A stilt-walking, Pied Piper-style trip to literacy

FALLS VILLAGE — Mark Alexander is an optimist. Just ask him.

“Whenever things go sour, I am lucky I have the tools to put on a positive spin,†said the leader of the Mortal Beasts and Deities, a loosely knit troupe of stilt dancers and kindred spirits.

“One of my goals is to do positive things — with whatever talent I can scrounge.â€

Alexander took a visitor through his picturesque cottage in the Pine Grove community in Falls Village. The place is crammed with puppet fixings: puppet heads, puppet frames, puppet wings.

And these puppets are not your little Punch and Judy marionettes. These things are big, and adults wear them, standing (or dancing) on stilts.

There’s an Angel Gabriel, mounted on a modified backpack frame, that would make the most committed atheist think about hedging his bets.

And giant birds. And characters from folklore and mythology.

Alexander, a tall, slender gent with a handlebar mustache and an impish grin, is taking the Mortal Beasts and Deities on a literacy tour to rural villages in Guatemala and Belize in January and February 2009.

The tour is sponsored by the Rural Literacy Project, based in Williamstown, Mass.,  and Salisbury’s Project Troubador. Going along are Mortal Beasts Jeffrey Hammond and Dan Hammond, and Susan O’ Riley and Zoe Remmilard from the RLP group.

“The tour addresses an urgent need,†Alexander said. “Most people around here are literate. The majority in Guatemala are illiterate, and having a hard time with the modern world as it encroaches.â€

There’s a serious side to this. “What feeds terrorism? Lack of education,†said Alexander. And a fun side. “We’re going in as performers, stilt dancers, clowns and goofs. It will be Pied-Piperesque — we’ll be pulling the villagers to the library sites.â€

The volunteers will be living with host families, and traveling by whatever means are available: buses and feet, in the main.

And it should be a memorable sight. “We have these huge backpacks, Dr. Seuss-style — with stilts and masks.â€

Alexander has taught art at Lee Kellogg in Falls Village and Sharon Center School; his day job these days is as a house painter.

And he has always had a flair for the dramatic — and pragmatic.

“I’m not a trained dancer,†he said. “I’m a klutz.

“But in high school I noticed that all the jocks would hang around at the dances, too embarassed to go out there. So I went out and danced with all their girlfriends.â€

The stilts are not of the enormous, circus variety. “The tallest, six-foot stilts are too cumbersome,†he explained. “These are smaller, two and a half, three feet.

“And once you’re three feet taller than everybody else what difference does it make?â€

It’s an art that is in constant flux. “I’m a good mimic,†Alexander said, mustache twitching. “I’m picking up hip-hop, learning to translate it into the stilt thing.â€

And when the troupe is performing, it’s best to expect the unexpected. “When we mess something up, it generally turns out to be an aspect we can use.â€

(Optimism again.)

He is realistic about the tour’s goals. “We can’t teach everybody to read, but we can get them to the books — and have a lot of fun along the way.â€

The tour organizers are trying to raise $15,000 for books and travel expenses. Persons interested can write to Project Troubador, 374 Taconic Road, Salisbury, CT 06068; visit projecttroubador.org for more information.

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