Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Singer with disability shines in Ali Stroker’s new kids book

- By Brooke Lefferts

NEW YORK — Broadway star Ali Stroker says she always felt like her “most powerful self ” when onstage, and now as the co-author of a new book for kids, she’s trying to empower others.

Stroker teamed up with her friend and middle grade author Stacy Davidowitz and set out to create a familiar character: a young girl in a wheelchair named Nat who wants to perform in a local musical.

“The Chance to Fly” was a way for the actor to share her own experience­s as a person with a disability and big dreams. Stroker, who has used a wheelchair since a car accident paralyzed her when she was 2, says she wanted to help kids with disabiliti­es recognize themselves in the book.

Even before winning a Tony in 2019 for her role in the Broadway revival of “Oklahoma,” Stroker served as an example of a person who doesn’t let limitation­s prevent her from achieving her goals.

Stroker said she was driven to write “The Chance to Fly” because she didn’t have any stories like it to read when she was in middle school. In a recent interview, Stroker talked about the challenges of writing a story similar to her own and representi­ng people with disabiliti­es.

Q: Nat loves musicals and performing. How did performing make you feel at her age?

A: On stage, I felt like I was my most powerful self because people were looking at me and staring at me. But it wasn’t just because of my wheelchair and it was a safe place to be different kinds of people. For a long time, I felt like I had to be, you know, like

happy and OK and inspiratio­nal for other people. And when I was on stage and I was playing a character who was going through something, I got to express all those other things that were living inside of me. Writing this book as well and going back to those really vulnerable, scary, first-time moments was so healing. And I think teenage Ali was just really brave and really tough. And I feel so proud of where I am now.

Q: Nat sometimes feels embarrasse­d about her wheelchair. Was it hard to write about that?

A: It was a challenge for me to go back to those moments. One of the ways I describe it is just like you feel like you’re like so hot and you feel like people are looking at you for the thing that you are most self-conscious of, and maybe the thing that you have the most shame about. And it’s just overwhelmi­ng. But I wanted to write it because whether you have a disability or you’re in a wheelchair or not, you have those self-conscious and really difficult moments in your life, especially as a teenager, when you just want to be like everybody else, but you’re not like everybody else. And the reason it needed to exist in this book is because I want young people to know that they’re not alone in feeling like that.

Q: There are more opportunit­ies recently for stories about people with disabiliti­es. Is that encouragin­g?

A: I really believe that one of the shifts that needs to happen is that actors with disabiliti­es are cast in roles where the storyline is not about disability and that we are able to just exist in stories and have disabiliti­es and have that not be the storyline. Because that’s one of the ways in which I believe some of the change can happen. I think that we are in a diversity movement, but oftentimes disability is not included in that movement because there is an opinion that in order for disability to be included, it has to be addressed. And I am here to say that you can cast somebody — like what happened with “Oklahoma.” I can play Ado Annie — my wheelchair is never addressed in the entire show. And yet we get to live this experience with a character who has a disability and we get to watch it and we are there with it, but we don’t have to talk about it.

Q: Nat names her wheelchair Peaches. Have you named your chairs?

A: My wheelchair is a part of my every moment, every day my wheelchair sits right next to my bed when I sleep. My wheelchair is my access to the world. And I like to have a good relationsh­ip with my chairs . ... My last chair was Twilight Flake — that was her racing name. She had sparkles!

 ??  ?? ‘The Chance to Fly’ By Ali Stroker and Stacy Davidowitz; Amulet, 288 pages, $17
‘The Chance to Fly’ By Ali Stroker and Stacy Davidowitz; Amulet, 288 pages, $17

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