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Rage close season with bronze, silver medals

    The Rage, Drumheller’s bantam girls softball team, is celebrating after another medal finish at provincials.
    Last weekend, the Rage headed to Leduc to battle for the title of U16 C provincial champions.
    The Rage got off to a tremendous start on Saturday, June 29, with a 19-0 win over McLeod and followed-up with a 16-8 win over a squad from Hyde Park in Edmonton.

The Drumheller Rage with their U16 C girls softball provincial bronze medals. The girls were in Leduc over the Canada Day weekend for provincials then finished off their season on July 3 for the final game of their league championships. The Rage finished with silver in their league.

    The Rage continued to dominate on Sunday with a 12-4 win over the Red Deer Rage and 6-2 win over the Killam Thunder, who defeated the Drumheller Rage two years ago in the gold medal game at provincials.
    “The game was unbelievable, both teams played incredibly well. We took an early lead and never looked back, defeating them by a score of 6-2. We had tremendous pitching, some incredible defence and the intensity of the game was beyond anything we’ve seen this year,” said Shari Fournier, coach of the Rage.
    After the round robin, the Rage were in first place.
    On Monday morning, they lost against their league rivals, the Calgary West Valley Sliders.
    “Both teams are pretty evenly matched, each winning and losing 2 games this year. Unfortunately we just came out very flat and struggled the entire game. I think the girls just got a bit ahead of themselves after the win against Killam,” said Fournier.
    The Rage headed to the bronze medal game against the East Central Kaos, where they won the game, 12-11, and the  bronze medal.
    The Rage had won gold last year at provincials, but are happy with their performance.
    “Although we were hoping for a gold none of us are disappointed with a bronze. We moved up an entire division in provincial play this year which is a big step for the team. We did not have the competition in league that we had hoped for, so our preparation going into provincials wasn’t as strong as we had last season, but we still managed to play extremely well. Our “gold” medal game was the game against Killam and we won.  Unfortunately, that came a day too early,” said Fournier.
    The Rage will had a chance for some redemption on Wednesday, July 3, against the West Valley Sliders in the final game of league championships. The Rage lost and had to settle for silver in their league.
    “We won silver, but it wasn’t our best night. We just couldn’t get our bats going,” said Fournier.
    The season is over for the Rage. They’ll be taking a break over the summer and then taking a look at the next season. At the moment, the number of players is leaving the future of the Rage in doubt.
    “With such a small team, we’re always fighting will having enough players. With the age range of girls we have, we’re going to be in two different divisions. We have five girls who would moved up to a U18 division and the rest would remain in U16. At this point we’re not sure what will happen,” said Fournier. “Hopefully we can keep the team together so the girls always have a place to play.”
    The Rage are encouraging any girls interested in playing to register in the fall.


Tennis Club gaining momentum on court project

    Proponents of new tennis courts are hopeful they will be able to break ground before the season is through, pending on its fundraising efforts.
    The Drumheller Tennis Club has been set up for about a year and has made tremendous progress towards realizing a new tennis facility in Drumheller. It has teamed up with the Town of Drumheller, Golden Hills School Division and the Friends of DVSS Society, and is well on their way.
    Barb Travis, president of the Friends of DVSS, a Society set up to fundraise for projects to benefit the school, says they have raised about $84,000.

    This comes from a casino they have worked, as well as donations from the Lions Club, The Kinsmen and Cenovus. The Town of Drumheller has also committed to a donation in kind for equipment and labour to help realize the dream.
    While the project began as  simply tennis courts, it has grown to include two full-sized tennis courts that could be used for pickle ball, a tennis rebound wall and an adjacent basketball court.
    They have selected a site on the grounds of DVSS where the former basketball hoops are located, have a working design and a contractor who has given them an estimate.
    Travis said they are about $100,000 off but are working on a number of fronts to raise the needed funds, including grants, and donations from individuals or companies. If they are successful, they could begin construction this fall.
    For more information, to donate or get involved in the club contact Travis at 403-820-7422 or 403-820-0048.
    Travis has also learned the Friends of DVSS are able to issue a receipt for tax purposes through Golden Hills School Division.

