Youth theater staging ‘Ramona Quimby’
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Tom Titus
Unpredictable, exasperating, boisterous and independent. That’s
Ramona Quimby, always aggravating her older sister and constantly
getting into trouble. She’s been doing so since the 1950s, delighting
young readers around the world.
This weekend, the Laguna Playhouse’s Youth Theater will bring this
contentious young lady to the stage in its final production of the
season, aptly titled “Ramona Quimby.”
“Ramona Quimby is one of the most beloved characters in
contemporary children’s literature,” said Donna Inglima, who’s
directing the show. “At least one Ramona book appears on almost every
core curriculum reading list in schools and adults still talk about
loving the Ramona books when they were children.”
Ramona lives on Klickitat Street. “What most people don’t know,
unless you check out author Beverly Cleary’s web site, is that
Klickitat Street is a real street in Portland, Ore.,” Inglima noted.
“It is the neighborhood where Beverly Cleary grew up. And it is a
place she still visits today.”
The genesis of this popular character is interesting, Inglima
added. “When Cleary was writing a book in the 1950s that she called
‘Henry Huggins,’ she created what she called ‘an accidental
character.’ ”
“It occurred to me that as I wrote, all of these children appeared
to be only children,” Cleary has said, “so I tossed in a little
sister, and at that time, we had a neighbor named Ramona. I heard
somebody call out, ‘Ramona!’ so I just named her Ramona.”
Ramona Quimby has been immortalized, along with Henry Huggins and
Henry’s dog Ribsy, in the Beverly Cleary Sculpture Garden for
Children in Portland’s Grant Park (which is four blocks from the real
Klickitat Street).
“Fountains are under Ramona’s and Ribsy’s feet, perfect for kids
to splash in during warm weather,” the director said. “Around the
concrete fountain slab are granite plaques engraved with the titles
of the Cleary books that take place in Portland.”
Cleary is quoted as saying, “People are inclined to say that I am
Ramona. I’m not sure that’s true, but I did share some experiences
with her.” Though Cleary did not write specific people from her
neighborhood she did say that one of her characters, Otis Spofford,
was inspired by a boy who sat across the aisle from her in sixth
grade who was “a lively person.”
Her best friend appears in several of the books as different
characters. She was the character of Austine in “Ellen Tebbits” and
she appears as the woman who is concerned about children waiting for
the school bus in front of her house in “Ramona’s World.” Cleary’s
childhood best friend still lives in Portland and they speak at least
once a week.
The adventures of Ramona and her friends will be played out for a
new generation of young fans over the next two weekends when “Ramona
Quimby” takes the stage of the playhouse in an adaptation by Len
Jenkins.
Performances will be given tonight at 7:30 p.m., Saturday and May
15 at 2 and 7:30 and Sunday and May 16 at 1 and 5 p.m. Call the
playhouse at (949) 497-2787 for ticket information.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Coastline Pilot.
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