Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Program sentences kids to Shakespear­e

Young offenders take to stage to perform while learning new approaches to life

- DENISE LAVOIE

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — For some youthful offenders, their choice is straight out of Hamlet: to act or not to act.

Shakespear­e & Company, a theater company in Lenox, Mass., works with the courts to get youths who run afoul of the law sentenced to perform works of Shakespear­e onstage as an alternativ­e to community service or juvenile detention.

Young offenders sentenced to Shakespear­e read the bard’s works, take on the role of one or more of his characters, come up with ideas for costumes and sets, memorize their lines, rehearse and then act out their roles for an audience of family, friends and court personnel.

The kids almost always hate the idea of performing Shakespear­e at first, but by the end of the six-week program, many say they’ve found new friends and a new sense of accomplish­ment.

“Honestly, you would never catch me doing this stuff if I didn’t have to, but it’s taught me teamwork and to just chill out and listen,” said one 17-year-old boy who will played Macbeth in a recent production that included scenes and monologues from various Shakespear­e plays.

Similar Shakespear­e programs are offered to inmates in prisons around the country as a way of bolstering self-confidence and literacy.

For the past 17 years, Shakespear­e in the Courts has been used to sentence youths accused of a variety of lower-level crimes, including larceny, assault and battery and vandalism. In 2007, the program won a national Coming Up Taller award from the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities.

The probation officers, teachers and others who work in the program say they hope it will help the teens respect the feelings of others, fulfill a commitment and foster a sense of pride.

“I never really tried acting or theater, so coming in, it was challengin­g,” said the 17-yearold playing Macbeth, shortly after practicing the famous sword-fighting scene during a rehearsal at a Pittsfield church.

The Associated Press is not using the teens’ names because they are minors and their identities are protected by the court.

The program was started by Paul Perachi, a former high school principal who recruited the theater company to work with his students. Years later, after he became a judge, Perachi asked the theater group to develop a Shakespear­e program for young offenders.

Since then, Kevin Coleman, a founding member of Shakespear­e & Company, has worked more than 300 teenagers, many of whom have struggled with poverty and family problems.

“We take baby steps into it, because they’d rather go to jail than be involved in this project,” Coleman said.

“We get them to work together as a group, getting them to talk about themselves, getting them to name feelings. And then, bit by bit, we start with small bits of text, then larger amounts of text, then individual soliloquie­s and then group scenes.”

During a recent rehearsal, three girls appeared to relish their roles as witches in Macbeth, creeping and crouching, then leaping around a small table. “Fair is foul, and foul is fair!” they chanted.

Only a few teens have refused to participat­e or dropped out before finishing the program, Coleman said. Those teens have been sent back to the judge to be resentence­d to community service or another alternativ­e program.

Juvenile court Judge Joan McMenemy said the program follows a rehabilita­tive approach to juvenile justice.

“This just broadens their horizons beyond what they could have had if they had been sentenced to pick up trash on the side of the road or other community service options,” McMenemy said.

 ?? AP/JESSICA HILL ?? Kevin Coleman (background, right), director of education at Shakespear­e & Company, works with a teenager portraying a soldier as another young offender (front left) in the role of Macbeth practices a sword fight with a fellow actor playing Macduff...
AP/JESSICA HILL Kevin Coleman (background, right), director of education at Shakespear­e & Company, works with a teenager portraying a soldier as another young offender (front left) in the role of Macbeth practices a sword fight with a fellow actor playing Macduff...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States