Amy Cassell contemplates her next diary entry as Anne Frank PHOTO by Jan Cartwright |
Amy Cassell’s world travels have taken her far and wide, but
she never expected that a visit to Amsterdam would prepare her so well for her
first role at the Barn. Amy is
playing Anne in Farmington Players’ production of The Diary of Anne Frank, and she previously visited the Frank house
in Amsterdam. Amy says she can “actually
picture the cramped living quarters. I remember seeing the bookcase and feeling
especially confronted. That one piece of furniture was the last thing
protecting them from an outside world that was hunting them. The terror they
must have felt when they heard unidentified rattles outside it is almost
unfathomable.”
Amy considers playing the role of Anne Frank an “incredible
honor and challenge to portray and do justice to, just because of her
contribution to society in her short life. What would she have done had she
been allowed to live? The role is such a fantastic one because of Anne's growth
throughout the play; you can see her maturing and really coming into her own,
while maintaining that incredible vivacious energy. At the same time, it's a
challenging development to portray with subtlety, but I'm so glad I have the
opportunity to do it.” Like
Anne, Amy was “a very energetic and creative child, so I can definitely relate
to Anne's aversion to any form of stasis. However I was lucky enough to have
freedom and a wealth of creative outlets, so I can only imagine the pain and
immense frustration she must have felt in the suffocating annex.”
So what brought Amy to the Farmington Players? As she says, “I started researching
them because I'd heard great things about the shows they put on and the people
in the company. When I saw they were putting on The Diary of Anne Frank, I knew I wanted to be involved. I've
always had a passion for history and this is such a classic and important
story. It's such a powerful play, no matter how many times I've seen or read
it, how many different ways it's interpreted, it still clutches at my heart. It
never becomes less shocking, the atrocities that humans are capable of
committing, and getting to know these families, and knowing how it all ends, it
really hits home. I felt ready to take on the challenge of a play of this
magnitude and I felt it was a very important production to be a part of.”
Amy enjoys the challenges of playing such a thematically
dark show, but also believes that audiences will “enjoy being able to relate to
the family dynamics and the adolescent experience that is portrayed,” including
the humorous exchanges between Gary Weinstein and Nancy Cooper as Mr. and Mrs.
Van Daan. Amy feels “the play will
be relevant forever because of the themes of family and growing up, but also
because history does repeat itself.
I think it's important to always remember the Holocaust, especially as
similar atrocities are occurring around the world right now.”
Amy is an Australian native, and in the past 18 months, she
has backpacked around Europe and learned to ski in Banff, Canada, before moving
to Michigan four months ago. She studied
Journalism in college but now works as a Patient Advocate in a women’s clinic
in Southfield.
The Farmington Players production of The Diary of Anne Frank is proudly sponsored by Weinstein Jewelers.
The show includes 12 performances from February 12 – March 5. Tickets are
available online at farmingtonplayers.org or by contacting the Barn box office
at boxoffice@farmingtonplayers.org
or 248-553-2955.
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