Entertainment

Cape Fear Regional Theatre presents "Footloose"

12The blue-walled rehearsal space attached to Cape Fear Regional Theatre is a mix of sounds of shoes hitting the floor. A mix of Chuck Taylor's and Cowboy boots move across the room. Looking up from further away, one could only see a sea of mostly cowboy hats on actors, doing steps, swinging in and swinging out, feet kicking up, 1-2-3-4. Again.
And again.
L Boogie is at the front of the rehearsal space with Camo pants, a long sweatshirt and a hat that reads "Do Good. Be Good." She laughs as she mimics a sort of country boogie-scat while the dancers follow out her choreography. She chameleons into her space with dancing being the tie that always binds for her.
"Don't be thrown by people walking by you," Director Suzanna Agins calls to them as the main actors of the show slink through the crowd.
"I'm gonna pray for y'all," L Boogie laughs at the dancers trying to keep the steps and not bump into the actors moving through their couplings. Boogie is a personality unto herself. This go round, she has the opportunity to choreograph CFRT's upcoming production of Footloose. Frequently after each step, she calls to the dancers to give themselves a high five.
Footloose will open in September in just a few short weeks. The actors, some of whom have graced the stage of CFRT before, have the pleasure of coming to the stage in the last production prior to the upcoming large renovation. CFRT will soon move to a space for the upcoming season near the Bordeaux shopping center.
For those who loved Kevin Bacon’s iconic movie growing up, the upcoming musical follows pretty close to the plot line of the 1984 movie.
"Some of those things are difficult to do on stage," Agins says and then chuckles, "two people playing chicken while riding tractors."
The production, however, will include the majority of the original music from the movie. Agins noted that the screenwriter for the movie helped in co-writing the music including the title song, "Footloose" with Kenny Loggins.
For this particular production, Agins viewed 300 tapes from auditions in three days. This did not include the in-person auditions she would do later.
"You start to feel a little fuzzy [watching] but then you watch one and you sit up straight and say, 'this person is amazing.'"
In the front of the rehearsal space, Josiah Thomas Randolph is standing, bouncing back and forth as he waits for his lines in the rehearsal room. His energy can be felt across the room and a smile rarely leaves his face. Randolph knew when he heard about the production of Footloose there was only one role he could do — Ren McCormick.
Although Randolph was born in Greensboro, this is his first production at CFRT. He grew up on Footloose and loving the energy that came from Ren. And this production, his family will get to come and watch.
"His character is so beautifully written. He's a complex teenager," Randolph says.
Randolph moves forward in the rehearsal space, delivers his line about the country bar the teenagers have just found themselves in and then bebops to the wall, but not before grabbing his awkward, lovable best friend Willard, who is played by Charlie Tucker. Tucker, who is no stranger to CRFT, moves awkwardly about the room. In between takes, while other actors are chatting, Tucker is methodically recalling his steps and quietly saying his lines to himself.
