professor had given me the extra points because of the effort he had seen me put in during his office hours. 

Say yes more often

This is something I’ve been working on and still need to work on. Whether it’s saying yes to trying out a new student group, attending a campus event, or getting dinner with your friends, try to say yes more often than not. While it’s obviously important to have a healthy balance of academics and fun, college is filled with many once-in-a-lifetime experiences. There are lots of memories waiting to be made, but those can only happen when you say yes.

Expect for change to happen

As someone who’s type A and loves to have their entire life planned out, this was one of the hardest pills for me to swallow. I’ve found that unexpected changes are constantly occurring, whether it be adjusting to living in a dorm to plans with friends changing to scrapping the career you’ve planned for your entire life for a different one (these ALL happened to me). When it comes to college, I would suggest that you “expect the unexpected,” so that you don’t get stressed out by the changes. Most of the time, these changes turn out to be good, so just be open to them happening.

A diverse group of young people pose for a photo, smiling.

The RA staff of Snyder Hall — one of the groups that most helped me find my place at MSU

Although I wish I would have known these things when I first entered college, I’ve realized there’s a lot you’ll just have to learn through experience. So far, college has been one of the craziest, happiest, and most fulfilling periods of my life. I’m hopeful that each year will just continue to get better and better. If you’re an incoming freshman, I wish you the best of luck; and maybe I’ll be your RA this year!

This is my last blog post since I begin RA training this week and from here, it’s an extremely busy two weeks leading up to the start of the school year. Thank you for reading my blog and for following along with my passion for theatre and adventures this summer.

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Grace Koepele

Boom! Shake It Up, Shake It Up

The second part of camp in Cimadolmo continued to keep us on our toes—we took an evening trip to the nearby city of Treviso, challenged our campers with various escape rooms, enjoyed a surprise visit from Carl the singing guitar man, took a field trip to Venice, and conducted a second scavenger hunt all in the first three days!

Despite our vast range of activities throughout the week, the kids somehow always found a way to work one line from our popular “City Camp Rocks” song into absolutely every aspect of their days. If someone so much as dropped a pencil, jumped in the air, gave a high five, or did nearly anything else, one or two kids would suddenly exclaim “BOOM! Shake it up, shake it up!” Which, with this song being a call-and-response song by its very campy nature, would require a follow up response from the surrounding kids of another resounding “BOOM! Shake it up, shake it up!”

Wednesday was an adventure within itself—the entire camp took a day-trip to Venice to visit museums, wander the city, and give the children a chance to practice their English in another setting. While the older campers spent the morning amongst the all of the paintings, photographs, sculptures, and other lovely things at the Peggy Guggenheim Museum of Art, I accompanied the younger groups to the Natural History Museum for a visit with our new friend the largest crocodile in the world and a laboratory where we made castings of trilobites and other cool fossils.

After the museums, we ate lunch on the museum campus and strolled around the city until it was time for us to return home (more often than not with that infamous “shake it up” line or some other camp song serenading the passing tourists). Our journey back to Cimadolmo required not only a train but a school bus as well, since the town does not have its own train station. Both the train and the bus rides to and from our little Venetian adventure kept everyone entertained with lively (and lengthy) renditions of five or six different camp songs and many rounds of Uno (with some children willingly acting as the table for the cards because our transportation did not provide tables).

After one of our classically long camp days, my coworkers and I treated ourselves to an evening out among the tiny, winding canals and cozy streets of Treviso. The time out away with all my coworkers was exactly what we needed to recharge. After a nice stroll as the sun set we took an aperitif in a cozy piazza near the city center and enjoyed the peaceful break from scurrying children and constant theatrical play. As much as I love my work with the kids, the songs, the games, and the busy going of it all, it felt refreshing to have this time to step back from camp and chat together about everything else in our lives aside from camp.

