FULTON, Mo. When Wendy DeVore, the drama teacher at Fulton High here, staged the musical “Grease,” about high school students in the 1950’s, she carefully changed the script to avoid causing offense in this small town. She softened the language, substituting slang for profanity in places. Instead of smoking “weed,” the teenagers duck out for a cigarette. She rated the production PG-13, advising parents it was not suitable for small children. But a month after the performances in November, three letters arrived on the desk of Mark Enderle, Fulton’s superintendent of schools. Although the letters did not say so, the three writers were members of a small group linked by e-mail, all members of the same congregation, Callaway Christian Church. Each criticized the show, complaining that scenes of drinking, smoking and a couple kissing went too far, and glorified conduct that the community tries to discourage. One letter, from someone who had not seen the show but only heard about it, criticized “immoral behavior veiled behind the excuse of acting out a play.” Dr. Enderle watched a video of the play, ultimately agreeing that “Grease” was unsuitable for the high school, despite his having approved […]
Sunday, February 12th, 2006
In Small Town, ‘Grease’ Ignites a Culture War
Author: DIANA JEAN SCHEMO
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 11-Feb-06
Link: In Small Town, ‘Grease’ Ignites a Culture War
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 11-Feb-06
Link: In Small Town, ‘Grease’ Ignites a Culture War
Stephan: When fear and religiousity become the bass line of public discourse the result is inevitably rigidity, intolerance, and hypersensitivity to anything that challeneges the familiar conventional. This story may seem an isolated situation but it is not. This is the tragedy America is becoming played out in one small town.