TROY—A play
written about a hurricane that hit New Orleans 40 years ago and
the lives it affected will help raise funds for those driven
from their homes by Hurricane Katrina.
Readings of the
play “An Evening with Betsy, Voices from the Storm,” will be
held at three Troy University campuses. Donations will be
collected at the door and the proceeds will benefit area
evacuees, according to Dr. Maryjo Cochran, dean of the College
of Communication and Fine Arts. Troy University theater students
and faculty will perform the readings.
The schedule
for the readings is:
* Sunday,
Sept. 25, 3 p.m. at the Rosa Parks Museum Theatre on the
Montgomery Campus;
* Monday, Sept. 26, 7 p.m. at the Claudia Crosby Theater on the Troy
Campus; and
* Tuesday, Sept. 27, 7 p.m. at Sony Hall on the Dothan Campus.
The playwright,
Barry Lemoine, is a Katrina evacuee who has settled in Troy. An
Evening with Betsy, Voices From the Storm, was nominated as best
original play in 2001 by the Big Easy Award committee. This
multi-media production tells first-hand accounts of those that
survived Hurricane Betsy, the infamous storm that devastated the
New Orleans area 40 years ago.
For 15 years,
Lemoine taught English, journalism and theater arts in New
Orleans and St. Bernard Parish. He now serves as the writer and
producer for PEN-TV, the educational television network for St.
Bernard Public School System.
“We are greatly
indebted to Barry Lemoine for sharing his talent with us to help
those whose lives were changed by Katrina,” Dr. Cochran said.
“At a time when he could focus only on returning his life to
normal, Barry is helping others get their lives back to normal.”
Contact:
Tom Davis or Clif Lusk @ 334-670-3196.