Our final day of camp together was tiring and busy, but lovely just the same. In between practicing the songs, games, plays, and questions that comprise the final show, we took naps, drew more pictures, played new games, and fought off ravenous mosquitoes while enjoying the sunshine outside. Once five oʼclock rolled around, we took a two hour pause at our respective homes before returning in the evening for the show that is our camp farewell. In my room, we had one of the liveliest arrangements of songs and games Iʼve seen at any of my camps (not to mention our wonderfully decorated classroom thanks to the fleet of artists I had the pleasure of tutoring at this camp). It only seemed fitting that we ended our final evening of this immensely artistic and musical camp with a massive dance party to the “Cha Cha Slide” (and we even roped our camp director into joining in on a second round of the song).

I will miss the insane artistic drive of these campers, their enthusiasm, my long evening strolls through nearby vineyards, and post-camp relaxation time with my host sister Vittoria but at the same time I am excited for what my next and final camp has in store for me. Each and every camp this summer has tired me to a new degree but has also led me to make some phenomenal friends, meet wonderful people, try a plethora of new things, continue to see the immense beauty of Italy, and left me feeling full of gratitude.

I will miss my time in Cimadolmo but I look forward to the next adventure ahead of me in the beach town of Marotta! ‘Til then, ciao for now.

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Cami Hancock

Changing My Major to Jeanine

This past weekend I saw a community theatre production of Shrek the Musical, which is a show I’m no stranger to: I performed in it in high school and have since seen it performed at professional theaters, colleges, and local theaters. It’s one of my favorite shows, and I don’t think it gets enough credit. Most would probably assume it’s just the musicalized version of the cheesy cartoon, but its creative team made it much more than that. Shrek the Musical deals with important issues such as alienation, isolation, and body image, and it makes you question the perceptions we have of others. Watching it again brought me back to when I was first introduced to Shrek in my freshman year of high school. For me, Shrek was the musical that fostered my love of Broadway. It was how I was introduced to Sutton Foster—now my favorite actress of all time—and it also introduced me to one of my biggest role models: composer Jeanine Tesori. 

In addition to Shrek, Jeanine Tesori has composed the music for numerous Broadway shows, including Caroline or Change, Violet, and the 2015 Tony Winning Best Musical, Fun Home. She’s known to be the most successful female Broadway composer of all time. She is both a trailblazer for women in the world of Broadway and an immensely talented creative. I love her music because the sounds she creates always reflect the show’s distinct setting. The sounds of Jeanine Tesori’s shows are so different that you wouldn’t guess they’re written by the same person. The music of Violet is bluesy, reflecting its setting of Spruce Pine, North Carolina, while Fun Home’s music is a darker pop/rock score with an ode to the 1970’s, reflecting the funeral home in Pennsylvania where it takes place. Shrek, on the other hand, features a classic Broadway-style sound and has catchy group numbers and other heartwarming ballads. 

Three high school students stand on stage in bear costumes, performing Shrek the Musical.

A scene from when I did Shrek in high school

In my sophomore year of high school, my choir teacher announced that our class’s final project would be to research a composer and present a project on them. Naturally, I decided that I would pick Jeanine Tesori—that is until my choir teacher told me that Jeanine Tesori “isn’t classical enough,” and she handed me a list of old, white, dead male composers to pick from instead. I was outraged that I not only couldn’t pick the composer I wanted, but that I also had no women to pick from. I grudgingly picked Stephen Sondheim. 

The following year, my teacher assigned the same project, and after my outrage the year before, she said we could choose any composer. I was finally getting a chance to present on my role model. I thought, Why don’t I reach out to Jeanine and ask if I can interview her? I figured I would probably never hear back, but it was worth a shot. I messaged her on Twitter of all places, and less than an hour later, Jeanine responded to me and said that she would be delighted to let me interview her. I couldn’t believe it.

A young woman (the author, Cami) poses for a photo with Jeanine Tesori.

