ENTERTAINMENT 173 co co co Many of Frances Hamburger's students have won state and national speech contests. ON SPEAKING TERMS Frances Hamburger will be honored for teaching numerous students the fine art of theater performance. JUDY MARX Special to The Jewish News T o teach in the field of performing arts is to have the exciting op- portunity to influ- ence and enrich the quality of life of young people. lb teach successfully in the arts is to promote a love of learning and culture and to offer the chance for youth to explore, develop and showcase creative skills and talents?' — Credo. Frances Hamburger, Chairman of the Cass Technical High School Perfor- ming Arts Department, upon her retirement. Frances Hamburger is a specialist. She specializes in a particular type of education. She specializes in a particular area of the arts. She special- izes in high expectations. She specializes in excellence. But mostly, agree those who know her best, Frances Hamburger specializes in love and commitment. On April 29, Hamburger's students and colleagues will honor her "for 36 years of devoted service to Cass 'Tech." There will be a dinner-dance at the Pontchartrain Hotel, one of the few such Cass Tech events that Hamburger hasn't planned. Certainly, it will be a hap- pening. But it may not be as much a happening as the one that took place last month in the auditorium at Cass Tech. On this occasion, there were just a few standing by when Frances Hamburger got her first peek at the hall's newly painted proscenium arch. Her dreams for the old auditorium were beginning to come true. "When you don't have something, you just go after it;' Hamburger says. For years, Cass Tech has sat with a tired old shell of an auditorium, architecturally splendid but unusable for per- formances. "I had gotten so tired of having to see my teachers struggle and move their shows all over the city, the kids, the costumes, the audiences." Now $30,000 later, Ham- burger is beginning to see the fruits of her labors. Cass Tech's auditorium, with a stage as large as that of the Fisher Theater, has curtains hanging for the first time in many years. Next will come the sound system, Hamburger explains. "I want to put down some carpeting, and I'd like to do something about those old- fashioned wooden seats. It's not just that they're uncom- fortable. But more fabric in the hall will help with the acoustics?' lb raise large amounts of money for an inner city school, one needs both creativity and commitment. Hamburger has no shortage of either. "I went to our alumni, among them Lily Tomlin and- Ben Vereen. I went to businesses. I went to anyone who would help?' And retired or not, she still seeks the needed funds. Hamburger also praises the Cass Tech students for their role in helping with the auditorium renovation pro- ject. Likewise, Hamburger's kids are not reticent in their admiration for their teacher, coach, sponsor and director. Nikka Jones calls Ham- burger a "second mother — hard working, generous, understanding, patient, per- sistent, energetic, always smiling, creative, never bor- ing, and ageless:' Donayle Griffin says that "Mrs. Hamburger saw in me a talent and a determination that I nourish every time I give a speech?' Rose Anderson writes that "Mrs. Hamburger has in- spired us to use the courage of dreaming for the purpose of self-improvement?' These and similar affidavits from colleagues and peers resulted in Hamburger being named the 1988 Drama/Theater Educator of the Year by Eastern Michigan University. Fellow teacher Bonnie Sheehy puts in succinctly, "Mother and mentor. That's how I think of Fran." The daughter of Abe and Leah Schwartz remembers herself as a shy little girl. "But my teachers noticed that I came alive when I read aloud, and in the sixth grade I was singled out for a special city-wide broadcasting pro- gram!" Her interest in speech 'The school has changed in many ways but we still have the same talented students: and drama blossomed when Hamburger discovered that on stage she would "turn in- to a different person." A graduate of Wayne State University with bachelor's and master's degrees in broadcasting and speech, she won the 1952 Wayne State University Best Actress Award. Upon graduation, she ac- cepted a teaching position at Cass Tech with somewhat less than wild enthusiasm. "I really didn't know much about the school when I was sent there. "I certainly never dreamed I'd stay in my first placement for more than 30 years, but at Cass I've had the wonderful experience to work with such talented people. I've always had bright students. They chose to specialize in speech, and they came to me, not because they had to, but because they wanted to. "Of course, the school has changed in many ways since the '50s, but we still have the same talented students. Un- fortunately, today many of them do not come into high school with all the cultural advantages our students had 30 years ago. So, now, it is simply a matter of helping my students discover talents they don't always realize they have!" When she sets her mind to it, Hamburger makes a lot of formidable tasks seem simple. Her contributions to educa- tion include coaching numerous award-winning youngsters in state and na- tional speech contests and producing scores of holiday I GOING PLACES I WEEK OF APRIL 7.13 SPECIAL EVENTS UNIVERSITY PRODUCTIONS Frieze Bldg., State and Washington, Ann Arbor, "$5 Revue," an evening of songs and skits to benefit a scholarship fund for U- M musical theatre students, today and Saturday, Thursday through April 15, admission. 764-0450. COMEDY COMEDY CASTLE 593 Woodward, Berkley, Bobby Slayton, Tuesday through April 15, admission. 542-9900. THEATER HILBERRY AND BONSTELLE THEATRES Wayne St. University, Detroit, Romeo and Juliet, Tuesday; Lost in the Stars, (Hilberry Studio) Thursday through April 17; The Scarlet Pimpernel, now through April 15 and April 25; The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail, now through May 13, admission. 577-2972. MEADOW BROOK THEATRE Oakland University, Rochester, Quilters, now through April 23, admission. 377-3300. PERFORMANCE NETWORK 408 W. Washington, Ann Arbor, India Song, Thursday through April 30, admission. 663-0681. BIRMINGHAM THEATRE 211 S. Woodward, Birmingham, Broadway Bound, now through May 7, admission. 644-3533, FAMILIES PEANUT BUTTER PLAYERS Karas House, 23632 Plymouth, Redford, The Wind in the Willows, Saturdays and Sundays through April 30, admission. 559-6-PBP. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 75