‘The King and I’ transports audience to Siam

SHARON — This year’s spring drama production at Sharon Center School was an adaptation of the musical classic “The King and I,” by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein, about an English governess and the influence and the friendship she develops with the king of Siam. Students at the school attended a special daytime performance of the show on Thursday, March 24. The community was invited in on Friday for an evening performance and again on Saturday for a matinee.“The King and I” is the story of Anna, a British schoolteacher who becomes governess to the 67 children of the king of Siam. She is to teach them about modern Western culture.While Anna and the king begin their relationship by butting heads, the king eventually seeks Anna’s help when the political status of his country is threatened. The two learn to appreciate and even admire each other. Many of the musical numbers from the Broadway play and its film adaptation were included, such as the well-known “Getting To Know You.” Director Jill Fay (who is the school’s fourth-grade language arts teacher) included the entire cast in several dance numbers. And the show included the famous “play within a play” —an Asian interpretation of the Harriet Beecher Stowe novel, “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” (or “The Small House of Uncle Thomas,” as it is called in the play).About 30 students participated in the play. Most were in grades four to eight, but one second-grader was also in the show. The lead roles were played by Ashley Coon (Anna) and Matthew Kreta (the king of Siam).

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