Category Archives: Staples HS

What The Hell Is Matt Doing Now?

Most internet sensations have the shelf life of a firefly.

But Matt Harding dances on.

The 1994 Staples graduate earned international acclaim the same time YouTube came of age.  Abandoning what he thought would be his life work — designing video games — Matt decided to travel the world.

In 2003, he did an impromptu dance in Hanoi.  A friend filmed him, and a tradition began.

By 2006 people around the planet were viewing his videos.  He danced — “badly,” which was part of the charm — in Mongolia, Cambodia, Antarctica, Machu Picchu, Namibia, New York, Fiji and Iceland.

And everywhere in between.

Matt Harding and friends in Papua, New Guinea.

Over 75 million folks watched him.  His videos — showing him dancing on a crab-filled South Pacific Beach; in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan; in the slums of Mumbai — are goofy, gleeful, and oddly compelling.

Sometimes he dances alone.  In the DMZ, 1 somber Korean soldier stood behind him.  Usually, though — in the plazas of Buenos Aires, the villages of New Guinea, the plains of Africa — folks of all ages giddily join in.

And Matt dances on.

Last summer he danced in places most people hesitate even to walk:  Haiti.  Iraq.  Afghanistan.

He was welcomed joyfully.  “I keep learning, and re-learning, that people are friendly, everywhere I go,” Matt told KING-TV last week.  He lives in Seattle now, and the local station caught up with him there.

In 2011, he heads to Cuba.

“I’m still dancing,” he said.  “It’s become my job.

“This is what I do.  And I can’t think of anything better to do.”

Last summer Matt danced -- and juggled balls -- in Kabul, Afghanistan.

Gaga For Emerson

Nine minutes of Lady Gaga might not be your cup of tea.

And — unless you’re a certain age — you probably have no idea what a lipdub is.  (It’s a music video that combines lip synching and audio dubbing.  Duh.)

But you should still check out Emerson College’s Lady Gaga Lipdub.  It could be the best in the entire who-even-knew-it-existed genre?

You won’t be alone.  It’s already been viewed over 850,000 times.  That’s right up there with the little kid who acted high after visiting the dentist.

Staples graduate Ariana Sigel — a member of the high school Media Lab‘s Wall of Fame — had a hand in the now-gone-viral dance video (and a bit role — you can see her at the 1:36 mark, with a camera).

She had plenty of help.  Scores of students worked on production.  Hundreds of others — sorority girls, athletes, quidditch players, gay activists — danced, jumped and gyrated through the streets of Boston, on campus, and at random other sites in that well-choreographed, uber-enthusiastic, “Fame”-style way.

A scene from the Emerson College lipdub.

Emerson is known for its communication department, and this lipdub shows how skillful Ariana and her classmates are.  It was shot over 2 weeks, in many different locations — with the usual endless production problems — but the editing is so seamless it looks like one long, perfect, 9-minute take.

(It even fooled an ABC newscaster, who shook his head in wonderment at “one take — pretty impressive!”)

The idea was to use the video to advertise the Evvy Awards — a college-wide show in which student work is judged by industry professionals.  It’s the largest student award show in the country.

It created a buzz, alright — and much more.

“Imagine what their school musicals are like 🙂 ” someone commented on YouTube.

“I am SO applying here!” someone else said.

And this from Emerson Class of 2013 dad:  “Makes the tuition payments worth it.”

Industry professionals loved it too.

Even those who don’t love Lady Gaga.

(Click here to view Emerson College’s Lady Gaga Lipdub.)

99% Chance Of A Snow Day Tomorrow!

No, that’s not Elliott Landon speaking.

Or me.

It’s the “Snow Day Calculator” — and that website is as scientific as it gets.

First you enter your school’s zip code.

Then some very important information:

  • Type of school (public, urban public, rural public, private/prep, boarding)
  • The number of snow days already this year
  • “Leniency of administration” (easy, okay, harsh)
  • Is there a special event or activity scheduled?
  • Is your school in a mountainous area?
  • Hype for a snow day (0 = no one talking about it; 1 = many kids talking about it; 2 = kids, teachers and media talking about it; 3 = administrators are talking about it too!)

Click “Calculate” — and it’s 99% certain Westport kids can sleep in on Friday!

But you should still call 203-341-1SNO tomorrow morning.

Just in case.

Even Westport's crack snow plow drivers will be unable to help Westport schools open tomorrow -- or so says the Snow Day Calculator. (Photo by Luke Hammerman/Inklings)

Jon Gailmor Joins The Beatles

What do the Beatles and Jon Gailmor have in common?

You can finally get their music on iTunes.

