School deems anti-bullying play too mature for audience


Thursday, February 21, 2008 | 2 comment(s)

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SHERWOOD (AP) — Drama teacher Jennie Brown warned students last fall that her anti-bullying play wouldn’t be tame.

In an announcement seeking children to audition, Brown noted that she needed actors “not afraid to take risks.”

The audition form that went home with Sherwood Middle School students emphasized the point: “If you audition for this play you must be willing to put yourself out there and take risks as the content of the material is brutally honest and does not sugarcoat the way students often undermine or harass one another.”

Brown found her risk-taking actors, but she also found some risk-averse parents.

School administrators on Wednesday gave the thumbs down to “Higher Ground,” two days before the play was scheduled to open.

Brown, who wrote the play for her after-school drama class, said she wanted to portray how students taunt one another. But Anna Pittioni, the school’s principal, said the play exceeds the maturity of many students and needs to be toned down before it can be performed.

Steve Emmert, the school’s vice president, said administrators examined the script after hearing concerns from parents. He said the play exaggerates the kind of taunting at Sherwood, and some of the subject matter would have been offensive to the small children and grandparents in attendance.

“It’s overall a conservative community,” he told The Oregonian newspaper.

The central character in “Higher Ground” is a boy who gets teased and harassed after he shrugs off a misunderstanding about whether he’s straight or gay. Other characters in the play are bullied for a variety of reasons, such as being overweight, in special education or having a dad in prison.

Students and parents who want the show to open feel they’ve been bullied by a handful of opponents.

“These kids deserve their day in the spotlight; they’ve earned it,” said Brent Burrowes, whose 12-year-old son was to appear in the production. “Why can one or two voices shut down a play for all these kids?”

Genny Rorricelli, a sixth-grader in the production, concurs that the play deals with touchy subjects, but said parents who object can, “A) Take their kids out or B) just not watch the play.”

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Information from: The Oregonian, http://www.oregonlive.com
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Sad in Portland wrote on Sep 1, 2008 12:57 AM:

They forced Jennie Brown to resign. Read about it here:
http://www.theregalcourier.com/news/story.php?story_id=121677208769163000

lisa pomeroy wrote on Feb 21, 2008 2:15 PM:

Pittioni told a parent (immediately after she cancelled the play) that she was afraid that the homosexual content would make it appear as if Sherwood Middle School approved of that "lifestyle". She claims to the press that it had nothing to do with the gay reference but she out and out admitted it to a parent. It is that kind of ignorance and bigotry that keeps bullying alive in our schools. Pittioni should step down from her position. Our youth need to be guided by a positve role model...not someone ruled by hate.


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