Epoch Times Staff Feb 7, 2009
Pat Shoemaker (The Epoch Times)
HUNTSVILLE, AL--Pat Shoemaker is the first lady of Tuscumbia, Alabama, and an
accomplished person in her own right. She serves on the board of the Tennessee
Valley Arts Center, and is a former dancer.
The arts organization she leads sponsors a fine arts and crafts show associated
with the Helen Keller Festival. It is one of the top five annual arts events in
Alabama.
Helen Keller was a renowned author and social reformer and learned to
communicate despite being deaf and blind. She was born in Tuscumbia. The
Miracle Worker, a play about her life, has been performed annually near her
birthplace since 1961, and draws visitors from around the region.
"Can hardly wait to go to my board meeting"
Mrs. Shoemaker and her husband, the Mayor of Tuscumbia, came to see Divine
Performing Arts give their second annual performance in Huntsville, Alabama on
Feb. 6.
She was thrilled by the show, saying the music touched her heart, gesturing with
both hands held to her chest: "I really thought it was fabulous, I really
did."
Continuing, she said, "It was really a very emotional thing for me. I just
thought it was just so beautifully executed. I agree with whoever said that you
could see the sincerity in their faces. I just thought it was wonderful. I can
hardly wait to go to my board meeting and talk about it."
She said it was so obvious that they had worked so hard for the sake of the
audience, out of generosity.
She and her husband, Mayor Bill Shoemaker, "were so impressed with the
backdrops and how they changed so quickly and so beautifully. This young lady
[one of the dancers] was just telling me that there is one costume change where
they have only thirty seconds. Can you imagine?"
The digitally-projected backdrops are a trademark of Divine Performing Arts. The
colorful scenery of the backdrop also enables the dancers to interact with it.
Mrs. Shoemaker feels passionately about arts funding in schools. She said arts
are the first thing to be cut, yet they are so valuable to a child. If some
children are not exposed to the arts through school, they never will be exposed
to the arts, and that's so unfortunate. A person may never develop his full
potential if he is never exposed to the arts, she said.
Source: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/11627/