Meeting Jeanine Tesori

Interviewing Jeanine was an unforgettable experience. It shocked me that such a successful woman (and a Tony winner!) would be so generous to share her life experiences with a high school junior. It meant so much to me, and I’ll never forget the time she took with me. She shared that she is frequently the only woman in the room when she’s working on a Broadway show, and that she feels an enormous responsibility with that. She believes that women on top need to help other women get there, so she tries to be an exemplar of that. She also has women who she looks up to as well: in the same way that I look up to her, she told me she looks up to Linda Twine, musical director of Big River and The Color Purple

We live in a world where only 17% of roles on Broadway creative teams are held by women, but Jeanine Tesori is one of the few women who have made it to the top and is trying to help others get there too. She is using her talent and her platform to lift up others, meanwhile inspiring a new generation of women while doing it. That’s why I admire her so much: she has shown me firsthand how crucial it is to see someone like you reflected where you want to be. It’s now my goal to work on Broadway and use my work to advocate for more women and other minorities to be on Broadway’s creative teams, something first modeled to me by my role model Jeanine Tesori.

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Grace Koepele

The Happiest (And Most Theatrical?) Place on Earth

Last week I traveled to California to visit my cousin who recently moved to Marina Del Rey. I enjoyed spending the week doing some sightseeing (you know I couldn’t miss seeing Lin-Manuel Miranda’s star on the Walk of Fame), catching up with family, and trying lots of new food spots. My favorite part of the week, however, had to be the two days my mom and I spent at Disneyland.

A young woman (the author, Cami) wearing overalls dress and pink Mickey Mouse ears, poses in front of a castle at Disneyland.

I was lucky that my parents took me to Disney World a few times as a kid, and a lot of my best childhood memories were formed there. This recent trip was my first time ever visiting Disneyland. I had the best time getting to ride LOTS of rides, meeting Minnie Mouse, and trying a Mickey Mouse-shaped fruity pebbles funnel cake that was as amazing as it sounds. One thing I couldn’t help noticing is that Disneyland is a VERY theatrical place. Although you wouldn’t necessarily expect the park to be theatre-related, during my time there, I found that Disneyland has an undeniably theatrical spirit.

A plate of funnel cake, covered in fruity pebbles and whipped cream shaped like Mickey Mouse ears.

My delicious fruity pebbles funnel cake

First, every single person who works at Disneyland is referred to as a “cast member,” not an “employee.” This is because the Disneyland cast members are pretty much performing at all times. Disney obviously places the utmost importance on the happiness of its visitors, and its cast members are entrusted with the job of creating magical moments for guests. To do this, they are always friendly, smiling, and using a specific themed language to add to the immersive experience of Disneyland. They want to make the overall experience the best it can be.

Secondly, Disneyland is basically a hub of all things needed for a show—costumes, sets, props, etc. Each land in Disneyland has its own unique feel and set pieces that transport you to that area: Fantasyland is marked by Sleeping Beauty’s castle and brightly colored cottages, while Frontierland is adorned with red rock, railroads, and western style trading posts. In addition, Disney cast members and many of the guests are in costume. One of the best parts of Disneyland is seeing the adorable kids visiting the parks dressed like their favorite Disney characters.

A decorative white and gold wall shaped like towers and turrets in Disneyland.
A view of the teacup ride at Disneyland, with multiple people riding giant, colorful teacups underneath vines with hanging, colorful lanterns.

Lastly, Disneyland is packed with live performances every single day. While I was there, I saw Frozen Live at the Hyperion Theater. I had previously seen Frozen on Broadway, and while this was a condensed version of the story, the quality of both shows was pretty comparable. It’s geared towards families, of course, but I thoroughly enjoyed it and appreciated the diverse casting that Disney used in this production. I love that there are opportunities to watch live theatre all day, every day at Disneyland.

With all of its theatrical elements, it’s probably not surprising that I cherished my time at Disneyland. I greatly appreciate the effort Disney puts into making their parks an immersive, interactive, and memorable experience. We were lucky enough to be there on Disneyland’s 64th birthday—commemorating 64 years of creating happiness and lifelong memories. Whether you’re a child or an adult, Disneyland can be a magical place for everyone. Most importantly, I love that Disneyland allows you to feel like a kid again, where everything is magical and anything is possible.

