The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Harrisburg and local officials announced the annual Ice & Fire Festival at a press conference this week.

Our March issue of the magazine is hot off the press, so make sure you grab a copy and read all of this month’s featured stories. This weekend is also exciting as the city will host its annual Ice & Fire Festival. Stop by our Midtown office to see our ice sculpture and grab the new issue! But first, all of this week’s news is linked below.

The Broad Street Market’s temporary tent for vendors displaced by the fire is closer to opening, our online story reported. The city shared that the tent will open in the spring, thanks in part to a donation of plumbing services by McClure Company.

Dauphin County announced that it would now accept glass for recycling at the Dauphin County Recycling Center, our online story reported. The new location adds to Harrisburg’s list of 10 drop-off containers.

The Harrisburg School District’s building configuration will change for the upcoming school year, our reporting found. Receiver Dr. Lori Suski approved moving students out of schools like Scott Elementary and Rowland Middle School and into others like Camp Curtin Middle School and the Lincoln Administration Building.

Harrisburg University is accepting applications for its Financial Literacy Scholarship Competition, our online story reported. The school is giving high school students a chance to earn a little cash and a scholarship, while promoting responsible money management.

The Harrisburg Zoning Hearing Board turned down a Midtown development project’s requested relief from parking requirements at a meeting on Monday, our online story reported. The board stated that they wanted the apartment project proposed for 320 Reily St. to provide the total amount of spots required by the zoning code.

Ice & Fire Festival is returning to Harrisburg on Saturday, our online story reported. The event will take place throughout the city and feature ice sculptures, food and live music.

March has lots of events taking place in and around Harrisburg. Find a list of all of them, here. For our specially featured activities happening this month, check out our Community Corner.

Open Stage’s “Sweeney Todd” is “peppered with darkly comedic spots, infused with intense suspense, and splashed with just a little taste of gristly gore,” says our theater reviewer. The show will run through March 16.

Our publisher shared in his column that he’s happy to see the community supporting the Broad Street Market and its vendors. Again, he implores people to continue shopping and dining at the market.

Sara Bozich has a list of events happening in the Harrisburg area this weekend. Find them all, here.

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) objected to the sale of Governor’s Square, a bankrupt and blighted low-income housing development in Harrisburg, our reporting found. Additionally, the court hearing to determine a buyer for the property has been continued.

Zembo Shrine in Harrisburg announced that it is now on the National Register of Historic Places, our online story reported. The Shriners hope that the new designation will allow them to apply for additional grants and show the community that they are here to stay.

 

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Harrisburg native, former NFL player breaks ground on affordable housing development

Vice Capital and local officials broke ground on JMB Gardens.

Developers have broken ground on a new affordable housing project in Harrisburg.

Former NFL player LeSean McCoy and his development company, Vice Capital, ceremonially broke ground on Friday on JMB Gardens, which will provide low-income housing on N. 6th Street.

“It’s a celebration for our community,” said McCoy, a Harrisburg native. “We are here to be the difference and make a change.”

JMB Gardens will consist of four rowhome-style buildings built on several currently vacant plots of land on the 2200- and 2300-blocks of N. 6th Street. In total, they will provide 41 affordable units, consisting of a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments. There will also be a community center as part of the project.

LeSean McCoy

The entire project cost is around $16.7 million, including funding from the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency (PHFA).

“We want to thank Mr. McCoy and his whole team for making this investment,” said Bryan Hudson, the former CEO of PHFA.

Construction on JMB Gardens is expected to take 12 to 14 months, according to Ryan Sanders, vice president of development for Vice Capital.

“It feels amazing,” Sanders said. “It’s a great opportunity to help families in our area.”

Construction began on JMB Gardens on N. 6th Street.

McCoy and Vice Capital are also currently working on another housing development on N. 6th Street, on the 1500 block. The “Savoy 48” will include 48 apartment units, 10 of which will be affordable by federal standards.

While that project broke ground in June 2023, Sanders said that construction has been delayed, but will likely begin in the coming months.

For more information about Vice Capital, visit their website.

