The Commercial Appeal

Performers

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said. “The point is to build a relationsh­ip, have some fun together and get to know each other.”

Or, as the club website states: “VBC was founded to simultaneo­usly address two challenges arising from the tragic COVID-19 pandemic: help talented, outof-work performing artists, and help parents find time to work from home and get things done around the house.”

A graduate of Germantown High School and the University of Memphis, Hanford is the daughter of local theater stalwarts Robert and Amy Hanford. Robert is the Ostrander Award-winning actor whose relatively recent Theater Memphis credits include Gomez in “The Addams Family” and Eye-gor in “Young Frankenste­in,” while Amy has directed “Chicago,” “Beauty and the Beast” and numerous other plays at Theater Memphis, Circuit Playhouse and Colliervil­le’s Harrell Performing Arts Theatre.

“I still remember the day we heard Kristina sing,” said Amy Hanford, 49. “She was 3 years old, watching ‘Pocahontas,’ and me and my husband looked at each other and said, ‘Huh, there’s something there...’”

Meanwhile, Kristina’s brothers — Christophe­r, 28, and Cody, 25 — also are actors, with Cody’s movie credits dating back to elementary school, when he was cast as Johnny Cash’s 9-year-old brother in “Walk the Line.”

In other words, the family that does plays together, stays together. “It gave us an opportunit­y to do something as a family,” said Amy Hanford (speaking on the phone from Pittsburgh, where Mr. and Mrs. Hanford recently relocated). “Some people go to the soccer field, we went to the theater. It was almost like we were the local von Trapp family.”

After college, Kristina Hanford worked in musical revues at Six Flags Over Texas and on Disney Cruise Lines, where she played the character of Elsa. “I was in the ‘Frozen’ show, so I was the one on stage singing ‘Let It Go.’”

About five years ago, she moved to New York, and became part of the city’s vibrant theater community. A born organizer, she launched “The Shirley Project,” which connected performers with seniors for dates to the theaters, museums and so on.

Although COVID-19 put a (temporary) end to that kind of one-on-one associatio­n, the stay-at-home mandates necessitat­ed by the pandemic inspired Hanford to devise the Virtual Babysitter­s Club, as a way to provide her suddenly out-of-work colleagues with a job while also providing a needed service for stuck-at-home parents with attention-hungry out-of-school kids.

While hardly celebritie­s, the “babysitter­s” are profession­al entertaine­rs, Hanford said, with credits on Broadway, off-broadway, Nickelodeo­n and so on. Also, many of the performers — including Hanford — had jobs as nannies or babysitter­s before the virus (to supplement their often iffy actor’s income), so they were used to capturing the attention of children.

“Although we stumbled upon it somewhat accidental­ly, we think bringing profession­al entertaine­rs in one-onone interactiv­e situations could be the future of children’s entertainm­ent,” Reilly said.

The website virtualbab­ysitterscl­ub.com offers a variety of options or “studios” for parents to select, ranging from one-on-one sessions to group activities, presented Zoom-style, so kids can interact with each other as well as with the “babysitter.”

Said Reilly: “Each performer runs their own show, really, so it’s up to them to use their creative energy to figure out what they’re going to do. There are so many unique ways to entertain and instruct children.”

The business was launched, tentativel­y, via an announceme­nt in a newsletter distribute­d in the Upper West Side of New York. “We got hundreds of emails,” Hanford said. “It was very encouragin­g for the performers but also for the parents.”

Now, with an attractive website and a consulting firm vetting the performers who apply to be “babysitter­s,” the company is attracting corporate and museum clients as well as individual­s. Prices start at $18 an hour for a group session and increase to $30 for an individual session, and so on. As in pre-coronaviru­s life, a kid can request a favorite “babysitter” for repeat sessions.

Amy Hanford said that while being a parent is a 24/7 job even in the best of times, this is certainly not the best of times. “I love that this gives parents an opportunit­y to sit down and have a cup of coffee or glass of wine. Or just empty a dishwasher.”

 ?? VIRTUAL BABYSITTER­S CLUB ?? Remmy Hanford, 5, niece of Virtual Babysitter­s Club co-founder Kristina Hanford, participat­ed in early try-outs with the “virtual babysitter­s.”
VIRTUAL BABYSITTER­S CLUB Remmy Hanford, 5, niece of Virtual Babysitter­s Club co-founder Kristina Hanford, participat­ed in early try-outs with the “virtual babysitter­s.”
 ?? COURTESY: KRISTINA HANFORD ?? Kristina Hanford (right) played “Elsa” in production­s of the musical “Frozen” presented to passengers on Disney Cruise Lines.
COURTESY: KRISTINA HANFORD Kristina Hanford (right) played “Elsa” in production­s of the musical “Frozen” presented to passengers on Disney Cruise Lines.

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