Fireworks explode at night over the lit up Disneyland castle.
Two women, Cami and her mother, stand in front of a building and Mickey Mouse-shaped garden with a circle sign that reads "We're 64 today!" for Disneyland's 64th anniversary.

Celebrating Disneyland’s 64th birthday

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Grace Koepele Italy

Third Time’s The Charm

My third camp of the summer brought me to Cimadolmo, a small town nestled among the Prosecco hills of the northern Veneto region of Italy. Along with a South-African, a Canadian, and a fellow Michigander, we had an incredibly eventful first week.

Six young women pose outside in a row, smiling and wearing red or blue shirts that read "ACLE CAMP TUTOR."

At the beginning of the camp, the children were quite timid with our morning circle songs and activities—something that is not uncommon — but their level of apparent disinterest made me worry that they would be an unenthusiastic bunch. Thankfully, the first afternoon of habitat games came around and my worries were alleviated. In habitat games, we divide the campers into teams and have them compete in various relays to select the animals, colors, adjectives, and places that will become their team names. By the second game, practically every kid was invested in the competition and in the fate of their groupʼs name. Once the names were selected and each group began designing their team crests, every camper had at least one marker in hand and was making some contribution to the artwork. After this activity we soon came to know that any artistic endeavor required at least 30 extra minutes because the kids loved so much to draw and create absolutely anything.

Several young children lean over a large sheet of paper, coloring a landscape.

Other afternoon activities fortunately proved to stir similar levels of excitement throughout the week; during our camp-wide scavenger hunt we had one Freddy Mercury impersonator, three human pyramids, four love letters to for us tutors, and 35 giddy campers running from one side of the school to another in an effort to solve all of the tasks first.

A young boy with his back to the camera posts a drawing on an orange wall next to several other drawings.

Once water games day came around we were in for a treat. Not only did we have 200+ water balloons to launch at one another but also a surprise “celebrity” participant (a camper impersonating Johnny Depp), a couple “Baby Shark” references, three water-war waging tutors (including myself), four completely soaked helpers, 10+ water relays, and countless buckets of water poured on anyone within range.

Young children smile and pose for a selfie--one wearing large, red aviators with the remnants of a fake mustache on his lip.

We ended the first week of camp with an eclectic talent show featuring everything from magic tricks, to the Macarena (courtesy of our lovely camp director and assistant), to gymnastics, to a re-telling of a Roman battle, to a dramatic reenactment of the time I was chased by a moose (which featured one of our camp helpers giving another a piggy-back ride so that they could chase me around the stage pretending to be a moose).

In addition to the excitement of camp, during my first few days in Cimadolmo, the Prosecco hills surrounding the town were officially named a UNESCO heritage site! Over the weekend, my host family and I visited a castle on one of the hills, where we made friends with some donkeys, admired the panoramic view of the nearby towns and countryside, and hurried down the hill back to the car when a hail-storm began aggressively pelting us with hail. Due to the storm, we spent 30 minutes hiding under trees, bridges, and overhangs in our car rather than drinking Prosecco but the adventure was lovely just the same (although I think Prosecco would have improved my sentiments toward the situation…. and lowered my panic as we scurried from one partially-safe spot to another).

A beautiful Italian landscape with old, white buildings in the background, rolling green hills in the foreground, and stormy clouds brewing.

All in all I enjoyed my first week in Cimadolmo and I look forward to what little adventures come my way next week!

Til then, ciao for now!

