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Volume
Issue
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Alberta
Guide to Indian Country Page 7
While some members of the Red Thunder Native Dance Theatre enjoy Paris
this spring, other members will enjoy staying home to launch a new show.
Red Thunder's new project, the Pitaa Native Dinner Theatre, is set to
debut this month at the Howard Johnson Hotel, located on Calgary's busy
Macleod Trail.
The two-and-a-half hour show will feature the best of Red Thunder
performances, plus Native cuisine. Unlike the road show, however, the
local dinner theatre will allow dancers to go home instead of going
back to a hotel room Most of the 500 shows that Red Thunder presents
each year are far away from the theatre's base in the Tsuu T'ina Nation.
Touring is tiring, explained Aroha Crowchild, manager and producer of
the Pitaa Native Dinner Show.
"The dinner theatre is for those who don't want to tour so much."
A break from Red Thunder's road tour, however, won't mean a rest for
the stay-at-home dancers. Instead, they will be busy performing as well
as teaching eight new Red Thunder recruits the basics of performing
arts.
"The dinner theatre is an opportunity to train young people, and offers
further development for dancers in our group, said Crowchild. The new
dancers, chosen during auditions in March, will be trained in 11
different areas of theatre, including stage production, modern dance and
sound and lighting.
"At the end of six months we guarantee them a job in the show and will
offer them the opportunity to tour with the company," she said.
Youth development, she explained, is at the heart of Red Thunder, which
was set up 10 years ago as an employment opportunity for your people.
But performances offer more than meaningful employment.
"Every time we do it, it's a restrengthening for us," she said. The
body of the buffalo, the mind of man and the spirit of the eagle all
combine to create "native consciousness re-strengthening," according to
the teaching of Chief David Crowchild.
The Pitaa Native Dinner Theatre opened May 22--Chief David Crowchild
Day--in honor of the great Tsuu T'ina chief. The dinner theatre's
300-to-350-seat home has also been named the Crowchild Room.
"Pitaa," meaning eagle in Blackfoot, is the name of Aroha Crowchild's
14-year-old son, who suffers from cerebral palsy.
"We thought we would like to honor him by giving his name to the show,"
she said. "Because we named it after Pitaa who is in a wheelchair, (the
dinner theatre) had to be wheelchair accessible."
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