Black Box theater becomes Pooh Corner on Feb. 26

SALISBURY — Walking into the cafeteria at Salisbury Central School on a Thursday afternoon, it’s hard to tell who’s in charge. The 16 elementary schoolers seem to bounce around with youthful energy as they rehearse their show, “Winnie the Pooh.�

Their director, Brandon Santoro, a senior at Hotchkiss, blends right in, matching them in energy and enthusiasm.

This is Santoro’s second year directing a Salisbury Central School play through the after-school SOAR program.

“Children make the best actors,� Santoro said. “They’re just full of ideas and interpretations.�

Santoro said the only challenging part is balancing the task of getting the youngsters to say their lines the way he wants them to while still letting them find their own moments and expressions.

“I cannot say what the future will bring for any of these children, but I can say that I truly love them all,� he said. “They are wonderful people and, though rowdy and silly on occasion, are incredibly focused.�

Though it is his second play at Salisbury Central, it is his sixth play working with children.

He has directed children’s plays such as “Princess and the Pea,� “Alice in Wonderland� and “The Jungle Book,� while he has been the assistant director for “Snow White,� “Robin Hood� and “Cinderella� productions.

Santoro has studied as a junior intern at the New London Barn Playhouse in New London, N.H.

In addition to directing for the SOAR program, he worked backstage for his school’s production of “The Importance of Being Earnest� (which went up last weekend).

This summer he hopes to return to the Summer Theatre in Meredith Village in Meredith, N.H., where he is currently artistic director of the Children’s Series, for the the third year. He hopes to attend a New York City or London theater school after graduating Hotchkiss this spring.  

He chose A.A. Milne’s “Winnie the Pooh� for his final Salisbury production because he feels the author “holds the key to a door for those who have forgotten that magic [of being young].�

Santoro said he feels that in these times it is vital to flash back to that remarkable place where life was much simpler, where a boy and a bear could be best friends.

“I think that, in returning to the Hundred Acre Wood, we are able to once again embrace a level of imagination that is lost in aging,� Santoro said. “I feel it is an excellent goodbye piece in that Christopher Robin must leave the Hundred Acre Wood, and his closest friends, behind to attend boarding school.�

The cast is comprised of 16 students, of which 12 are actors or actresses and four are stage hands, ranging from grades four to seven.

Santoro first became involved with theater in the fourth grade when he asked his mother to sign him up for a drama class. Since that year he hasn’t imagined himself doing anything else, he says.

“I loved the idea of taking words, concepts and messages and translating them into physical entities,� he said.

Nancy Hegy-Martin, director of SOAR, has initiated most of the SOAR programs and is working with Santoro and the cast of “Winnie the Pooh� as they prepare for their performance.

“I think it’s great for the kids, and they’re having a ball,� Hegy-Martin said. “Public speaking just does wonders for a child’s confidence and poise.�

“Winnie the Pooh� will be performed at the Black Box Theater at The Hotchkiss School on Friday, Feb. 26, at 6 p.m., and Saturday, Feb. 27, at 2 p.m.

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