Categories
Cami Hancock

My Seven Favorite Theatregoing Experiences

I am a firm believer in the powers of theatre. I believe theatre is capable of much more than entertainment—it can provide you an escape, lead you to ask questions, and force you to see the world from a different perspective. Playbill’s website has a series where they have Broadway performers share their favorite theatregoing experiences. I’ve had multiple theatre experiences that played major roles in fostering my love of the arts and that I truly consider to be life changing, so I figured I would share them with you. These are my favorite theatregoing experiences of all time:

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child

I bought the script for this show at Target on a whim last summer, and I ended up devouring the entire thing in two days. Although I had only read one Harry Potter book at the time, I found the script to be utterly thrilling and heartwarming. I knew I had to see it performed on stage, and I got to see Harry Potter and the Cursed Child on Broadway last November. The show is a spectacle that uses mind-blowing special effects to create the magic of Harry Potter. To this day, I don’t know how they do some of the magic. The show is performed in two parts, each at three hours long, so it is not a brief piece of theatre. Even so, the play whizzes by. The story is like a moving train: you hop on and brace yourself for the wild journey ahead. 

A young woman (the author) stands in front of the Broadway sign for Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.

Ramin Karimloo in Les Misérables

Les Misérables was one of the first musicals I ever saw on Broadway, and it left me absolutely blown away. I found it to be stunning and heartbreaking. I cried (literally) six times. Although I loved the entire production, the standout for me was Ramin Karimloo as Jean Valjean. He has a gorgeous baritone voice, and he possesses a warmth onstage that made it so easy to feel attached to him and cheer him on through the show’s trials and triumphs. 

Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812

The Great Comet was the first immersive, experimental piece of theatre I had seen, and it completely changed my idea of what theatre can be. The show transformed every inch of Broadway’s Imperial Theatre into a 19th-century Russian supper club. With the renovation, they added seats to the stage, which is where I got to sit. I had Broadway actors performing on all sides of me. In addition, the performers interacted with me and the other audience members onstage. The actors sat at our table, gave us pierogies, and hand delivered us love letters. It was incredible to witness such a beautiful piece of theatre while being right at the center of the action.

A young woman (the author) sits in a red chair in a lavishly decorated room, holding a playbill that reads "Great Comet"
An interactive stage with pathways leading into the audience seats, decorated in reds and golds.

Jessie Mueller in Waitress

I completely fell in love with Waitress, which is an emotional piece of theatre that is equally charming and funny. I was most moved by Jessie Mueller as Jenna. Jessie Mueller is a unicorn on stage—seriously, she is one of a kind. Her voice has such a rich and unique tone and watching her feels magical because of how present she remains throughout the entire show. Even when she wasn’t speaking, I loved watching her reactions to the other characters onstage. Something about her is so vulnerable and honest. It’s impossible not to root for her. 

Jessica Vosk in Wicked

This is the only show on this list that I saw on its national tour rather than on Broadway. When I saw Jessica Vosk as Elphaba, it was my fifth time seeing Wicked. I was just looking forward to basking in one of my favorite musicals all over again, but as soon as Jessica began singing “The Wizard and I,” I was floored. I got chills throughout my entire body. Every time she sang, I was mesmerized by her. Her voice is stunning, and she pulled off riffs that I’ve never heard any other Elphaba manage to do before. She embodies the definition of a star, and I was not at all surprised that she moved to the Broadway company a year later. 

Hamilton

I’ve already written an entire blog post about this experience, but seeing Hamilton on Broadway changed my life. I saw it at the end of one of the most difficult periods of my life, and it made me feel grateful to be alive. It is unmatched in its originality and the strides it has made for people of color. I’m thankful that we are alive at a time where you can see such boundary-breaking, genius work living and breathing on Broadway. 

Dear Evan Hansen

I first saw Dear Evan Hansen in previews back in 2016, and while I loved it, it wasn’t until I saw the show for a second time in 2018 that it truly made me feel changed. Dear Evan Hansen made me feel validated and heard. I found myself able to connect with it because the show draws on the universal feeling of loneliness, something that everyone has experienced at some point in their life. To me, it perfectly verbalizes the feelings of being an outsider and not fitting in. I sat in the front row and sobbed so hard that the person next to me turned to ask if I was okay. With seeing the show a second time, I also got to pay attention to some more complex details, such as the similarities between Evan and Connor, as well as the universal experiences that link every character in the show to every person in the audience. It is a heartbreaking and healing piece of theatre that I recommend to any person that has a pulse.