 

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Harrisburg’s Zembo Shrine recognized as national historic place

Zembo Shrine

A notable Harrisburg building has received national recognition for its history.

Zembo Shrine, on N. 3rd and Division streets, recently announced that it is now on the National Register of Historic Places. The Shriners hope that the new designation will offer opportunities for growth.

“It’s something we are very proud of,” said Mike Smith, former Zembo potentate. “It shows the community what we are about.”

Several years ago, the fraternal organization had put Zembo, which was built in 1929, on the sales market, stating that maintaining the building had become too costly. However, in February 2022, the Zembo Shriners pulled the building off the market, opting to retain and restore it as an event space for the Harrisburg area.

“Just talking to people who aren’t even Shriners, I’ve seen what Zembo has meant to them,” Smith said. “People love Zembo and want it to stay in our hands.”

Once they decided to keep the building, the Shriners moved forward with the process of registering it as a National Historic Place, citing its unique Moorish Revival-style architecture. Zembo partnered with the Historic Harrisburg Association (HHA), which helped the organization raise donations for registration process costs.

“We are delighted that HHA was able to provide technical and administrative assistance to Zembo in the challenging process of seeking and successfully securing a National Register listing,” said HHA President Jeb Stuart.

With the designation, Smith said that Zembo can now apply for certain grants that are only made available to properties on the register. The historic designation also shows the community that Zembo is here to stay, Smith shared.

“Zembo has played an important role in a lot of people’s lives,” he said.

The organization has also been working to make upgrades in the building, recently replacing the HVAC system and completing roof work.

And while membership has been on the decline over the years for the group, Zembo still has about 1,350 Shriners who meet in the building.

Smith said that, post-COVID, event space rentals have picked back up, as well. One of the most popular events, the Zembo Shrine Circus will return to the building’s auditorium from March 21 to March 24.

To celebrate Zembo and its addition to the National Register of Historic Places, HHA will host “A Toast to Zembo Shrine!” at the Shrine on Friday, May 17, from 6 to 9 p.m. The event will also honor recipients of HHA’s 2024 Preservation Award.

Zembo Shrine is located at 2801 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit their website.

 

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Frozen Festivities: Harrisburg’s Ice & Fire Festival to return to the city this weekend

Harrisburg Communications Director Matt Maisel, joined by other local officials, announced the Ice & Fire Festival at a press conference on Thursday.

This weekend, Harrisburg will get a little cooler.

The city’s Ice & Fire Festival will bring entertainment, food and, of course, ice to Harrisburg on Saturday, March 2.

“What makes this festival so special is that it really is the only special event that we have during the course of the year that incorporates the entire city,” said Matt Maisel, communications director for the city, at a press conference on Thursday. “We call it the hottest festival on ice.”

There will be nearly 70 ice sculptures located throughout the city during the festival, including shapes like a car, a throne, the state Capitol dome and a sloth, among others. Additionally, the festival will incorporate live ice carving demonstrations, and sculptures will be illuminated in the evening.

A majority of the sculptures will be located downtown, on N. 2nd Street, where most of the festival happenings will take place. However, ice sculptures will be found near Italian Lake, Reservoir Park, City Island and throughout Midtown, as well.

Downtown, children and families can enjoy free activities like an ice slide, ice skating rink and build-you-own s’mores at fire pits. There will also be balloon animals, face painting and, for a fee, horse-drawn carriage rides around the city. The city is also providing a heated seating tent.

Visitors will be able to shop at an artist market located inside city hall and at the HBG Flea inside Strawberry Square.

Live music, entertainment and dance will take place on a stage on N. 2nd Street. Fire dancers will perform at 5 p.m. and 7 p.m.

Food trucks will also be onsite, along Market Street, during the day, offering a wide range of menu options.

Attendees are also invited to participate in an ice sculpture scavenger hunt. Participants will have to scan the QR codes on at least 10 ice sculptures and fill out an online form. Two winners will be selected randomly to win gift cards to city businesses.