Standing beside Randolph and Tucker is Victoria Mesa who plays Ariel. This is also Mesa's first go at CFRT. Funny enough for Mesa, she says she did not grow up watching Footloose but gravitated towards movies like Grease instead.
"I knew some of the songs. I knew 'Footloose.' I knew Kevin Bacon," she laughs.13
For Mesa, this has given her the special pleasure of really curating the character, she says. Script analysis, a big love in her life, has been a large part of playing this role.
"I admire her in a lot of ways," she says. "This loss [of her brother] sort of drives her. She becomes a strong, fiery, passionate teenager."
The foursome, including Zoe Godfrey-Grinage who plays Rusty, maneuver through the crowd of dancers and find themselves in the back of the dancing establishment. The only actual recall to the space they will act in is the tape on the floor to show the actors where walls are located on the stage.
Randolph stands at the back of the room beaming. Tucker brings out a script book while he waits and walks awkwardly about. It’s not very clear if this is in character or just Tucker himself. Mesa and Godfrey-Grinage look about the room and wait for the beginning of the next sequence of events which will include dancing of their own.
The rehearsal will go on for hours as they all refine small details. Some of the actors, like Amber Dawn French, who plays Vie, the pastor's wife, are missing tonight. These scenes don't involve their characters. For French, it is also a welcome back to CFRT. She's a local to the area and often gets to audition the productions at the theatre.
This production, however, rings a little different as French says she really identifies with some of the religious undertones in her own character's story. French did not audition for Vie specifically but just for an adult part in the play. The twist of playing a character with religious beliefs similar to those she grew up in was a fortuitous turn.
"I came from a similar background," she says. "Not allowed to dance. Not allowed to wear pants. It's been interesting telling a story similar to mine."
The challenge, French says, is playing a character with such an incredible loss and that French in real life is an empathetic person.
"If I think too hard about it I cry and I can't sing anymore. The challenge is ... not falling apart as Amber in the midst of telling
Vie's story."
The actors move about the room again. Tucker, as Willard, says it’s a good time to find a seat (and not dance) while Randolph and Mesa take front stage and join in on the dancing. It’s been a couple hours on this scene but that is nothing new for any of these actors.
The show will start on Sept. 5 and run about three weeks in total. The production will be about two hours and 15 minutes with a 15-minute intermission. This show, Ashley Owen notes, is special because the members of CFRT gave the patrons an opportunity to vote on what play they should do in the first, empty slot of the season and Footloose won "by a landslide."
"It'll be one last hurrah before we officially move," she says. "Celebrate the last 63 years before we open a new chapter."
The production will include a military appreciation as well as a teacher appreciation night and two previews with the first night including a Welcome Back Bash that will feature complimentary drinks and food.
Tickets will range from $19 to $37. For more information about tickets visit CFRT.org or call 910-323-4234.

