I’ve really been thinking Valentines lately. And as a public service, I am here to try to get you to think about making somebody a valentine. I know it is the last minute, but there is still time. Even if you are a day or so late, there is still time. It would be nice if you made it for us at Cedar Lake Nursing Home, but it would be just as nice if you to make it for somebody you love, and send us a picture of it.
I got on this Valentine kick when I saw all the Valentine’s Day stuff Cedar Lake Nursing Home had going on. Our Activity Director Terrina already had folks making valentines, and has a candle-light sweetheart party planned. I really got interested in the valentine-making part of it. Then we kicked it up a notch, by challenging every staff member and every visitor we could button-hole to make a valentine. And then we had the nerve to ask some of our really fine artist friends to make us valentines, and they did. We even got one from Malaysia. We asked the school, and they brought us a wall full of valentines. We are tickled to death with the response we’ve been getting.
But my best fun started when my friend John and I did what I’ve now named the Get-yourself-an-old-magazine-and make-a-valentine-challenge. It really opened my eyes to the creative possibilities that lie in old magazines. This is why I am sharing this with you:
It made us play. People need to play more. It seems like some of us have to have an excuse to play. Ours was that we were trying to set an example to get these other folks to do crafts. Once we had that excuse, we absolutely loved it! Continue reading “Around Malakoff: Valentine’s Day Assignment”
Pictured are the State Solo and Ensemble qualifiers from Malakoff High School. The students competed last Saturday and are preparing for competition in late May.
Pictured are, back row from left, Julia Walden-flute soloist, Efren Rios Perales-french horn soloist, Michael Silvey-marimba soloist, Lazarus Salinas-saxophone quartet; front row from left, Olivia Stanton-saxophone soloist and quartet, Karly Kebodeaux-saxophone quartet, Hannah Kimble-saxophone quartet.
Three condensers were stolen from outside of the new restaurant that is coming into Malakoff. The building is located across from the Malakoff Middle School on Highway 31. The thieves caused so much damage the grand opening will have to be delayed. This business, the Canton Square Bakery, had recently located to Malakoff.
If anyone has any info, please call the Malakoff PD.
Some of you may have read about the trip that John Walker, Jo Ann Surls and I made to Tyler to see the one woman show, “O’Keeffe!” Carolyn Wickwire is that one woman, and she is marvelous. On a nearly bare stage with very few props, she BECOMES Georgia O’Keeffe. Well, actually, Georgia O’Keefe’s ghost, but a very healthy ghost. The three of us just fell in love with her and her husband/producer, Dennis West. We hung around after the play and wouldn’t let them go until they promised they would at least visit us in Malakoff and consider putting the play on here, maybe during the Cornbread Festival.
I’m happy to tell you that last Saturday they came to see us. Pat Isaacson, Jo Ann, and I met them at the Community Center let them take a look at it. They said they could work with it nicely. The Chamber of Commerce is going to work with the Malakoff Area Garden Club to sponsor the show, which we hope will raise enough funds to do some more work on the Bartlett House property. Pat had to go home to see about her husband Carl, who is recuperating, but the rest of us went and had lunch and talked about it, and it is all set! I am so happy about this I can hardly stand it!
Mark the date: April 12, at the Community Center, in the evening, after all the other Cornbread happenings are over. I think 7:30. Tickets will be $20, and are worth at least twice that. You will love it just like we did.
This is not an amateur performance, folks. This is Broadway quality. Carolyn Wickwire is an accomplished actor, the recipient of several awards in the Dallas area, though she only began her acting career at age 50. She has appeared in numerous films and television series. She has a small part right now in a big movie coming out soon, with some famous actors, but I forgot the name of it, and who the famous actors are. I’ll let you know before it comes out.
I’m thinking this is going to be a great addition to the Cornbread Festival, and maybe will attract us some more attention than usual. I hope we can build some other activities around it. I have some ideas which I will be telling you soon.
If you don’t remember who Georgia O’Keeffe is, she is the lady who painted the gigantic flowers, and also a lot of Southwest things that often involve bleached bones. Here is a little quote from one of the “O’Keeffe!” flyers.
Two forces shaped Georgia O’Keeffe as an artist and a woman: her passion quest to express her artistic voice, and her tumultuous 29-year love affair and marriage to the revolutionary photographer and champion of the Modern Art Movement, Alfred Stieglitz. In “O’Keeffe, Georgia—witty, irreverent, and decades ahead of her time—shares revealing scenes from her challenging life as she struggles to maintain her independence in the early decades of the 20th Century.
Here’s a quote from one reviewer of Ms. Wickwires’s performance as Georgia O’Keeffe:
“Dazzling…Impeccable…Ms.Wickwire is intriguing, fascinating, complicated, amusing, wry, and heartbreaking…It’s almost as if she’s channeling O’Keefe.” (Dallas Examiner)
Another fun thing is going on at Cedar Lake Nursing Home, and you can play with us if you’d like: We are all making valentines. All of us. Patients, staff, visitors, anybody we can buttonhole, and the ones we don’t give to our sweetheart, we are going to post on a huge board, and turn it into the world’s — OK, Malakoff’s — biggest valentine. We have a lot of material on hand to get creative with, but we’d like more, so anything you’ve got that you don’t need that could conceivably make or decorate a valentine, we’d appreciate you sharing it with us. But that’s just the start. We want you to make us a valentine. Use your own stuff, or come use our material. You could mail it to us, but time is getting short, plus we’d like to see you. If you are a teacher in Sunday School, or regular school, maybe your kids would like to make us some.
My friend John is coming down this week, and promises to join in the creativity at Cedar Lake and make me a valentine if I’ll make him one. You and your valentine could come out and join us. We are going to creative stuff available for anybody who wants to give it a try. My goal is to see if I can get the Fed Ex man to make one. And all the other delivery people who come in. Maybe if they don’t have time while they are there, maybe we can send them a little package of raw material home with them.
I went to Rotary today, mainly to tell them about “O’Keeffe!” and I got great response. But I also wanted to tell them about our Valentine Extravaganza at the nursing home, and ask for them to make us valentines. That was great too, because Teri Caswell was giving the program, and it was all about Valentine’s Day and how it originated. And she passed out tiny heart-shaped boxes of candy to each person there. So I saved that part of my speil till Teri had finished her talk, and had them all in the Valentine spirit. I got promises of a number valentines, plus Sybil Norris said she would email all the teachers, and suggest that they ask their classes if they would like to make the nursing home some valentines. Plus, I bummed a couple of those little candy boxes to make valentines out of.
Now may sound like we are going to have plenty of valentines, but that is not the case. We need one from YOU. Come on out and we’ll help you make it. This is going to be fun.
The Salvation Army Service Unit in Malakoff has formed a new Board of Directors, but we still have some slots to fill. We are looking for a few good men, preferably from Malakoff, Cross Roads or Trinidad who would be interested in serving on the board. Duties would be to meet regularly with the Board of Directors, and work together to determine the types of services we will provide, the budget, public awareness and fundraising.
If interested, please contact Pat Isaacson at 903-489-8118.