Free parking will be available downtown after 5 p.m. Visitors can also get four free hours of parking during the day by using the code LUVHBG in the Parkmobile app. A discounted $10 rate is available at the Market Square Garage courtesy of Park Harrisburg.

N. 2nd Street will be closed, between Market and Walnut streets, starting at 9 a.m. on Friday. The closure will then extend to Pine Street beginning at 7 a.m. on March 2. Market Street will also be closed between 2nd and Front streets at 7 a.m. on March 2. All roads will reopen as normal after 10 p.m.

The Ice & Fire Festival will take place on March 2, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. For more information, visit the city’s website.

 

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Plan your weekend with my weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg and central PA!

 

What you’ll find ⤵️

For something new: I think the Exotic Meats Dinner at Home 231 sounds really cool Worth noting: Harrisburg’s Ice & Fire Festival, HBG Flea are Saturday musts Things on my agenda this weekend: PA Game + Garden Show with mom, dinner with friends, maybe a visit to the Maple Sugar Festival on Sunday

For your weekend planning

Below are more options for your weekend.

A Look Ahead

  1. Check out next month’s events!
  2. You can now sponsor the Weekend Roundup! Ask me how!
  3. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

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Federal agency objects to proposed sale of Harrisburg’s Governor’s Square, hearing postponed

Photo by Dani Fresh

The sale of a blighted, bankrupt affordable housing development in Harrisburg has been postponed and is facing significant resistance.

On Tuesday, this week’s scheduled bankruptcy court hearing to finalize the sale of the Residences at Governor’s Square was continued until April. Additionally, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) recently joined Harrisburg and several Governor’s Square tenants in objecting to the proposed sale.

Uptown Partners, the owners of Governor’s Square, filed for bankruptcy in May. For years, tenants dealt with quality-of-life issues in the units, and the property has received hundreds of city code citations and condemnations.

The final hearing to determine a buyer has been continued from Feb. 29 to April 2 at 10:30 a.m. in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania.

In January, the owner identified a potential buyer for the development, New Jersey-based real estate company ANCDI, according to court documents. The company made an offer of $9.6 million at a Jan. 10 auction.

Last week, HUD filed an objection to the sale, stating that the proposed buyer has failed to agree to HUD’s conditions for their approval. According to HUD, it has a right to approve the sale of Governor’s Square because of its ties to the development. Years ago, HUD sold the property to Uptown Partners in exchange for deed restrictions and covenants to keep the housing affordable, in addition to providing the owner with multi-million-dollar loans to aid in redevelopment.

In the court documents, HUD also states that it has a right to receive a portion of the proceeds from the sale of Governor’s Square, but that the proposed owner has not made it clear whether they would honor that.

Additionally, HUD objected to the uncertainty of the language in the proposed sale order, which says that Governor’s Square must be sold “free and clear of any liens, claims, interest and encumbrances of every kind or nature whatsoever.” HUD’s objection said that the buyer must make it clear that they intend to maintain the property as affordable housing in keeping with the restrictive covenants.

Last month, Harrisburg also objected to the sale, in addition to three people, two of whom hold tenant leases at Governor’s Square.

Both objectors also expressed concern about keeping Governor’s Square affordable and stated, in court documents, that they didn’t believe ANCDI had adequate experience with low-income housing development.

 

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Harrisburg School District to reconfigure several buildings, grades

Harrisburg School District’s Lincoln Administration Building (file photo)

The Harrisburg School District’s building configuration will look different in the coming year.

At a board meeting on Tuesday, Receiver Dr. Lori Suski approved the opening of some school buildings, the closing of others and the moving of several grades to different buildings for the 2024-25 academic year.

At a meeting in November 2023, Superintendent Eric Turman presented several options for reconfiguration, which he said would help balance student populations at each building, create neighborhood schools on the elementary level, and allow the district to prioritize facility improvements at certain buildings.

Suski approved the plan, which includes removing students from Scott Elementary School and repurposing the building. Additionally, the Lincoln Administration Building will be used as an elementary school. The plan also includes phasing out Rowland Intermediate School over three years and moving those students to Camp Curtin Middle School.