(Graphic courtesy of Cape Fear Regional Theatre.  Photo: The cast of Footloose pose in downtown Fayetteville. Footloose will open Sept. 5 at the Cape Fear Regional Theatre, and will be the last play held at the downtown location until renovations are complete. Photo courtesy of Cape Fear Regional Theatre)

 

Take a hike through Carvers Creek State Park's 13 miles of trails

10Steeped in history and ecological significance, the trails at Carvers Creek State Park weave visitors through Longleaf Pine ecosystems with wiregrass understory, past the longstanding Rockefeller House, and alongside habitats of federally endangered species. Approximately 13 miles of trails blaze through the 4881 acres of meticulously tended land.
Colleen Bowers, Ranger Supervisor at Carvers Creek State Park since 2010, detailed some of the restoration the property underwent in preparation for public access. She says it included reworking wetlands and a stream that was previously used as farm irrigation. The stream is now braided and runs across the front of the property. Restoration also includes regular controlled burns that regenerate and maintain the longleaf pine and wiregrass.
The ecosystem at Carvers Creek State Park is likely the most fire-adapted in the state, according to Bowers. She said there used to be about 90 million acres of longleaf pine in the southeast United States. Through turpentine harvesting and naval store industries in the 1700s, it was diminished to about three or 4 million acres. Longleaf pine sap is more plentiful and rich than other pine trees. They grow particularly tall, straight, and water-resistant. These raw materials were in particularly high demand at one time.
“It's definitely an ecosystem that we're losing but trying to preserve,” Bowers explained.
The preservation process requires controlled burns every few years. Bowers said they burn multiple units within the park on a 3-5 year rotation. The wiregrass meadow, however, is typically burned every year to maintain it as a warm-season grass meadow.
“In Fire-dependent ecosystems, the seeds cannot regenerate unless they’ve been exposed to fire in the summertime. So that way, when the seeds fall in the autumn, they're falling on nutrient rich, bare soil so they can sprout,” Bowers said.
This regenerative cycle and the habitat it provides endangered wildlife is the backdrop that hikers, bikers, and equestrian visitors enjoy on Carvers Creek trails.
Two trail access points, the Sandhills access, and the Long Valley Farm access, offer visitors distinct opportunities. Bowers explained that the Sandhills access trails are considered “multi-use,” meaning they’re open for hiking, biking, and horseback riding, and include horse trailer and pedestrian parking lots. The Long Valley Farm access trails are open only for hiking and biking, Bowers advised they can be challenging for bikes or strollers due to areas of soft, sandy terrain.
The Long Valley Farm access includes 2 trailheads: Cypress Point Loop Trail and Rockefeller Loop Trail. The Rockefeller loop trail features views of the Rockefeller house, the former winter escape of James Stillman Rockefeller. The house will eventually be renovated as a Visitor’s Center, but currently can only be viewed from the trail and is not open to the public. Bowers highlighted the first portion of the trail saying, “It’s a nice birding spot because there's a meadow on one side and then Longleaf Pine. So that's the first half mile of the trail is a great edge habitat for all of these birds.” She said sightings often include the Loggerhead shrike, Bobwhite quail, and Red-tailed hawk. The Cypress Point Loop trail runs along the millpond and features a 91-foot observation deck where visitors can access the scenic lake view.
The Sandhills access includes 7 trailheads. Bowers highlighted two. For an easy and approachable adventure, try the Wiregrass Loop Trail. Bowers said visitors don’t have to stray far for this activity, as the 1.4-mile loop starts and ends at the parking lot. For those interested in an up close look at the longleaf pine ecosystem, Bowers recommends the Longleaf Pine Trail. It’s 4 miles one way and does not loop, but visitors can turn around before the trail ends if they don’t wish to traverse all 8 miles. Not only do visitors get to see the towering trees on the Longleaf Pine Trail, but if they watch below, they’ll spy the creek. Hikers and cyclists cross on a footbridge, while horses ride through the water. The Sandhills access will also be the starting point for Fayetteville Running Club’s upcoming Deerfly Trail Race.
Humans and canines are both welcome at the Deerfly Trail Race with separate registrations and start times for both. Courses include an 11k and 6k that the Fayetteville Running Club describes as “fun and challenging race(s) for all ages and abilities.” The race will take place Saturday, Oct.19, at 8 a.m.
Bowers recommends visitors call ahead with questions and come prepared for their hike with important gear such as proper footwear, insect repellant, and plenty of water. Whether visitors are interested in walking, running, biking, or horseback riding, she encourages them to spend time on the trails and observe the unique ecosystems they spotlight.

