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Show eant of he Arts Stage Story AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1977 Back r 7 V l PUnd ma. Y S- MAKEUP FOR "THE GLEANERS" is project each night for cast members Janette Buhler, left, and Janet Dean. Putting on finishing touches are Martha Hardina and Margaret Rogers. : J w " ' I v . "c- . j OPENING SCENE for the Command Performance of Utah Pageant of the Arts is "Protection." Cast member Kim Brown gets last minute makeup and set adjustment with help of Nancy Blackburn and Dix Davis of the production staff. I ' 1 . 4' it.-; I (7 ; I : EVERYTHING that can be seen by the audience has to be costumed or painted. Craig Shields, in the cast of "The Storm," gets detailed body makeup from Randy Blackburn, makeup specialist with the Pageant. A v H i if w "BACHANNALE" cast applies makeup in preparation for their curtain call. The six figures are caught in the movements of the dance "Autumn Bachannale" in a frieze of bas relief. The music fades, the lights lower and the curtain opens nightly at Utah Pageant of the Arts. Audience approval is evident by the warm applause, the exclamations of wonder and the comments on the audience questionnaires which are returned to the ushers each evening. But, the view of the audience, however inspiring, is just part of the picture at Utah's most successful new theatrical ventures. The backstage scene is also fascinating. The production requires a total of 85 persons in the cast night. In addition, 50 persons are required backstage to assit with casting, makeup, costuming, stage crew and other assignments which produce the magical illusion that the audience sees when the curtain opens. Cast members are greeted and checked in by the casting director and her assistant. They then go to costuming and makeup and go into the "holding" room where they play chess, visit with each other, or watch the performance per-formance on closed circuit television. The stage crew, the lighting staff and the production people work together to put the right person, in the right set, in the right place at the right time. All are cued and brought together by the contact with the director, who mans the control booth at the back of the American Fork High School theater. Backstage at the Pageant of the Arts? It's a fascinating scene! 1 t V t A, ( ' 7 r - . IV' I.. t ... . . m r-mrn-mtm-mtr I Wat wumwa i-rni n ii- I t . i rf 1 I W t v '.4 J HEADPIECF or wig is part of every costume for the Pageant. Margo Kukpatnck checks Karen Brady's headpiece for "Snap the Whip" as Shauna Brady watches with interest. "THE HUMMELS" are an audience favorite each night. Tony Anderson, in the set of "Smart Little Sister," gets an assist from waidtobe mistress Marge Davis as he prepares for his big moment on stage. Girls' Softball Tourney July 9 Starting July 9th, as a purl of the Lehi Roundup, a girl's Free Schooling Program For Vets Most Widely Used of All Benefits softball tournament will be held at the softball complex on the Lehi Veterans Memorial fields. Games will start at 12 noon on the 9th and conclude with a champion. Teams from Lehi, American Fork, Pleasant Grove, Spanish Fork and Provo are entering. The girls will be vying for the championship cham-pionship in softball. It's nice to have the highest living standard in the world. Too bad we can't afford it. During the 33-year life span of the biggest free schooling program in the nation's history, his-tory, nearly 17 million Americans Ameri-cans have been educated under und-er one of the three GI Bills passed since World War II, the Veterans Administration said today. The program trained nearly eight million World War II veterans, more than two million mil-lion Korean conflict vets and nearly seven million post Korean Kor-ean conflict servicemen and women. Free to the students, the three GI Bills cost the taxpayers tax-payers $40.7 billion and are regarded as one of the most successful and widely used of all veterans' benefits. VA's latest figures on GI Bill usage cover the period through November, 1976, a month before the traditional program was replaced with one requiring financial participation partici-pation by the serviceman or woman. The November enrollment figures, incidentally, showed large drops from those of a year previous due to the fact that the semi-annual VA compilation com-pilation was the first since GI Bill eligibility ran out for 3.6 million post-Korean and early Vietnam Era veterans. The GI Bill carries a 10-year "Use it Utah ranks seventh among the states in acres of inland water, according to the 1976 edition of 'Public Land Statistics.' or lose it" limit. Even with the smaller enrollment en-rollment figures, VA said 1.2 million veterans and active duty service personnel were taking GI Bill training in November. Nothing arrives more slowly and passes more quickly than a vacation. Follow the crowd to the horse races at the Am. Fork race track Friday and Saturday, July 8, 9. . . . ' - : I , , r " '.' TN;i ill ", ' - .1 PAGEANT SCRIPT WRITER Betty G. Spencer, center, confers with narrators Aaron C. Card, left, and Byron L. McFarlane. Mr. McFarlane narrated script for the first two weeks of the 1977 run, with Mr. Card taking over narrator duties June 27. The Pageant will close July 9. IF IFA SELLS IT - YOU CAN DEPEND ON IT fpQVS El t One thing about our new word for Bank Charges... The Price is Right! 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