In addition, the plan includes enrolling only 6th through 8th grade students at Marshall Math Science Academy, which currently includes 5th grade. Cougar Academy, which is currently housed in the Lincoln building, will move to the Hamilton building on N. 6th Street, replacing the Specialized Services Education, Inc. program, which will move to Scott temporarily.

At the meeting, several board members and a few community members raised concerns around the reconfiguration, specifically combining both middle schools in one building.

“The rationale is to move all the students from the two schools with the most behavioral issues into one school and then say that the teachers have told you they don’t have any concerns about it; that doesn’t make any sense to me,” said board member Danielle Robinson.

Several other board members made comments about the increased number of students, an estimated 900, who would be attending the school and about the lack of community feedback on the plan.

According to John Reedy, chief of operations for the district, Camp Curtin would not reach capacity, but would be at about 79% of building capacity.

Suski also stated that she believed that there was sufficient room for students in the building and that several other local middle schools have comparable numbers of students.

Turman also justified the decision by sharing that the district wants to move students out of Scott and Rowland, two schools that were originally designed as office buildings, not constructed to house students.

“We are going to work as hard as possible to make sure there are no issues at Camp Curtin,” Turman said. “It’s very important to all of us to make sure we make this work because we know at the end of the day is what’s best for the students of Harrisburg.”

According to Turman, the Harrisburg Education Association, the teachers’ union, expressed support for the plan.

The alternative to the middle school reconfiguration would be to renovate Rowland, district officials explained. However, Reedy said that it would likely cost over $15 million to renovate Rowland, according to a recent feasibility study by the district that outlined upgrades needed to buildings to keep them operational.

In the end, Suski approved the reconfiguration. Next, she said, the plan must be submitted to the state Department of Education for approval.

Also wrapped up in the reconfiguration is the re-opening of Steele Elementary School, a long-vacant building that the district has been renovating. Steele will contribute to creating more neighborhood-based schools on the elementary level, Turman explained.

Also on Tuesday, Suski approved the sale of 42 acres of the district’s land at 1901 Wayne Ave. in Susquehanna Township to the Susquehanna Township School District, which plans to construct a middle school on the property, according to district officials. The Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas ultimately will need to approve the sale.

 

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Struggle for Survival: Resistance against Nazis highlights festival film

A scene from ‘Four Winters’

One of the burning questions people ask about the Holocaust is why more Jews didn’t resist Nazi persecution and mass murder.

Nobel Prize laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel suggested a reframing.

“The question is not why all the Jews did not fight, but how so many of them did,” he said “Tormented, beaten, starved, where did they find the strength—spiritual and physical—to resist?”

Yet, many did. There were ghetto uprisings—the Warsaw ghetto was the most famous but not alone—and uprisings in three death camps. There were Jews who refused to hand over other Jews for deportation. Some fought in national resistance movements, while others resisted spiritually by creating Jewish cultural institutions and continuing to observe holidays and rituals. And Jews helped each other survive.

There were also Jews, many still in their teens, who escaped from the ghettos into the forests, where they joined other partisan groups or formed units of their own.

Julia Mintz’s documentary, “Four Winters: A Story of Jewish Partisan Resistance and Bravery in WWII,” gives voice to the latter. It is also the March offering—on the ninth and 10th of the month—of the Edward S. Finkelstein Harrisburg Jewish Film Festival.

The partisans, probably numbering 25,000 to 30,000, consisted mostly of very young men and women who fought deep in the forests of Eastern Europe, Ukraine and Belarus. Sometimes, their groups were small. Others, like the Bielskis, drew hundreds of members.

Mintz interviewed eight former partisans—now elderly—who appear on camera. Others contributed offscreen. And a “lot of research bolstered the interviews,” she said.

The “four winters” in the film title refer to the frigid conditions these young people braved, year in and year out, until the end of the war, and their commitment to that end.

A scene from ‘Four Winters’

There were forays into neighboring villages from the forest seeking weapons or something to eat, not knowing whether the people they’d encounter would be sympathetic or Nazi collaborators. And when they did get food, it didn’t necessarily meet Jewish dietary standards. Laughing, one of the former partisans said, “I keep kosher now.”

