Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Harry Potter’

CHS students work on their production of a new play. (Jackie Saia photo)

The curtain goes up Thursday.

Coupeville High School’s production of Puffs, or: Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic runs May 9-11.

Show time is 7:00 PM each night.

Tickets are $10 for adults, $7 for students, and $5 for students with ASB.

As you prepare to be immersed in “a very familiar story about finding out you are a wizard and being swept away to a school of magic,” enjoy the pics above and below, which come to us courtesy Stefanie Ask and Jackie Saia.

And for more on the play, pop back to my first story here:

Magic in air, magic on stage

 

Read Full Post »

Opening on a stage near you next week. (Poster by Sydney Wallace)

Four years later, the magic is coming to the stage.

After the pandemic threw a wrench into things, the Coupeville High School Theater Department has regrouped to revive its production of Puffs, or: Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic.

The play, written by Matt Cox, hits the CHS stage May 9-11, with performances at 7:00 PM.

Tickets are $10 for adults, $7 for students, and $5 for students with ASB.

Puffs is “a very familiar story about finding out you are a wizard and being swept away to a school of magic,” said CHS drama instructor Stefanie Ask.

“But our show isn’t about that character.

“Our show is about Hufflepuffs, or Puffs, and being the unassuming lovable underdog we all find ourselves to be at one time or another.”

Ask and her students were deep in the rehearsal process in March 2020, when Covid arrived to throw things asunder.

“When the world paused, so did our heartfelt little play,” she said.

“It was heartbreaking to realize that the show we thought we sat aside for a few weeks of shutdown was not going to come to fruition at all for that wonderful cast of humans.

“Together we mourned (on GoogleMeets) for the theater experience that we should have had together as Puffs.”

Cut to four years later and Ask and a new group have revived the play and are dedicating it to those who were part of the original cast and crew.

“An entirely new combination of wonderful humans assorted into a cast, and we are finally bringing our sweet, funny, little underdog story to the stage for an audience” she said.

“We hope they’ll be out there in the audience (or elsewhere on their own heroic adventures) hearing our “Third or Nothing!” cheer and feeling the bond they share with today’s cast.”

 

The crew:

Director – Stefanie Ask
Stage Manager – Danni Demers
Light Technicians – Oktober Frost, Reina Reed
Sound Technician – Hailee Wells
Costume Designer – Nevaeh Hertlein-Darby
Set/Prop Team – Peyton Caveness, Nick Shelly, Zac Tackett

 

Cast:

Jorja Auen
Gareth Bevill
Peyton Caveness
Brooke Crosby
River Dearmond
Emma Garcia
Miles Gerber
Marz Halstead
Elizabeth Lo
Pamela Morrell
Michael Robinett
Lina Shelly
Cedar Socha
George Spear
Sydney Wallace
Zak Weatherford
Doc Wertz

Read Full Post »

Spanish foreign exchange student Lola Jimenez is following in the footsteps of big sis Elena by joining the Coupeville High School cheer team during her year in America. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Lola Jimenez is a true rarity.

She’s the second girl in her family to suit up for the Coupeville High School cheer squad, despite the fact her family doesn’t live in the USA, much less on Whidbey Island.

A foreign exchange student from Madrid, Spain, Jimenez, a sophomore, is following in the footsteps of older sister Elena, who was a cheerleader and softball player at CHS during the 2012-2013 school year.

And, not only is she attending the same school, in the same small town, but she’s also staying with the same host family.

Gretchen and Blake Thorn, and daughter Megan, also a Wolf cheerleader this winter, have hosted numerous foreign exchange students over the years.

The family has also visited Spain twice since Elena Jimenez was in America, strengthening the bond between the two clans.

“My family and the Thorns have an awesome relationship,” Lola Jimenez said. “I have known Megan for six years now and we both have been good friends.”

Lola’s older brother, Rafa, was also an exchange student, though not in Coupeville, and her family’s time in America inspired the young woman to strike out on her own.

Even if it meant leaving her beloved puppy, Dana, behind for a bit with parents Antonio and Lola.

“I wanted to be an exchange student because of my older siblings,” Jimenez said. “They had great experiences and I wanted to have those American experiences too.

“I have always been interested in the high school, because I have always seen it in movies and it seemed so cool and now I can say that it is,” she added. “Another thing that really interested me was the culture you have here.”

Part of that culture is cheerleading, which has drawn in a number of previous foreign exchange students at CHS who grew up only knowing the sport from American movies and TV shows.

“I decided to become a cheerleader because in the football season I fell in love with them, with all those acrobatic jumps, all the choreographies, the pom-poms … everything!,” Jimenez said.

“And we don’t have cheerleaders in Spain, so I wanted to give it a try,” she added. “Actually, the cheerleader is an iconic America high school thing and I could not miss the opportunity to became one of them.”

When she’s not cheering at games or working on her skills in practice, Jimenez can also be found in the arena, where she joins Megan Thorn on a horse gaming team.

Back in Spain, she did showjumping, dressage and side saddle riding.

Her time with horses is also fueling her future dreams, which include going to college and studying veterinary medicine.

“It has been my dream since I was three years old,” Jimenez said. “I love animals and the fact of being able to help them in the future is amazing.”

She also has her eye on following big sis Elena’s example and trekking out to the diamond this spring.

“I would love to try softball, it seems so fun,” she said.

Away from sports, Jimenez is a huge Harry Potter fan (“I am a real freak for it!”), who enjoys musicals like The Greatest Showman and Mamma Mia or sweeping romances such as Titanic or The Notebook.

She also has a love affair with Disney movies, hailing Lady and the Tramp as her favorite.