Two young ladies (the author, right, and her friend Abby, left) pose in front of a stage while holding up a playbill that reads "Dear Evan Hansen"

Cami and her friend, Abby

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The Only Camp of Its Kind

If you’ve been reading my blog this summer, you are well aware of my passion for all things theatre and may have read my post about the lifelong impact that theatre has had on me. I’ve always had a second passion, as well—one that has been present in my life for almost as long and one that influences my life daily: writing. 

Perhaps an unusual choice for most children, I spent my summers growing up attending Author Quest, a kids’ sleepaway writing camp in Ocqueoc, Michigan, owned by Michigan Chillers author Johnathan Rand. I first attended Author Quest in June of 2009 at only 10 years old. I remember being terrified of going to sleepaway camp knowing only a single person, and on top of that, feeling nervous of what other people would think of my writing. While I enjoyed writing, I had never received any sort of praise or encouragement about my writing from anyone other than my parents. My fears were quickly alleviated, however, as I stepped into the lush wilderness of Ocqueoc with 40 other campers who loved to write as much as I did. At that first camp, the staff and instructors at Author Quest took me under their wings and fully embraced me as a writer. They gave me a place where I felt safe to share my writing and deepest inner thoughts with others. They gave me the confidence to take risks with my writing, and to keep going, even when I may feel discouraged.

A picture of the author, Cami, as a ten-year-old child at her first camp session, wearing a red Author Quest shirt.

My first Author Quest in 2009

The effects of Author Quest on my life go far beyond improving my writing. Because of how much the people at Author Quest believed in me at that first camp session and all of the sessions following, they made me believe I can do anything I set my mind to—whether it be becoming a professional writer or pursuing whatever else fulfills my soul. Author Quest was also the first place where I got true leadership experience, first as a counselor-in-training, and now as a counselor. It inspired me to become a better person, and it made me want to lift up the current campers in the same way the staff has lifted me up all these years. In addition, Author Quest has given me some of my most treasured friendships, people that I talk to on a weekly basis and eagerly look forward to reuniting with every summer.

A group of Author Quest camp counselors in red shirt, including Cami, second from the right.

My camp friends

At the end of June, I returned from my 12th Author Quest camp session and my fifth session being a full-fledged counselor. I thoroughly enjoyed spending the week reading and writing for copious amounts of time, catching up with my friends, and listening to the campers read their newly crafted stories around the campfire every night. As a counselor, I’m thankful that I now get to play a small role in the experience of the current campers and give them similar encouragement and care that I received at their age. Each year, I am blown away even more by the talent of the campers who attend Author Quest. At 10, 11, 12, and 13 years old, they are using words I’ve never heard and creating such expertly constructed, inventive stories that I never could have dreamed of in a thousand years. Each camp, Ann Rowland, Author Quest’s camp director, stresses to the campers that they are good writers, not just good writers for their age —which is true and what I believe is a testament to the respect the campers at Author Quest receive. 

There’s a reason I’ve now attended Author Quest for 10 years. I’ve come to realize that the feeling of having someone believe in you is invaluable. The people at Author Quest have remained both positive and encouraging but have always challenged me when I needed it most . Because of Author Quest, I’ve worked diligently to foster my passion for reading and writing throughout my life. Author Quest is the reason I was brave enough to raise my hand in English class throughout school. It’s the reason I feel confident enough to publish my thoughts and writing on two blogs this summer. It’s the reason I want to incorporate writing into my future career, no matter where I end up. I’m grateful that my 10-year-old self somehow ended up at that writing camp in Ocqueoc all those years ago. I guarantee that if I hadn’t received their support, I wouldn’t be the same person or on the same path in life that I am on today.

A group of young people make a pyramid with their bodies, a child perched on top making a thumbs up gesture.