Added Mintz, being a partisan meant “breaking the 10 Commandments.”

Above all, there was the challenge of undergoing a transformation from young innocents to brave resistance fighters. But they felt they had no choice.

“We were high on survival,” said one of the former partisans.

Mintz, whose work focuses on narratives of bravery and resistance against unimaginable odds, has been on the producing teams for films shortlisted for the Academy Awards. She will be in Harrisburg to speak, live, at the screenings of “Four Winters.”

 

Shared Experience

This year, the Harrisburg Jewish Film Festival is, for the first time, offered as a film series, one weekend a month through June, rather than as an eight-day festival. The festival began in October, said chair Julie Sherman.

“We’re four very memorable films down, six more to go,” she said.

The films are presented live on Saturday nights at the Alexander Grass Campus for Jewish Life and Sunday afternoons at Midtown Cinema, both in Harrisburg.

Remaining festival offerings include “Remembering Gene Wilder,” a tribute to the beloved comic actor (April 6 to 7); “Perfect Strangers along with Madame Rosa,” the book club feature (May 4 to 5); and “Less Than Kosher” (June 1 to 2).

The first film directed by Israeli movie star Lior Ashkenazi, “Perfect Strangers” is the story of a group of friends who play a risky game—they toss their cell phones into the center of the table, and every message or call received is revealed for all to see. The Israeli version of “Perfect Strangers” is part of a greater phenomenon. It began as a 2016 Italian film that struck a universal chord, adapted more than a dozen times in diverse cultures.

“Madame Rosa,” released originally in 1977 and based on the book, “The Life Before Us” by Romain Gary, stars Simone Signoret as an elderly Holocaust survivor and former prostitute who cares for the children of other prostitutes.

“Less Than Kosher” is a Canadian movie about a failed singer whose life changes radically when she assumes the role of cantor at her family’s synagogue. The creator and star of the piece, Shaina Silver-Baird, will appear, live, with the film.

“Finally, people are coming back to the movies,” Sherman said. “We’re really pleased with our film selection this season, but really, the most exciting aspect of the festival is having our audience together in one room, sharing the experience.”

The Alexander Grass Campus for Jewish Life is located at 2986 N. 2nd St., Harrisburg. Midtown Cinema is located at 250 Reily St., Harrisburg.

Tickets for all 2023-24 screenings at the Grass Campus are available now. Midtown Cinema tickets will be available online two weeks before each screening. For more information, visit www.hbgjff.com.

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Paint by Nature: Local creators, groups use art to advocate for, promote environmentalism

Naturally dyed fabric by Jovana Sarver

Harrisburg-based artist Jovana Sarver doesn’t let an onionskin, avocado pit or rose petal go to waste.

While most people are quick to toss them into the trash once peeled, plucked or withered, Sarver sees their potential. She takes cast-aside items and makes them her medium.

Sarver take pride in her natural fabric dying technique—as opposed to synthetic—that she uses to create one-of-a-kind pieces of clothing under the name Dirt Petal. Over time, she’s found that red onionskin, interestingly, can create a vibrant green dye, avocado skins and pits elicit a dusty pink, and florals make a rainbow assortment.

Jovana Sarver

As much as Sarver loves the “magic” of experimentation and crafting dye recipes out of nature, her art has a larger purpose—promoting re-use over destruction.

“It’s a way of working with abundance and natural resources,” she said. “You’re using something that already exists. There’s a greater positive impact.”

Sarver isn’t the only artist interested in making an environmental impact through her work. Art groups, organizations and creators in central Pa. are using their talents to get people to think deeper about nature—its beauty, but also the threats to its harmony.

For Sarver, that means avoiding synthetic dyes, which, she said, are artificially made using fossil fuels, and, instead, using natural dyes and fabrics, many of which are upcycled and vintage. Her choice of materials also won’t harm the land when they’re eventually returned to it, she noted.

