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Wahconah's Apollonian Players are staging a production of 'Into the Woods' this coming weekend.
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The players caution that Act 2 contains material that may not be suitable for young children. The more family-friendly Act 1 runs about 90 minutes.
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Wahconah Apollonian Players Perform 'Into the Woods' this Weekend

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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There some 50 students who make up the cast and technical team, including 16 from Nessacus Middle School. 
DALTON, Mass. — Wahconah High School Apollonian Players will be performing the musical "Into the Woods" this weekend. 
 
The show will run on Friday, April 5, at 7 p.m. and Saturday, April 6, at 1 and 7 p.m. in the school's auditorium. Tickets can be purchased in advance here or at the door for $14 for adults and $12 for students and seniors. 
 
The first act is 90 minutes and open to all ages but Act 2 contains adult content, such as adultery, death, murder, and other bad choices that may not be suitable for children age 10 and under.
 
The students have put in countless hours of rehearsal time, clocking in around 150 hours of rehearsal time since kicking off in January. 
 
"[The students] have definitely stepped up. It was a very aggressive rehearsal schedule. It's been very intense," Shawn Therrien, one of the directors, said. 
 
"We have some new people who have never been on stage before in significant roles, and to watch them grow every day … it's been great. They are ready. We could have show night tonight and we would be good."
 
The show is being directed by Therrien, Michael Hoffman and Rebecca Hoffmann and choreographed by Kaitlyn Houghtaling. 
 
The cast and technical team is made up of 50 students, including about 16 students from Nessacus Regional Middle School, two of whom have speaking roles. 
 
This has been a challenging show for students to undertake but they have done an amazing job, Therrien said. 
 
"I think this is the most technical show we've done. The number of lighting cues, sound cues, sound effects, scene changes, like all the other ends of theater. It's crazy there are like, what, 110 tracks," Therrien said, adding that the  Apollonian Players currently has a very strong group, particularly of seniors, who are also interested in entering the profession. 
 
The players will be saying goodbye to 11 of its students because they are graduating or transferring to a new school so this year the directors wanted give them a challenge. 
 
"We selected 'Into The Woods' on purpose because we have such a strong group, particularly of our seniors, and we have quite a few who are interested in doing this as a profession and we needed to challenge them this year," Therrien said.
 
 "It's a beautiful musical and people are gonna need Kleenex the couple of the songs at the end are very powerful and emotional. They're knocking it out of the park every day."
 
The show has many tough moments and there are moments where it would get frustrating but you have to learn to breathe through it and continue on, said senior Bee Gillespie, who is playing the Witch, and this is a type of skill that will last forever and can be taken everywhere. 
 
Although it has been the most difficult musical she has ever done, the witch has been Gillespie's dream role for about five years after seeing it performed Barrington Stage Company. 
 
"I saw it for the first time and I was absolutely blown away. I was in like seventh grade, but I was blown away and as much as the music's been so hard, the timing has been really hard and I am on stage a lot, costumes a lot. It's been worth it," Gillespie said. 
 
The Baker's Wife in the play, Sara-Louise Oakes, also a senior, echoed the remarks added that despite how difficult something can be and the obstacles that may occur, she is now confident that she can keep calm and keep going with what needs to be done.
 
"I've also like just learned to be even more appreciative of every single person involved," she said.
 
Every person involved in the production is important, Oakes continued, because if even just two people are absent a whole set change can go crazy wrong. 
 
The school's theater program has provided the students with a range of skills such as leadership, public speaking, confidence, and more. During their time with the Apollonian Players students have developed a close bond with one another, Oakes and Gillespie said.
 
"I've always personally liked the theater atmosphere better than the school atmosphere. I think it's really inclusive," Oakes said. 
 
"And I've known people that have done sports, or done music their whole life, or never done anything [but they] they  just come in and everyone is friends and gets along." 
 
Gillespie agreed adding that in some of the other clubs the school has you done make the close friendships and bonds that you do in the theater program. 
 
"My philosophy of theater is that in the end, the play doesn't matter. It's great to have an amazing performance but to have an inclusive environment where everybody feels welcome and apart, and that they each get to contribute something. That's No. 1 priority," Therrien said. 

Tags: high school musical,   Wahconah,   

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Pittsfield Community Development OKs Airport Project, Cannabis Amendment

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Community Development Board has supported plans for a new hangar at the airport and a change to the cannabis ordinance.

Lyon Aviation, located in the Pittsfield Municipal Airport, plans to remove an existing "T" style hangar and replace it with a new, 22,000-square-foot hangar.  The existing one is said to be small and in poor condition while the new build will accommodate a variety of plane sizes including a larger passenger jet.

"There's no traffic impacts, there's no utilities to speak of," Robert Fournier of SK Design Group explained.

"I'll say that we did review this at length with the airport commission in the city council and this is the way we were instructed to proceed was filing this site plan review and special permit application."

The application states that the need for additional hangar space is "well documented" by Lyon, Airport Manager Daniel Shearer, and the airport's 2020 master plan. The plan predicts that 15 additional hangar spaces will be needed by 2039 and this project can accommodate up to 10 smaller planes or a single large aircraft.

Lyon Aviation was founded in 1982 as a fix-based operator that provided fuel, maintenance, hangar services, charter, and flight instruction.

This is not the only project at the Tamarack Road airport, as the City Council recently approved a $300,000 borrowing for the construction of a new taxi lane. This will cover the costs of an engineering phase and will be reduced by federal and state grant monies that have been awarded to the airport.

The local share required is $15,000, with 95 percent covered by the Federal Aviation Administration and the state Department of Transportation's Aeronautics division.

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