Jon Gailmor

The Fab Four caved in November.  It took Jon — the fabulous Westport-bred singer (and former Staples Orphenian), now an official Vermont “state treasure” — a bit longer.

But his catalog is now available with the click of a mouse.

My favorite album — “Gonna Die With a Smile if it Kills Me” — includes the joyful “Woody,” the wistful “Ae Fond Kiss” (perhaps the only folk song ever written by Scottish poet Robert Burns), and the lovely “Long Ago Lady,” Jon’s elegant tribute to his adopted state of Vermont.

I know — it’s still January 1.  But Jon finally joining the 21st (iTunes) century is the best news I’ve heard all year.

“Race To Nowhere” Heads Here

Audiences in Chappaqua, Bethesda, Winnetka — high-achieving, high-pressure Westport-type towns across the country — have flocked to “Race to Nowhere.”

The film — fueled largely by word of mouth (internet-style) — has drawn so many SRO crowds at schools, churches and town hall auditoriums around the country, it’s already the 20th most successful documentary ever.

Parents, educators, clergy, physicians — and teenagers — are drawn by the theme:  that years spent building resumes, being tutored and seeking perfection may not produce perfect, healthy, high-achieving kids.  The result, rather, could be “unhealthy, disengaged, unprepared and stressed-out youth.”

After screenings, audiences stay for facilitated discussions.  Recently, in New Canaan, a few high-achieving fathers took issue with the film’s premise that intense pressure is bad.

That’s the way the world works, they said.

Two Staples students disagreed.  They’d gone with Chris Lemone — the outreach worker who runs the school’s Teen Awareness Group — and stuck around to talk.  (Most of the New Canaan kids left — maybe too much homework?)

The Stapleites refuted the dads — strongly and eloquently.  Their words made a tremendous impact on the adult audience.

Now, “Race to Nowhere” is coming to Westport.

The PTA Council is sponsoring a Feb. 15 viewing at Bedford Middle School.  In 2 days — and with virtually no publicity — 600 free tickets sold out.  It happened so quickly, the Staples student and parent communities had not even received details.

The screening cost has already put the PTA Council over their measly budget of $1000.  They hope to recoup some of the money from audience donations that night.

A scene from "Race to Nowhere." A typical Westport scene too?

The Council plans a 2nd screening in March.  They need someone to fund the  $2500.  In a high-achieving community like this, someone should write a check today.

In the meantime, Westporters can click here to find details on other local screenings — including January 28 at Town Hall. Tickets to that show cost $10 each; it’s sponsored by the Learning Community Day School.

Are Westport students engaged in a “race to nowhere” — or do we avoid many of the traps that snare youngsters in similar communities?

Those questions — and others like them — will be explored here this winter.  Whatever the answers, it’s clear — by the race for tickets — that “Race to Nowhere” is important to run.

Zach Slater Demolishes “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”

The Secretary of Defense is for it.

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is for it.

So — particularly eloquently — is Zach Slater.

Zach Slater

“It” is repealing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” — the policy that prohibits gay men and lesbians from serving in the U.S. military.

Zach — a Staples senior, and captain of both the water polo, and swimming and diving, teams at the high school — tackled the controversial rule during the finals of the local Rotary finals last week.

Organized by both Westport Rotary Clubs, the oratory contest asks students to apply Rotary’s 4-Way test to ethical issues.

The test asks:  Is it truth?  Is it fair to all concerned?  Will it build goodwill and better friendships?  Will it benefit all concerned?

Zach’s answer to “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” is a resounding “no!”  Here’s what he said:

Don’t Ask Don’t Tell.  It is a policy that has discharged over 14,000 members of our armed forces.  It is a policy that has cost our government hundreds of millions of dollars and it is a policy that has rid our armies of brave gay, lesbian and bisexual service members.

I have determined that this policy must be abandoned and I have done by asking myself:  Is it the truth?  Is it fair to all concerned?  Will it be beneficial to all concerned?  And will it build goodwill and other friendships?

First, is it the truth?  Some of our political and military leaders believe that “don’t ask don’t tell” creates cohesion among the armed forces.  They claim sexual orientation ambiguity makes sure that there will be no distractions while fighting for our country.

However, those serving in the military feel differently.  A study released this pass week by the Pentagon reports that over 70 percent of people serving in the army are comfortable with gay, lesbian and bisexual peers.  A majority of Americans, also 70 percent, believe that gay people should be allowed to serve openly.  This is what America wants, this is the truth, and why “don’t ask don’t tell must be repealed.”