Wearable art is unique in that it’s a “living gallery,” Sarver said, and that’s what she loves about it. Her canvases range from graphic T-shirts to slip dresses, ankle socks, blouses and matching sweat sets. Each piece is different, and she utilizes a variety of dying techniques. Some clothing items are hand-painted with color blocking, some are eco-printed with plant patterns and others are tie-dyed.

“When people see my work and know that it’s made with natural dyes, it blows their minds,” Sarver said. “It creates a lot of curiosity and deepens people’s attention to their environment.”

Pen-and-ink drawing by Ned Smith

Best of Both Worlds

Over Peter’s Mountain and tucked away in Millersburg is the Ned Smith Center for Nature and Art.

If the name didn’t immediately give it away, the center brings together brush and bark for art and environmental education. Specifically, the facility serves as a memorial to the late Ned Smith, a local artist and naturalist.

“He drew inspiration from what he saw and photographed,” said the center’s archivist, Alexis Rich. “Protecting wildlife was important to him.”

Smith’s paintings, which are permanently on display in the center’s gallery, depict moose in a forest, bluebirds feeding their babies, a pair of foxes on a snowy bluff, and many other nature scenes.

Emily Rosmus, director of educational programming at the center, was always interested in art and nature, but didn’t realize she could combine both of those passions in a career. Having previously worked at nature centers, she came to the Ned Smith Center interested in the way it incorporated art education.

“I can’t say I’ve been to a place like this,” Rosmus said. “We focus on those two aspects so distinctly.”

Rosmus uses Smith’s art to teach students, who come to the center for summer camps and field trips, about wildlife, introducing them to creatures and plants. The staff will then take them for nature walks, pointing out animal tracks, mushrooms, snakes and birds.

When a student is more interested in nature, the more they will care about its wellbeing, she explained.

“It gives them more appreciation for when we take them into the woods,” she said. “We are guests there, it’s not our territory. We try to do our best by leading by example.”

While Smith died in 1985, Rosmus believes that, had he still been alive today, Smith would be concerned about threats to the environment, specifically, climate change.

“Based on what we know about Ned, I think he would be very alarmed,” she said.

 

Impact Change

When Martha Taylor retired, she finally had the time to pursue a long-time interest of hers—painting.

Then she heard about the Farmland Preservation Artists of Central Pennsylvania, a group that works to promote the preservation of the land through their art. Taylor grew up going to her grandparents’ dairy farm, so the thought of combining her two interests made getting involved in the art group an easy decision.

The group, which formed in 2005 as a joint effort between the Art Alliance of Central Pennsylvania and the Centre County Farmland Trust, is made up of about 18 artists. They travel around the region painting farm scenery, produce and animals, and they host a few exhibits each year.

Taylor and her fellow artists also sell their paintings to raise money for the art alliance and farmland trust, although the education and advocacy work is even more important to them.

“I really started to see a lot of development at places I remember as rural farmland,” Taylor said. “I think it’s important to maintain farmland, not just for food security, but for the sense of place.”

A selection of the group’s work, 51 pieces, was showcased in the state Capitol building this past October. That exhibit was especially meaningful to Taylor as they were able to get their art in front of lawmakers.

“That was a big step forward in our efforts,” she said. “I feel like we were being seen by the people that make the decisions.”

Ultimately, being seen is what all of the artists and organizations advocating for the environment want. To them, getting eyes on their art is deeper than receiving personal recognition, as viewers ponder their message.

Sarver, for one, is excited about her recent collaboration with a large company to develop natural dye recipes for their use. Designers from clothing brand Alexander McQueen commissioned also a piece from her.

“I’m seeing the bigger industries try to adapt,” she said. “That gives me hope that companies want to change.”

Whether it’s through opportunities like this, or through smaller instances, like staff at the Ned Smith Center seeing a child’s wonder and curiosity of nature sparked, art has a chance to make a difference.

“It gives me a great sense of responsibility and pride that I can use art to impact change,” Sarver said.

For more information about Jovana Sarver and Dirt Petal, visit www.dirtpetal.com or find her work for sale at Found Collab, 25 S. 3rd St., Harrisburg.

The Ned Smith Center is located at 176 Water Company Rd., Millersburg. For more information, visit www.nedsmithcenter.org.

