Vernonia's voice. (Vernonia, OR) 2007-current, November 01, 2009, Page 13, Image 13

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    community
november
2009
A Review: The Return of the Vernonia Melodrama!
13
“Sweet Violette of Vernonia” is a Smash Hit at this year’s Salmon Festival
By Seymour Talent
 
Many Vernonians have fond memories 
of attending the yearly Melodrama presentation 
each summer.  I have been told it was a family 
event that even the teenagers enjoyed.  It was 
funny and lively and something folks in Verno-
nia truly looked forward to.
 
Well,  the  Melodrama  has  finally  re-
turned  to  Vernonia,  with  a  performance  that 
was held as part of this year’s Salmon Festival, 
on the first Saturday in October.  The Salmon 
Festival is Vernonia’s Fall Harvest Celebration, 
welcoming  the  salmon  back  to  the  rivers  and 
streams of the Nehalem Valley, with activities 
for  the  whole  family  like  hay  rides,  pumpkin 
carving, and scarecrow building.  The Melodra-
ma was a perfect addition to this year’s festival, 
helping instill the feeling that folks really were 
visiting historic Vernonia, as they traveled back 
in time for a sunny afternoon of family fun.
 
This  was  my  first  Vernonia  melo-
drama,  and  I  sure  had  a  good  time!   The  pre-
sentation,  “Sweet  Violette  of  Vernonia”  is  an 
original production, written and directed by our 
own mayor, Sally Harrison.  The cast and crew, 
all local Vernonians, built a wonderful set on a 
flat-bed trailer with a backdrop that showed the 
wooded hills surrounding Vernonia, and a small 
cabin where most of the story takes place.   
Sharon Parrow played the heroine, the virgin-
al Violette Sweetwater, and Ron Wright was 
a revelation as the well-meaning, but not-so-
bright hero, Thomas Talltree.  Marilyn Nicks 
filled  the  role  of  Stella  LaBella,  the  saloon 
owner  with  a  heart  of  gold  who  had  a  few 
tricks up her...sleeve, so to speak, and Kevin 
Hudson  was  Virgil  (Bigbucks)  Stonewall, 
the local rich man who steps in to help save 
the day.  Of course, no self-respecting melo-
drama would be complete without its villain 
and  henchman,  and  Sam  Poetter  as  Victor 
Vambaldi and Deanna Pearl as Toadie Back-
bite practically stole the show, along with the 
Sweetwater property.  The cast was rounded 
out with Helen Hudson as Grandma Sweetwa-
ter; sexy Saloon Girls, Sharon Bernal and Alli-
son McLeod; and a cameo appearance by local 
peace officer Mike Kay as the Sheriff.
 
The  audience,  arranged  on  theater 
seating of hay bales, were treated to an opening 
musical  prelude,  with  Burt  Tschache  singing 
the “The Frozen Logger,”  City Administrator 
Bob  Young  leading  a  sing-along  of  old  stan-
dards like a “A Bicycle Built For Two,”  and a 
short comedy routine by Best Girl, Coral Dawn 
Pearl and Bonnie Holce, who was also the pia-
no player for the show.  
 
The costumes were amazing,  the act-
ing  was  over-the-top--  as  expected--  and  the 
crowd  really  enjoyed  cheering  for  the  heroes, 
and booing the villains, and sighing for the her-
oine  as  they  were  instructed  by  the  cue  cards 
held up at appropriate times.
 
Here’s hoping Vernonia has a new tra-
dition,  the  annual  fall  Melodrama--  entertain-
ment that’s fun for the whole family, even teen-
agers!    
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