BArT Students to Perform 'Midsummer Night's Dream'

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Note: Performance times have been changed from the original release.

ADAMS, Mass. — High school students at Berkshire Arts & Technology Charter Public School will perform "A Midsummer Night's Dream" at First Congregational Church on Friday, Dec. 4, and Saturday, Dec. 5, at 7 both nights.

The production is the culminating event in a 13-week class that is part of the school's visiting artist program.

For the first trimester of the school year, resident artist Alexia Trainor has offered a drama class to students exploring dramatic theory and technique, studying the text, and preparing students for their performance of the Shakespeare comedy.


Trainor has been a performer, director and producer of theater throughout the Berkshires for the past 15 years. She attended Berkshire Community College and Marymount Manhattan College, where she studied directing and acting. She is a founder and executive director of Main Street Stage in North Adams. She is also a founding member of The Royal Berkshire Improv Troupe and a resident clown for Nutshell Playhouse Children's Theatre.

During each trimester, BArT students have the opportunity to work with professional artists who represent a range of artistic backgrounds and who work in a variety of media including drama, music, the visual arts, and digital media. BArT’s Artist Residency Program is funded through a grant from the National Endowment of the Arts.

The performances of "A Midsummer Night's Dream" are open to the public. Admission is $5 for students and children and $7 for adults.
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Berkshire Arts & Tech Grads 'Grateful to Be Weird'

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

Class speaker Liliana Choque says she was thankful to be 'weird with all of you.' See more photos here. 
ADAMS, Mass. — Among the things that Berkshire Arts and Technology Charter Public School senior Lilianna Choque was thankful for on Saturday was the fact that she knows all her classmates.
 
"In preparation for today, I have read and watched a lot of other graduation speeches," Choque said during her "senior reflection" at the school's graduation exercises. "All of them, without fail, had some version of the same throwaway line: 'Although I don't know all of my classmates,' or, 'Some of you may not know me.'
 
"But the beautiful thing about a graduating class of 32 is that that doesn't apply. I do know all of you … quite well."
 
And, Choque said, she likes what she knows.
 
"Maybe the rumors are true, and we are the weird kids," she said. "But — and you have to forgive me, because I'm going to invoke the right I've been given as a BArT student to be a little cringe here — I'm so grateful to be weird with all of you."
 
Choque was not the only one to extoll the virtues of what she called her "32-ring circle of friends," and she was not the only one to talk about the kindness exhibited by the Class of '26.
 
Head of School Jonathan Igoe set that tone in his opening remarks.
 
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