In the 1990s a few people pioneered the climbing and exploration of the redwood canopy and were astounded at what they found. Over the centuries some of the trees have broken off at the top, centuries of wind and storms have caused up to as much as 3 feet of soil to accumulate in spots 250 feet up in the air. There, in the California coastal mists, huckleberries and other trees, some as tall as 30 feet in their own right, start to take root. Little animals and unique plants join the crowd and they thrive. The high-altitude show has been going on for centuries and no one knew because only recently did someone bother to check it out.
Valley Performing Arts is a similar show in our midst noticed by too few. Like the redwood treetops, most folks know about it, but not that many bother to inspect it up close. Live theater in this borough is a bargain, and there is no comparison to the feelings it can instill when done well. It is usually done very well at the Machetanz Theatre in Wasilla.
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Then the singers started to do their thing. Eden Barrington, Blaine Lee, Garry Forrester, Dave Nufer ... and I should just stop naming names. I know there were others, and it’s not fair to name some and not all, but the point is there were many who really can sing. I will name one more because when Mary Olsen sings I melt. In another VPA musical, “Oliver,” her voice resonated as the Rose Seller. I mean, wow! Enough about her, she’s great and I’m married. Back to the revue. “Carousel” went from fun to fabulous when the whole cast sang “You’ll Never Walk Alone” in a chorus. I was ready to march on the Bastille.
The VPA should be sold out for every performance like “Carousel,” yet one block away the Parks Highway was bustling with traffic and people were zipping right on by. The VPA is not a government operation. It is a group of dedicated volunteers who have labored for more than a quarter of a century to make sure that the “show does go on.” It will survive and thrive even if attendance does not change markedly. However, there are more people in this borough who would be pleased at the discovery of VPA if they would just try it once. Now they are performing Agatha Christie’s murder mystery “Spider’s Web,” yet another good performance.
In the October issue of National Geographic the featured cover article is “The Tallest Trees” that features yet another glimpse into the “Forests in the Air” on pages 54 and 55. I would venture to guess that because of that story a lot of people suddenly learned about something new and wonderful. It was always there, and now life is a little richer for a few more people. Climb a tree, go to the theater, check out the wonders around you.
Talis Colberg is mayor of the Matanuska-Susitna Borough.

Comments
2 comment(s)Sarah Phillips wrote on Nov 4, 2009 11:48 AM:
John T Shue III wrote on Nov 3, 2009 4:47 PM: