On Thursday the 7th of March primary’s 5 to 7 took part in the Shetland Drama Festival 2019. They have been practising for weeks and they are going to preform for a second time in the Walls Hall.
By Robert And Max
This week Primary 6 and 7 started writing an imaginative story about Big Ben. The primary science teacher came in and helped us carry on with Living Things topic. Primary 6 started learning about the European Union because there is a competition in Lerwick in February. While Primary 6 were learning about the EU Primary 7 did Robitics with Emma Chitick. We had to program our robots to do certain things like pick up a toy block. This week the Primary Department got a new climbing frame and we feel everyone really enjoys it. We also started our new play called Suspicion (Suspeesion in dialect) by Marsali Taylor which we will be performing at the Drama Festival !!
We feel that this week has been lots of fun and action packed !
By Sadie and Yelena
Adjudicator’s comments : This has been an excellent night! The theme for the festival is ‘Celebration’ – the pleasure of doing and watching drama – and an important part of this is the rehearsal stage, putting the play together to delight the audience. Well, we were delighted tonight!
I very seldom see children as young as P3-5 on stage, and I’ve never seen them engaged and entertaining us to such a level. The music was terrific, the movement great, the noises wonderful. The movement was very modern – often with a box set children just stay within it, but these animals were everywhere! Up and down the auditorium – great fun. They had the confidence and the competence to engage with you, me, each other. Everyone was in role for the whole play – the farmer trying to keep control – what a beard! Do you think if I worked at it I could grow one like that? The cats – they’re going to be a problem when they’re older – niggling at each other like that! The ponies eating away, the pig shuffling about, the cows, the sheep nudging each other up at the back, the dog with his bone, all the excitable hens and the ducks with their flippers, the laid back fox, the sneaky rat – everyone was excellent.
The play was ideal to engage, stretch and challenge these young actors. I was delighted to see it was also part of a project to keep the Shetland dialect alive and vibrant. Well done Aith Junior High School – please put your hands together for these talented young actors.
A big thank you to our producer and script writer – Marsali Taylor and also to Izzy Swanson for all her help
Muckle thanks also to our very talented face painters – Elizabeth Atia and Lynn Ritch, much appreciated!
* For a copy of the performance on DVD, please contact the AJHS school office 807 400 (£5)