A sketch of the proposed tennis courts at DVSS. The Drumheller Tennis Club is hoping to raise the funds needed to start construction this season.

 

Laugh. Think. Repeat.

    These days, the tranquil arts valley of Rosebud is home to one of the busiest actors in central Alberta.
    With up to three performances a day of  Cotton Patch Gospel  and Underneath the Lintel, four days a week, Rosebud Theatre actor, musician and entrepreneur Nathan Schmidt is ‘busier than a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs’—to quote a line from one of the plays.
    “This is about the third time I’ve done a summer show with the Studio show in the middle,” says Schmidt. “I took it on in part because Lintel is such a great opportunity for me to stretch some muscles as an actor—in terms of a one-man show, in terms of a character-type role, and in terms of getting to tell a unique, interesting story,” said Schmidt.

Rosebud Theatre’s Under the Lintel opens on July  3 and is starring NathanSchmidt. He is also Rosebud’s summer musical  Cotton Patch Gospel.


    When asked about the physical stamina this busy schedule requires, Schmidt points out that the fatigue is more mental than physical. “I just put my head down and do it,” he says. “When I get active in my off-hours my mind rejuvenates as well.”
    Underneath the Lintel tells the story of an eccentric librarian who ventures from the safe and orderly confines of his workplace in pursuit of a 2,000 year-old mystery.
    “He steps outside of what’s comfortable and what’s normal, taking a risk,” says Schmidt. “His whole world gets turned upside down as he goes deeper and deeper down the rabbit-hole.”
    Many would agree that the casual interactions between performers and theatre-goers—whether at a B&B, on the streets of Rosebud or at the Mercantile dining room—are part of what make the Rosebud Experience so special.        “People want connection,” says Schmidt. “The actor mystique is not nearly as interesting as actually getting to talk to people.”
    And it appears the connection they want is with Schmidt especially.
    “Nathan is as close as we get to having a ‘star’ in Rosebud,” says Morris Ertman, artistic director of Rosebud Theatre. “His presence on our stage is always met with anticipation by our audience. He’s a man of rare conviction who always brings his transparent heart to performances.” Audience members often wait for him after the show to compliment him and share their personal thoughts on the play they’ve just seen.
    “The biggest compliments I’ve ever gotten as a performer are times when somebody says ‘You were just my uncle so-and-so,’” says Schmidt, “and you know that you’ve connected to their life and spoken into it somehow.”
    He describes an interaction with a woman in 2005 who saw his performance of Daddy Sherry, the oldest man in the world, in Rosebud Theatre’s production of The Kite.
    “She came up to me after the show and talked about how looking after her 80-year-old mother had been such a struggle; just fighting all the time. The Kite is about this old guy who fights all the time with the daughter who’s looking after him, because everything is being taken away. He can’t do the things he used to and it makes him angry. This woman said, ‘I get it. I understand now why we fight all the time. I understand what my mother’s lost.’ In the midst of this comedy. And it mattered to her. I didn’t expect that. I was just trying to be believable as a 114-yearold guy.”
    Lintel director Paul F. Muir says Schmidt was a natural choice to portray the librarian who catalogues and collects evidence on a quest that spans several centuries and continents.
    “Nathan is a guy who loves mysteries and figuring out puzzles and conundrums. What better conundrum to unravel than the possibility of a man who has been alive and roaming the earth for 2000 years? This story is like a stage version of a Dan Brown novel. The story, the mystery, and this actor will take you on one of the most incredible, moving, and humourous adventures of your life. Underneath the Lintel is 75 minutes well spent!”
    Underneath the Lintel opens July 3  and runs to  August 24 at 5:00 pm Wednesdays to Saturdays on the Rosebud Studio Stage.


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