Second, is it fair to all concerned?  “Don’t ask, don’t tell” is not fair to those brave enough to risk their lives for our country.  If discovered to be gay, a serviceman or woman is immediately discharged, and any openly gay person qualified to serve our nation is turned away at military offices around the country.

According to the Pentagon, over 75% of young Americans are unqualified to serve in the military because of growing drug use, obesity, law-breaking and poor education.  Yet a physically fit, law-abiding, well-educated gay person interested in serving is not allowed. Why someone interested in protecting us, Americans, should be turned away, simply because of their sexuality when there are only so many people qualified to fight?  This is unfair and why this policy must be forgotten.

Third, will it be beneficial to all concerned? “Don’t ask, don’t tell” is disadvantageous to our country and all Americans. Expelling someone from the military because of their sexuality simply makes us less strong.  It is one less person keeping us at home safe, safe from an enemy, safe from terror, safe from corruption and safe from the evils of our world.

There are an estimated 66,000 closeted gays is the armed forces.  Imagine if all of them were to be outed and discharged.  That is 66,000 less people keeping us safe.  By abandoning “don’t ask don’t tell,” more gay people would feel comfortable joining the armed forces.  Therefore, more people to keep us safe and more people fighting for the greater good.  It will be beneficial to all concerned if “don’t ask, don’t tell” were to be revoked.

Fourth, will it build goodwill and other friendships?  “Don’t ask, don’t tell” currently limits goodwill and friendships in the army because it is a policy not in touch with the times.  The Servicemembers Legal Defense Network reports that a majority of those who have fought in 21st century wars do not care if someone is gay or straight and do not find any connection between sexual orientation and job performance.

The Joint Force Quarterly reported “after a careful examination, there is no scientific evidence to support the claim that unit cohesion will be negatively affected if homosexuals serve openly.”  And if gays were allowed to be open, in a way they could be there true selves, creating true cohesion between the troops, building true goodwill and friendship.  This is why “don’t ask, don’t tell” should be repealed.

By using the rotary four-way test, I have come to the conclusion that “don’t ask, don’t tell” is not the truth; “don’t ask, don’t tell” is not fair to all concerned; repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” will be beneficial to all concerned, and repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” will build true goodwill and friendships.

This policy is not in touch with the times and is unsupported by a majority of Americans, and servicemen and women. This is why it must be repealed, and this is why it must be repealed now.  Those who understand that this policy is not right must call their senator today and let them know that they can repeal this policy today, and let them know that “don’t ask, don’t tell” is not the truth, not fair, not beneficial and does not build good will and other friendships.

Zach’s speech won him $500, and advances him to the Rotary 4-Way Test regional contest next month at Fairfield University.

Staples Celebrates 70 Years Of Candlelight

The 70th annual Candlelight Concert debuted at Staples last night.  The “gift to the town” continues this afternoon (2 p.m.) and evening (8 p.m.).  Tickets are all gone — though some seats may be available close to showtime, at the door.

Here are some scenes from last night’s performance:

Staples grad Justin Miller made his debut as choral director. He received a warm welcome -- and his singers were in fine form. (Photo by Lynn U. Miller)

Michael Findley belts out "I'll Be Home For Christmas" during the production number. (Photo by Lynn U. Miller)

The production number -- "Merry Christmas and Goodnight" -- was a clever and fitting climax to the Candlelight Concert. (Photo by Lynn U. Miller)

The World Is Just A Book Away

Sarah Monich is a 2009 Staples grad, now a student at William & Mary.  A volunteer with The World is Just a Book Away — an organization that brings books and education to children in developing countries — she recently participated in 10 library openings in Padang, Indonesia.

Sarah posted this report on WIJABA’s blog:

Each of the schools we opened libraries at welcomed us with so much excitement and energy.  The children could barely contain themselves; the headmasters and teachers smiled and embraced us with vigor and sheer joy.  I was so astounded by their extremely kind, grateful, exuberant welcomings.

Though I have been doing volunteer work here and in India, I was still shocked by the effort the schools put in to thank WIJABA, and how happy the children were to have us there.  Being with the children, seeing their faces as they poured into the libraries and raced to take bright books off the shelves, I felt like I was in a dream that moved me and touched my heart, a dream that I will never forget.

I wish more people could experience what I did in Padang, and I hope that people take the time to reflect on how much a single book means to a student, how much a library means to a school, how much a smile means to a child.  I am so touched and fortunate to have been a part of this.

Amidst the intoxicating chaos, a few moments stand clearly out in my mind. The first is the way the children shook my hand to show respect.  Many of the children at every school, while shaking my hand, touch it gently to their foreheads.  This gesture was so beautiful, so genuine, and I was so touched by their thankfulness and respect.

Sarah and her new Indonesian friends.