9/11 Memorial Stair Climb Honors Fallen Firefighters

8We’ve become desensitized to stories about 9/11. We all seemingly know what the members of the Fire Department of the City of New York (FDNY) endured that day 23 years ago. We know that 121 fire engines, 62 ladder companies and 100 ambulances converged on the World Trade Center after al-Qaeda terrorists flew planes into first the North Tower at 8:46 a.m. and then the South Tower at 9:03 a.m.
We know that 23 battalion chiefs arrived at the Twin Towers and only 4 went home and that 750 firefighters were dispatched and that 343 never came back. We know the firefighters came to recognize the incomprehensible sound of human beings impacting the ground.
Faced with being burned alive, people chose to jump to their deaths, and in fact, the first firefighter to die on 9/11 was hit by a falling body. The sound became a siren’s call to the firefighters to ascend. The rescued owe their lives to men who saw and heard a nightmare around them and only thought to free their people. They attempted to climb the height of the building, 110 flights, 2,200 stairs, in full gear, into the smoke and fire. They reached the 78th floor.
That act by New York City’s firefighters on behalf of their fellow citizens is what the 2024 Fayetteville 9/11 Memorial Stair Climb is all about. Each climber carries the name and picture of a firefighter who died in the attacks. This year’s event will be held on Saturday, Sept. 14 at Segra Stadium, 460 Hay St.
The climb starts at 8:46 a.m., the exact moment the North Tower was struck. The public is welcome to participate; registration costs $30 and proceeds benefit the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation (NFFF). You’re encouraged to register online prior to Sept. 10 or to sign up onsite the day of the event starting at 6:30 a.m.
Firefighters know there are health concerns associated with wearing turnout gear. That said, young people born after 2001 only have two-dimensional screen images to help them understand what New York City firefighters, police and port authority personnel endured during a terrorist attack with fellow Americans trapped by fire above them. Seeing today’s firefighters wearing the same gear and carrying the same equipment is an in-person, real-world display of risk and self-sacrifice in honor of the fallen. It doesn’t go unnoticed.
Today, more firefighters have died from known cancers associated with the fallout of 9/11 than died in the attacks. The number is now north of 350, according to Regina Livingston, NFFF development program manager. Research shows firefighters are 9 percent more likely to be diagnosed with certain cancers than the average American and they are 14 percent more likely to succumb to those illnesses.
In addition to myocardial infarction within 24 hours of duty, those cancers are: mesothelioma, testicular, intestinal and esophageal. The firefighting community has been aware of this for 15 years, but only slowly has it come to the fore of the public’s consciousness. Here at home, the most recent line-of-duty death within the Fayetteville Fire Department (FFD) was Chief John Bowen from colon cancer. He was 35. Over the course of the FFD’s history, it has lost five firefighters in line-of-duty deaths.
FFD Captain Stephen M. Shakeshaft has “Sola Fide” tattooed inside his right forearm; on his left is “Sola Christus.” From the Latin, they translate as “through faith alone” and “through Christ alone.” They are two of the Five Solas of the Protestant Reformation, the 16th-century Christian movement that sought to bring the Catholic Church back to basics. (The other three are “Sola Scriptura,” the bible is the sole authority for Christians; “Sola Gratia,” we receive salvation solely through God’s grace; and “Soli Deo Gloria,” we live our lives to glorify God alone).
On his left forearm is a cross in color with a red-headed fireman’s axe ensconced within the wood of the cross. He’ll tell you that there’s no more intense rush than running into a burning building, but over time, he has come to realize he was encountering people on the worst day of their lives and that it was a privilege and gift he’d been given to help them. His perspective changed; the adrenalin addictiveness turned into a heart of service to those he encountered throughout his duty.
Brave The Fire is the FFD climb team and the department appreciates the community’s support and participation.
The first-responder community and the military have always maintained close ties. Sure, there is good-natured ribbing, but mutual respect predominates between our armed forces, law enforcement, firefighters and paramedics. This is why the military turns out in force to support their firefighting brethren.
Many of the men who died on 9/11 also served in the military. One firefighter who had served in the Marine Corps 35 years prior to 9/11 heard the cadence “one, two, three, four; I love the Marine Corps” in his head as he ascended the stairs. It got him through; he survived.
FDNY Chief of Department Peter J. Ganci, Jr. served in the 82nd Airborne Division.
When the North Tower collapsed, he did not survive. The Fayetteville Stair Climb has numerous military teams set up. You are encouraged to register with a team or as an individual to help explain to the next generation what happened on 9/11 and over the ensuing 20-year Global War on Terror.
The NFFF Stairs Climb Program began in 2005 as a training exercise in Denver, Colo. Because of 9/11, there was interest in learning about high-rise firefighting. As the anniversary approached, the organizers decided they would make the exercise equivalent to the 110 flights the 9/11 firefighters attempted to brave.
In a few years, other Colorado department heads inquired about conducting their own climbs and then firefighters out of state made contact. The organizers approached the NFFF and a partnership was born whereby events across the country would benefit the work of the NFFF. The organization’s “mission is to honor America's fallen fire heroes; support their families, colleagues and organizations; and work to reduce preventable firefighter death and injury.”
For more information, or to register for the event, visit https://nfff.akaraisin.com/ui/fayetteville24/about

(Photo: Firefighters, Police Officers, EMS professionals, soldiers and civilians took over 2100 steps to honor those who lost their lives in the World Trade Center and those who continue to live with 9/11 related illnesses during the 9/11 Memorial Stair Climb in 2023. More than 500 people participated in the climb.)

