Dancers, actors and acrobats fly across the stage in perfect unison, creating a mystifying blend of performance art and athletics.
The Okanagan Rhythmic Gymnastics (ORG) Club and Cirque Theatre Company is bringing its rendition of Pinocchio to the Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre stage Nov. 24-25.
With roots in the classic Italian yarn, the club brings together talented actors and current rhythmic gymnastics Team Canada stars to create the captivating performance experience.
âOne thing I really found from coming from a high performance background is kids feel, âOh, I did sports, I canât do that,ââ said the showâs producer, director, choreographer and ORG head coach who competed in the â96 Olympics in Atlanta. âI think the lines are way blurrier than we think.â
And itâs an arts and athletics marriage that has sparked success for Martens and ORG, who have put on their yearly performance since 2000, consecutively filling more than 3,000 seats since their 2010 performance of Wonka.
This year is no exception, with the performanceâs three special school-only shows filling up on the first day.
âWe had to say no to a whole school,â Martens said. âIt used to be like, I wonder if anyone will come.â
But these shows, which bring buses of students from across the area to the Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre, arenât about the profits.
âWe donât really make money on the school shows, itâs more about community outreach,â Martens said, adding that she hopes the shows inspire kids to pursue athletics and/or the arts and show that thereâs always more than one way to do things.
âGrowing up in a family where we werenât told a lot of that, we definitely had more of a sense of letâs make our own way of doing it,â the Vernon product said. âLetâs do something else. Letâs do our own thing.â
Following Martensâ mantra of carving a new path, the cast of roughly 70 people ranging in age from five to 70 perused the storyâs multiple versions to craft an ORG-specific screenplay.
âWe thought at the end of it all, whatâs the story we want to tell?â Martens said. âThatâs the whole fun of it. We get to look at the way itâs been done.â
Drawing inspiration from multiple versions of the family-favourite tale, ORGâs Pinocchio features Madeline Sellars as the title character, Ben McLean as Grillo the Cricket â better known as Jiminy Cricket from Disneyâs take â Gabriel Newman as Geppetto, Emmalee Holland as the Blue Fairy and Yann Brierley as Stromboli. The show also features renowned Vernon talents Brie-Anne MacPherson, , and Tammy Andreotti.
Itâs a show that had been suggested in the past, but Martens said it never felt right, until now.
âWe had Pinocchio suggested a few times, but I shied away from it because I found it scary as a kid,â Martens said. âWhat draws us to it (now) is the whole concept of strings and looking at what does it mean to be real and in what ways do we avoid being real? For us, the metaphor of the strings are a symbol of numbing.â
Martens asked the kids what they fear the most, and the resounding answer was being embarrassed. Unlike some adults who use drugs and alcohol to escape their problems, Martens said, kids often turn to TV or their devices. Pinocchio is about being true to oneself and breaking down those barriers.
âLooking at Pinocchio and his challenges to be honest, brave and generous and watching him go through a whole series of events is sort of joyous,â Martens said.
âWe all want to be real and sign up for the full human experience,â Martens said. âThatâs what brought us to this story.â
ORGâs Pinocchio takes the Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre Nov. 24 at 7 p.m. and Nov. 25 at 2:30 and 7 p.m. Tickets are $38.25 adult, $25.25 seniors and students, $18.25 child 12-and-under or $80 for a family of four (two adult and two youth passes, not available online) available through the Ticket Seller, 250-549-7469, .