Annie Schunior as Miep Gies brings news of the outside world to Anne (Amy Cassell) PHOTO by Brigid Blaschak |
Annie
Schunior caught the acting bug when she first got involved in community theater
at age 13. At Churchill
High School’s Creative and Performing Arts Program (CAPA), every role she
played was “either a villain, self-absorbed diva, or person of very
questionable morals,” including her favorite part, the Wicked Witch in The Wizard of Oz. But it wasn’t until she was cast as Miep Gies
in The Diary of Anne Frank at the Farmington
Players that she came to the following realization: sometimes the “true hero”
of a story is the one who acts selflessly, outside the limelight, without ever
getting recognition or attention for her deeds.
Annie
didn’t even remember the role of Miep when she’s seen the play staged before,
but now she understands how instrumental Miep’s anonymity was to the survival
of those in the Annex. As Annie said, “I
think it is very fitting Miep does not have a large role. I think she would
have wanted her role to be very small because everything she did, she didn’t do
for recognition. She did it to save lives. I can’t even imagine the pressure
she must have been under trying to save the lives of eight others, all the
while keeping it a secret for her own life and the life of her husband. I think
that is a true hero -- someone who puts others before themselves when it seems
hardest. If it weren’t for Miep, we wouldn’t have Anne’s diary (as the Nazis later
raided the Secret Annex, but not before Miep stashed away the diary to give to
Anne after the War). We wouldn’t have this play. We wouldn’t have this huge
insight into the lives of Jews in hiding.”
Annie
was 13 – the same age as Anne Frank – when she first ready The Diary of Anne Frank. She
immediately felt connected to the WWII era story from “listening to my grandpa
tell bits and pieces from his times in the Navy and his own personal experience
with the Normandy invasion.” Even though
WWII ended over 70 years ago, Annie thinks “people will be able to recognize
our own modern world in Anne Frank’s 1940s Amsterdam. This was a travesty that
should never have happened. And yet similar travesties are happening around the
world today. I think it can show how much we still have to learn and yet in the
midst of turmoil, hope and the human spirit are stronger than we give them
credit for. We will all go through tough times in our lives, but Anne gives
such a beautiful and innocent example of being a light in dark times.” During college, Annie studied in Austria for
four months, an experience that was “life changing for me. I traveled to see
some of WWII’s historical landmarks firsthand like Auschwitz in Poland, Vienna,
the Eagle’s Nest, Salzburg and Munich, and parts of England, Italy and France.”
Although
this show portrays tragic events, Annie says, “I feel very grateful for Miep
and the rest of the staff’s sacrifice because it led us to this story, it led
me to this show, and this show has helped me realize the need for people like
Miep, the need for sacrifice and being there for others, stranger or not, no
matter the cost.”
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.
No comments:
Post a Comment