KidsPeace spreads awareness at auction by giving back

9At KidsPeace Foster Care’s Annual “Chair-ity” Auction, you’ll find limitless creativity expressed in the auction items. Past pieces included a rustic wood window upgraded with panes of meticulously laid mosaic glass, and a children’s rocking chair made new with freshly painted dinosaurs. These items, refurbished by local artists, help kids.
According to Mike Edelman, program manager at KidsPeace, the pieces are a reflection of the agency’s purpose.
"The idea is to take something old, thrown away, and discarded, and make it into something wanted, which is really our mission with our foster children. They feel like they're unwanted and they're thrown away. And we want them to feel wanted."
He told the story of one foster child whose summer was changed for the better by the Chair-ity Auction.
“She’s a very good student. She's in an early college program, and she got information at her school for a journalism camp at Johns Hopkins University up near Baltimore. But she crumpled up the paper and put it in the bottom of her backpack because she thought, ‘Nobody has the money.’ Her foster parents found this out a couple of days before the deadline. They called and said, ‘We really want to send her to this camp, we just need help.’ I said, ‘Absolutely, just tell me what you need and I’ll write the check.’ We immediately got that money paid to the school and she attended the journalism camp.”
Funds raised at the auction made her participation possible.
Hundreds of foster parents and children face similar dilemmas. According to Edelman, while Medicaid has increased their rates to an extent that helps KidsPeace keep their doors open, it’s not enough. KidsPeace wants to finance opportunities that keep the kids' lives moving “toward normalcy.” He described opportunities like summer camp, owning musical instruments, and going on vacation.
Despite the ongoing need to maintain a surplus allocated toward supporting these opportunities, 2024’s auction will look a little different. Edelman says they’re focusing on building awareness.
“We're calling it our ‘Give Back Year.’ We cut the cost of all of our sponsorships and our tickets in half this year. I don't want to say we don't need the money, there's always the need for money, but we also really want to continue to build awareness.”
The auction will still feature local artists’ handiwork, upcycling bits of unwanted furniture and turning them into stunning art pieces. But Edelman says they need to highlight more fundamental areas of need.
In Cumberland County alone there are 1,200 children in the foster care system. This is over four times greater than nearby counties similar in size and population. Forsyth County, for example, currently has 250 children in their foster care system. When kids in Cumberland County are placed with a foster family, summer camps and music lessons can become priorities, but delayed placements are not uncommon.
“There are so many kids in our area, some of them sleeping in DSS offices, because there aren't enough Cumberland County foster homes out there available to take them,” Edelman explained.
By cutting sponsorship and ticket costs, KidsPeace brings other needs to the forefront, including the need for more foster parents. But for those who can’t donate or attend the auction, he says there are other ways to help and hopes the community will spread the word.
“There are so many kids out there who need good, loving homes. We have a big need for awareness and just sharing information is often the best thing people can do. Maybe you're not in a financial spot to be able to donate, but if you share about the fundraiser, maybe somebody you know will want to buy one of these upcycled items. Or maybe you know someone who has an event space. We’re always looking for an event space for our Christmas party. As a non-profit, we’re all about doing things for free.”
Though their 11th annual auction won’t focus as heavily on funding, Edelman says the mission at
KidsPeace remains the same.
"These kids have faced enough rejection when they come to us. They've often been in 10 to 12 foster homes already. We want to end that cycle. We want them to know that people care about them."
General admission tickets can be purchased for $35.00 at kidspeacefayettevilleauction.com/annualauction. The “Chair-ity” Auction will be held Thursday, Sept.12, at 5:30 p.m. at the Cape Fear Botanical Garden.

