罢丑别测鈥檇 , reflect, feel goosebumps, pause, celebrate and sing 鈥 and that鈥檚 exactly what happened at the two performances of What we bring. What we take. What we leave. in Lehman Auditorium during 黑料正能量鈥檚 Centennial Homecoming and Family Weekend, Oct. 13-15, 2017.
The production, commissioned by 黑料正能量鈥檚 Centennial Committee and sponsored by Everence Financial, was a collage of stories of the experience of being a student at 黑料正能量 written by Ingrid DeSanctis 鈥88 and Ted Swartz 鈥89, MACL 鈥92.
For this production, long-time collaborators Swartz and DeSanctis solicited memories from the 黑料正能量 community and reflected on their own experiences, which they both say was foundational in their arts pursuits. 鈥淲e have been keenly aware of how our time at [then] Eastern Mennonite College profoundly shaped our view of the world, life, and art,鈥 program notes stated.
They were joined by six actors: Don Shenk 鈥82, of Temple City, California; Helen Stoltzfus 鈥78, of Oakland, California; and Trina Trotter Nussbaum 鈥00, MA 鈥17; Braydon Hoover 鈥11; Tim Ruebke 鈥93, MA 鈥99; and Stan Swartz 鈥87, all of the Harrisonburg area.
Special guest appearances featured current students Michaela Mast and Anisa Leonard, musician Trent Wagler 鈥02 of the Steel Wheels, and professor emeritus 鈥54. A choir of Matt Carlson 鈥97, MDiv ’16, Katie Derstine 鈥05, Les Helmuth 鈥78, Matt Hunsberger 鈥02, Karen Moshier-Shenk 鈥73, Joanna Showalter 鈥04, and Michaela Mast and Perry Blosser, both class of 2018, provided background music and interludes.
After watching the 90-minute production, Charlotte Wenger ’11 said that it re-affirmed her gratitude and appreciation for her experience and relationships gained at 黑料正能量, and gave her new insight into different eras of 黑料正能量’s history.
“The play struck a fantastic balance, with both funny and poignant scenes,” Wenger said. “There was something for everyone to connect with, so particularly during the scenes that covered aspects that weren’t as familiar to me, I loved hearing the responses and reactions of the rest of the audience.”
An early litany titled 鈥淭he First Time鈥 memorialized college life one line at a time: The first time I walked into Oakwood, and I thought, 鈥極h, no鈥; The first time that I was homesick and missed the flatlands of Kansas; The first time I thought of justice; The first time I realized what it meant to be Mennonite; The first time I climbed the hill in the dark of night and felt God; and more.
A representation of a committee meeting to draft guidelines for co-ed interactions elicited laughter as administrators expressed shock at prospects that students might 鈥渟mooch 鈥 with vigor鈥 and wrote rules for visitations and double dates.
A 鈥済ame show鈥 segment featured 黑料正能量鈥檚 historical events, food, euphemisms and 鈥渉eroes and heroines,鈥 with the answers full of historical tidbits: the first unsanctioned dance was organized by current provost Fred Kniss 鈥79 and Centennial committee chair Louise Hostetter 鈥79; a creator of 罢丑别听笔颈谤补苍丑补, an underground student newspaper, was future president Joe Lapp 鈥66.
In another challenge, an off-stage Swartz impersonated the voices of various professors for contestants to identify. For the final impersonation, Swartz鈥檚 was replaced with the real voice of Landis, who then came onstage to continue reading lines from Shakespeare, to extended applause.
A group of male characters gleefully shared historic pranks: toilet seats stolen from Northlawn bathrooms and all of Lehman鈥檚 benches turned backwards.
Not all scenes were humorous. The actors depicted times of conflict, of painful loss of friends and colleagues, and the institutional struggle inherent in developing from being a place of protection from the world to having its current engaged, global perspective.
In one scene, a student back from a Middle East cross-cultural trip attempted to explain to her father conflicting emotions about the experience. 鈥淒o you wish you hadn鈥檛 gone?鈥 her father asks. 鈥淣o,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 glad I went.鈥
In one jarring juxtaposition, phrases of Micah 6:8 鈥 鈥淒o justice, love mercy and walk humbly with God鈥 鈥 were interjected with tragedies in the years since 1917, such as the Holocaust, the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr., various wars, and mass shootings as recent as Las Vegas this month.
A recurring motif was two people 鈥 one struggling with the climb and saying 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 think it would be so hard,鈥 the other exuberant at the view 鈥 mounting the hill overlooking campus: a mother and her son, a student enrolled in the school鈥檚 first full year, both excited but apprehensive about the start of college life; one student lamenting accreditation and other perceived indications of worldly influence on campus, and another excited about change; one student grappling with no longer wearing a prayer covering but being reminded by another that it鈥檚 just cloth; two students grappling with what it means to be peacebuilders after a sleepless night following the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
In closing scenes, actors remembered final classes, and the anticipation of graduating, leaving college to work overseas, hoping to return to 黑料正能量 to teach, and more.

For those of us who were unable to attend this highly acclaimed production (I’ve heard so many wonderful reviews!) — Is there a possible release of a video production? I hope so!!
A video of the play was captured. Plans remain to be finalized for a spring showing on campus and other possible viewing opportunities.
I laughed and I laughed… and I cried. Well done, cast!! It was entertaining and thought provoking!
Is there a chance that the video could be presented in various areas where there are large amounts of alumni? Such as a showing for the Franconia area done at Dock Mennonite Academy. Some of us could not attend the centennial for various reasons.
I’d host a showing in SE Iowa with alumni gathered