Music plays a large role in Jimenez’s life, and she bops from genre to genre.

“I love to listen to music, and I do it all the time,” she said. “I love every type of music, but what I listen to depends on my mood.

“Maybe one week I am listening to pop and the next week I am listening to rap.”

For Jimenez, music is more than just a series of songs, however, as she tends to get creative with how she uses the beat.

“Actually, I calculate time in songs,” she said.

“For example, I take three song showers, and from the high school to home is just one song and a half; I do that all the time.”

Life in a small rural town on a rock in the middle of the water is a big change from Madrid, which contains 3.3 million souls. But the young Spaniard is fitting right in.

“I am adapting good,” Jimenez said. “I love the fact that everyone knows each other.

“What I am not handling that good are the distances between Coupeville and everything else; I am not used to taking more than one hour to go shopping!”

And, even for an animal lover, the variety of wildlife scampering around Whidbey Island has been a bit of a surprise.

“Another of the things that I am still shocked about Coupeville are all the deer you have running around,” Jimenez said. “And the coyotes, those freak me out! Oh, and all those huge eagles!”

Read Full Post »

   Mollie Bailey has never met a cameraman she can’t mess with. (John Fisken photos)

   Bailey, being a rock behind the plate for Central Whidbey Little League hurler Melody Wilkie.

She is the chosen one.

Equally at ease in the heat of athletic battle and goofing off for the camera, Coupeville 8th grader Mollie Bailey is the last in a long family line of Wolf athletic legends.

From great-grandfather Robert “Fat” Engle, who tore up the CHS gridiron in the ’20s, to big sisters McKayla and McKenzie in recent years, her relatives are kind of a big deal on the prairie.

Not that the ever easy-going Mollie is going to be ruffled by pressure.

“Oh you know me, just too cool for school,” is her go-to motto, followed by a huge grin as she saunters away, giggling that you might have believed she was being serious.

She is very dedicated to her craft, however, whether it be playing basketball and softball (she’s adding soccer when she hits high school) or making a run at McKayla and McKenzie’s title of Photo Bomb Queen.

Bailey wants to make the duo proud.

“My big sisters had a lot to do with who I am as a player. They have always shown me the way,” she said. “I want to show my sisters that the little sister can kick as much butt as they did – maybe more!”

Following in their footsteps helped prepare her for her own athletic exploits, as well.

“I have been drug to so many of my sister’s games that I learned a lot just from watching,” Bailey said.

Like her sisters, she plays positions which require leadership skills and a knowledge of the game.

“I think one of my strengths is my awareness of the game, both on the field and the court,” Bailey said.

She claims no favorites, saying she enjoys all of her sports and gets something positive out of each.

“Can’t wait for seasons to start and then I’m ready for a break by the end of the season and excited to start the next one!,” Bailey said. “I enjoy the competition and playing/working with my teammates and friends.”

As she moves forward, she wants to “work on my speed and overall power,” with an eye on “making varsity before junior year.”

When she jumps to high school, she’ll retain fond memories of “Coach Ryan (King’s) technical and the bus rides to far, far away places.”

Away from the athletic stage, Bailey is a fan of movies like How to Train Your Dragon and the Harry Potter series and loves spending time outside.

“I like reading, hunting, building things with wood, hanging out with my friends and long walks on the beach,” she said.

Along with her sisters, and the 237 family members (give or take one or two) who show up to support her at games, Bailey gets strong support from her fervent fan club.

“Coach Bob Martin has always seen my potential,” Bailey said. “Also, (I appreciate) my friend Genna (Wright), who pushes me to be better and my mom and dad for always supporting me.”

Read Full Post »

Amanda Neitzel

Amanda Neitzel

Cheerleading has become the family business, and business is pretty dang good.

Following in the footsteps of older sister Maddy, who made an electric debut last year, Coupeville High School junior Amanda Neitzel is out to take the cheer world by storm this fall.

“I started because I saw my sister cheer and she would come home and tell me about how much fun she was having and how all the girls were so close,” Neitzel said. “I’ve always wanted to be part of a team.

“I love how all of us are all really close, we truly are one big family,” she added. “All the veterans are really helpful if you ask them for extra help on routines or cheers; they’re always there for you.”

Putting in hard work is a big part of being part of the Wolf cheer squad, something not always properly appreciated by those on the outside.

“We work really hard at every practice,” Neitzel said. “For our stunt groups our bases have to have strong enough legs and arms in order to get our flyers up in the air and keep them there.

“We work just as hard as any other sports team at our school.”

When she’s not slaving away at practice, Neitzel enjoys science class and loves Harry Potter, Iron Man and The Avengers (“I love anything Marvel”), while also harboring a semi-secret talent.

“I love to sing, but I’m really shy, so I don’t sing a lot in front of people.”

Those closest to her, friends and family, ease that shyness and make sure Neitzel feels appreciated and loved.

“My family and friends have helped to shape me who I am, they are all such amazing people and I’m thankful to have them all in my life,” she said. “Anytime I’m feeling down I have them to talk to and they always help put a smile on my face!

“I’m also pretty thankful for my best friend because she’s a lot like me; we are both huge goofballs and we make each other laugh a lot.”

Two women, though, stand as Neitzel’s closest companions, and she treasures every moment she has with them.

“My momma has always told me that I can do anything I put my mind to. She is my biggest supporter and she’s honestly the strongest person I know,” she said. “She always tells me how strong and smart I am and believes in me.

“My sister too; we may not always get along but Maddy’s my best friend and she’s always there for me and I’m always there for her.”

Read Full Post »