(Photo: A participant holds up a paddle during the 2023 Chair-ity auction at the Cape Fear Botanical Garden. Photo courtesy of KidsPeace of Fayetteville' Facebook page)

Fayetteville Roller Derby hosts doubleheader

17Fayetteville Roller Derby is finishing up their season with a doubleheader against Cape Fear Roller Derby at the Crown Arena, 1960 Coliseum Drive (the building with the tin dome beside the theater), on Saturday, Aug. 24 starting at 5 p.m. Tickets are $14. Home team tickets purchased cover admission for both games. The night begins with the Fayetteville All Stars taking on the Cape Fear Roller Derby out of Wilmington, NC, and ends with a match between the FRD Ritzy Rollers and FRD Wreckers. For those unfamiliar with roller derby, it’s an aggressive marriage of rink skating and football. Here’s a breakdown of how roller derby works.
Playtime
• (2) 30-minute halves, broken down into 2-minute “jams” or plays
Players and Positions
• Each team is allowed 5 players,
• 1 Jammer (offense) designated by a star on their helmet
• 3 blockers
• 1 pivot blocker (defense) designated by a stripe on their helmet
• A pivot blocker can become a jammer, switching from offense to defense
Goal of the game
• Get the jammer around the track as many times as possible before the 2-minute jam ends
While some may have grown up watching “bank track,” most roller derby teams now compete on a flat track.
“We play on a variety of surfaces, not polished concrete… sometimes we’re on sport(s) court floors, sometimes it’s a skating rink, so that's a wooden floor and sometimes it’s a basketball court. That's the great thing about flat track [be]cause we can play anywhere that’s a smooth surface. We put a rope down to do boundaries and that gets taped over. That becomes our boundaries, and we can feel that with our wheels,” explained DanniBanannie, league secretary and training board member.
Fayetteville Roller Derby is as much a community staple as the International Folk Festival, with over 15 years in the community. The league is more family than competitors and it’s apparent in the way they talk about not only their teammates but others. Psycho, the league's recruitment chair said, “This is my 11th season with the league. I started in 2013… The hardest thing [about roller derby] is myself. I’m really hard on myself about it. Even after 11 years, I don’t feel like I’m very good. But the thing I love most about it is the family,” she said. “When I moved here, I didn’t have anybody and now me and SheHulk have been friends for 10 years. I really feel like this is my family here. And they always got my back. She (SheHulk) used to babysit for me when I took college classes.”
SheHulk, league President and training committee member said, “I’ve been on the team for 10 years now. I started when I was 19… we started 15, 16 years ago. There were actually two leagues at one point. I actually started on the other league and they kinda fizzled out and I transferred over here,” she said. “I grew up playing sports. When I moved to Fayetteville, I wanted something to do. I was looking for a softball team, literally anything. Then I saw an ad on Facebook that said ‘come play roller derby.’ I was like, Ok, and I’ve been doing it ever since.”
Fayetteville Roller Derby is actively recruiting new members. Members “pay to play” and are responsible for the purchase of equipment. Fayetteville Roller Derby is inclusive and openly invites anyone who identifies on the female spectrum to come out and try out.
One's ability to skate should also not keep them from trying out. Many members admit that roller derby was their first time skating, or they had very little track time before jumping headfirst into the sport. There are also non-skating positions for those who are quad-impaired or just can’t physically skate.
“Our open recruitment starts Aug. 26. There will be a practice Monday of that week and that Wednesday, as well as the following Monday and Wednesday. Anybody can come on any of those days if you want to learn how to skate with us. We’ll teach you everything… I’m primarily a blocker. I got one or two good jams in me [be]cause I have asthma and fun hurts my lungs,” Psycho said of the upcoming recruitment.
Make sure you follow them on Facebook to stay up to date on games and recruitment opportunities at https://www.facebook.com/fayettevillerollerderbyfans. Tickets for the upcoming doubleheader can be purchased at Ticketmaster.

(Photo:From left to right: Psycho, Hannabanannie and SheHulk, members of the Fayetteville All Stars Roller Derby team, pose for a photo during practice. Photo by Amber Little)

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