To learn more about the Farmland Preservation Artists of Central Pennsylvania and upcoming exhibits, visit www.artallianceofcentralpa.org/farmland-preservation-artists-central-pa.

Stories on environmental subjects are proudly sponsored by LCSMWA. 

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Solace & Solidarity: Part of this month’s Good at Heart Festival, “Mary Speaks” offers a “classic story of a mother’s love”

Angela Polite. Photo courtesy of Angela Polite.

In tumultuous times, Angela Polite’s one-woman show, “Mary Speaks,” is a powerful testament to the enduring strength of Black mothers and their sons.

The New York actor is bringing her play to Open Stage this month for seven performances.

“I began to write ‘Mary Speaks’ in August 2015,” Polite said. “The rash of shootings of unarmed Black men over three years came to a tipping point with the death of Mike Brown in Ferguson, Mo. That one incident pushed pen to paper.”

That scorching, violent summer, Polite found solace in the timeless tale of Mary, the mother of Jesus, as a poignant parallel to the anguish of Black mothers throughout history.

“I had read reports that Brown’s mother tried desperately to get through the crowd to see if the body was indeed her son. Something in the story felt familiar,” Polite recalled. “In that moment, I saw Mary at the foot of the cross, and it hit me—all of these Black mothers were Mary.”

While grounded in biblical allegory, “Mary Speaks” transcends religious boundaries, offering a narrative that speaks to the universal experience of motherly love.

“It’s not a religious play,” Polite said. “It is the classic story of a mother’s love. Everyone can relate to that.”

With a career spanning 15 years, Polite’s passion for performance runs deep, rooted in her upbringing in Charleston, S.C. Yet, it is her unwavering commitment to telling stories that resonate with audiences on a profound level that sets “Mary Speaks” apart.

“Black mothers have always been in mourning for their sons,” she said. “The killing of unarmed Black men is nothing new. I hope there comes a time when this play is no longer relevant.”

Drawing inspiration from the Black Lives Matter movement, “Mary Speaks” stands as a beacon of resilience and empowerment, inviting audiences to bear witness to the untold stories of marginalized communities.

“The message of BLM is simply ‘we matter,’” Polite said. “And if we matter, then our stories matter. Art remains the powerful tool through which we can do that.”

As patrons prepare to embark on this transformative journey, Polite offers a glimpse into what they can expect.

“People can expect to be invited in,” she said. “This journey is just as much about the character as it is about the audience. There are highs and lows. Buckle up!”

In a world fraught with uncertainty, “Mary Speaks” offers solace and solidarity, reminding us of the enduring power of love, resilience and the human spirit. The production is part of Open Stage’s second annual “Good at Heart Festival.”

Centered around the theatre company’s 24th annual production of “The Diary of Anne Frank,” the festival focuses on social and racial justice conversations and art, inspired by Anne Frank’s quote, “In spite of everything I still believe that people are really good at heart.”

Experience the transcendent stories of the Good at Heart Festival firsthand with a series of performances and discussions this March.

“Mary Speaks” runs March 23 to 30 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. “The Good at Heart Festival” runs March 19 to 23. For more information, visit www.openstagehbg.com.

Stuart Landon is Open Stage’s artistic director.

 

UPCOMING EVENTS 

At Open Stage
www.openstagehbg.com
717-232-6736

The 2nd Annual Good at Heart Festival
A week of art and conversation celebrating the spirit of Anne Frank
March 19 to 24

“The Diary of Anne Frank”
Open Stage brings this important play back for its 24th season
March 19 to 22
ASL interpreted performance Thursday, March 21 at 7:30 p.m.

Black NewsBeat with Dr Kimeka Campbell
Join the live studio audience.
Wednesday, March 6 at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, March 19 at 7 p.m.

EFF Live!
A night of naughty fanfic readings
Sunday, March 17 at 7:30 p.m.

“Mary Speaks”
A bold new take on the timeless story of Mother Mary and her son
March 23 to 30
ASL interpreted performance Sunday, March 24 at 2 p.m.

 

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