A second was visiting the Darren Dahlman Memorial Library, which I had visited a few days before to distribute the books and tear off the plastic with the children.  When I saw them again I was so happy to recognize them.  I spent my entire time  in a back corner with a small circle of girls, trying to read a story in Indonesian, and being taught to speak simple words by these girls. They were so cute, enjoyed hearing me butcher every word they tried to teach me, and smiled and laughed with true joy the entire time.
Finally, at the last school on the last day, the Kartini Library, I was literally cornered into the back of the room with so many children laughing, screaming, holding up books, trying to touch me, laughing with me.  I was so happy and fortunate to be with these children in their time of excitement.
Though there were earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanoes, causing destruction and devastation near Padang, it was a week of excitement, generosity, learning, friendship, love and peace.  The energy was contagious, and I will forever remember the smiles, handshakes, hugs and shouts.  I will treasure all that I saw, and utilize my passion for these children to help with WIJABA’s mission to spread knowledge and books to children around the world.

Justin Paul’s “Christmas Story”

There are many Christmas stories.

But there is only one “A Christmas Story:  The Musical!”

And — when it opens officially this Thursday (Dec. 9) at Seattle’s 5th Avenue Theatre — the adaptation of the 1983 film about a young boy and his dream present (an air rifle) will boast the best gift around:  an original score by Broadway’s “hottest young composer/lyricist team,” Pasek and Paul.

As in Westport’s own Justin Paul.

Justin Paul

The musical had a successful run last year at the Kansas City Repertory Theatre.  But the Seattle producers wanted a new score.  Justin and Benj submitted a couple of songs on spec, and earlier this year signed a deal.

“We’re strangely drawn to stories of boys on a mission,” says Justin — a 2003 Staples graduate who, with his songwriting partner, are on a mission themselves to scale musical theater’s highest peaks.

Rehearsals began last month.  The 5th Avenue Theatre is a major launching pad for Broadway runs and national tours.

Pasek and Paul are no strangers to top-notch musical theater.  The duo’s 1st show, “Edges,” has been produced internationally.  Their commissions include “Dogfight” (Lincoln Center Theater) and Broadway’s upcoming “White Noise.”

They are the youngest winners of the Jonathan Larson Award, and were listed as part of the “50 to Watch” up-and-coming writers by The Dramatist Magazine. They were interviewed on National Public Radio, and their music has been broadcast on Sirius XM’s On Broadway Channel.

The duo has played sold-out concerts across America at venues including The Kennedy Center in Washington, Joe’s Pub in New York, the Falcon Theater in Los Angeles, and Australia’s Adelaide Cabaret Festival.

But you don’t have to go Down Under — or even cross-country — to enjoy Justin Paul’s many talents.

On Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 18 and 19, the Broadway Boys comes to the Westport Country Playhouse.  Justin’s the musical director and keyboardist for this great pop-funk-gospel-jazz-folk-show tunes-classic pop-and-holiday songs extravaganza.

(Click here for a YouTube interview with Pasek and Paul about “A Christmas Story.)

Tickling New Ivories

You may not notice the piano at Staples’ Candlelight Concerts next weekend — but the singers and musicians sure will.

A fund drive to raise $30,000 for a new Yamaha C3 grand piano — in honor of now-retired choral director Alice Lipson — has borne fruit.  The old one was used for every Candlelight Concert, musical performance, Players production and — for good measure, music class — for years.  It played out its string.

Dave DeVoll (center) and Fran Southworth present the new piano to David Winer, townwide music supervisor.

Fran Southworth and Dave DeVoll headed up a Staples Music Parents Association fundraising effort.  “We desperately need a new piano!” is not an easy sell, but the money finally came in.

The final piece was a luncheon/recital in late September.  Westporter Frederic Chiu — a nationally renowned classical pianist — was the featured performer.

Buying a grand piano is a bit more intricate than a scarf, or even an SUV.  The instrument needed custom voicing work done at the New York factory.  With tone quality regulated and improved, the new piano is now up to professional concert level.

This far exceeds the average “educational” piano found in most schools.  Then again, the Staples music program far exceeds the average too.

A humidifier system has been installed in the piano — very important, during the dry days of winter.

The piano debuts next Friday and Saturday (Dec. 10 and 11), at the Candlelight Concerts.  This is the 70th anniversary of that prestigious event.

With luck — and loving care — Staples’ grand piano will be around for 69 more.

(Anyone [including non-parents] interested in joining the Staples Music Parents Association should email shsmpa@aol.com, and/or go to the next meeting:  Tuesday, Jan. 11, 7:30 p.m. in the Staples orchestra room.)