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"But when I read an article in the local paper about acting classes for adults, I remembered acting in high school plays and that had been a happy time for me." He decided this was an opportunity to recapture some of that joy.
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Within two months of starting class, Harding auditioned at the Longview Community Theatre, where he got the part of Buffalo Bill in Annie Get Your Gun. "I'm still a serious guy," he says, "but I'm having more fun than ever before. I get onstage, and I relax. Even my wife says she's seen a change in me."
Harding is one of thousands of seniors across the country who have ventured into theater as an arena of self-expression, therapy, social benefit and sheer fun. According to Bonnie Vorenberg, author of Senior Theatre Connections, a resource guide, the number of senior performing groups has grown from 78 in 1999 (the first year she collected data) to 409 in 2002. And senior theater is getting a serious nod from the academic world. In August 2002, Ohio State University's department of theater served as host of the first International Senior Theatre Festival and Conference ever held in the U.S., and the university is considering offering a master's degree in senior theater. Meanwhile, at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas (UNLV), 25 students are working toward a B.A. in senior theater a major first offered just three years ago.
Most of the students in the UNLV program are over 50. One is retired home contractor Jack Winston, 68, who in his early 20s performed in off-Broadway plays. He gave up the actor's life when he married, had a family and needed a "real" job. After he retired and moved to Las Vegas, he started dabbling in local theater. Four years ago, he enrolled in classes at UNLV. "It's not only fun," he says, "but it's forcing me to use parts of myself that have lain dormant for years."
The upsurge of interest in senior theater stems from several factors, according to experts. "There is a larger population of people 50 and older," says Ann McDonough, director of gerontology and senior adult theater at UNLV. "These people are healthy and active and want to either return to something they did earlier in their lives or take up something that they always wanted to try."
For Lou Tudor, 56, of San Diego, joining the Late Bloomers Comedy Improv Troupe, which is geared to people over 55, started as an adventure but turned into something therapeutic. "When I retired last year, I wanted to keep busy," says the former corporate executive, "and improv sounded like a blast, even though I had no prior stage training." Tudor had recently suffered several bouts of serious illness and had lost a beloved 49-year-old brother-in-law to a heart attack. Doing improv not only became an exciting new hobby but also taught her to live emotionally in the present. "When you have to think on your feet," she says, "the present is the only place you can be. Fortunately, that realization has carried over into my offstage life as well, and I think it's helped me cope."
Experts in health and aging agree that participation in the arts is a powerful antidote to the ravages of time a view that has only recently gained popularity in the health-care world. "Historically, we looked at aging as a medical model," says Susan Perlstein, executive director of the National Center for Creative Aging. "People got older, got sick and died. Now we look at it as an 'assets model.' Older people still have much to contribute to society, and what keeps them alive and healthy is the ability to be engaged."
The arts, including theater, engage people socially, spiritually and cognitively. The National Endowment for the Arts is co-sponsoring a three-year study, conducted by Dr. Gene D. Cohen, director of Aging, Health and Humanities at George Washington University and author of The Creative Age. His hypothesis: engagement in cultural activities like theater can promote independence, thus lowering the risk factor for long-term care. "Unless we look at the potential in the aging population," Cohen says, "we won't be very creative with social policy."
Being part of a theater group has plenty of benefits besides good physical health. Because theater is a collaborative effort, there tends to be a great deal of camaraderie. For some people, it's like having a second family. It's also a chance to share and revisit a life's worth of emotional experiences. And it can teach you about yourself. "Often people's first reaction to joining a theater group is 'I'm too old to memorize lines,'" says Joy Reilly, associate professor of theater at Ohio State University. "And I tell them, 'You're never too old to memorize; it'll just take longer. And it's good for your brain.'" Then those naysayers memorize their lines, and they're amazed at themselves.
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