Play ‘West Virginia Story’ Takes Viewers Through The ’80s In Southern W.Va.

JC Lasek’s latest play is about a West Virginia family in the 1980s as they struggle with the ups and downs of the economy at the time. The play also mirrors popular shows at the time, and pushes to exemplify contemporary West Virginia. It is showing through Nov. 12 at the Raleigh Theatre in Beckley.

JC Lasek’s latest play is about a West Virginia family in the 1980s as they struggle with the ups and downs of the economy at the time. The play also mirrors popular shows at the time, and pushes to exemplify contemporary West Virginia. 

It is showing through Nov. 12 at the Raleigh Theatre in Beckley. 

Briana Heaney sat down with the native West Virginian and playwright to talk about the show. 

The transcript has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Heaney: Tell me about this play, and give our listeners a short preview. 

Lacek: So this is my third full length play. It’s been produced here in West Virginia. My previous two were Abomination On Bolt Mountain and Frack the musical. So this new play is kind of a lighthearted comedy. It’s set in the ‘80s, kind of in the period where West Virginia still voted staunchly pretty much as Democrats. It’s not a political play, but it is kind of playing in that sandbox of a bit of a different reality that most people would see the state as today. 

The story follows the Callaghan family, as they struggle with the ups and downs of the economy at the time – the coal strikes. As a structure, you know, kind of a traditional family drama, but the majority of the story takes place in their household and like, every time they watch their TV, the audience can see what’s on the TV. And so it’s kind of hovering above the stage facing the audience.

One thing I wanted to do with this is not fabricate some wild drama that had to unfold on stage. Instead, I wanted to just kind of explore what day-to-day life is like with these people. And just show people that there doesn’t need to be some sort of grandiose plot developments for the stories to be interesting. People’s lives are just interesting.

Heaney: It sounds like you’re putting the characters or the people above the plot or the narrative. 

Lacek: Yeah. I mean, it’s like, there’s no real one, what you would call a protagonist, you know? It’s like each character’s arc, each person gets their chance to shine throughout the story. Again, like I was saying, there’s nothing grandiose that happens, it’s very much kind of like slice of life.

Heaney: A lot of times in West Virginia, there is this very strong narrative. And I noticed in your play that you said that the narrative is not that important. It really comes down to the people. Was that style of writing at all a comment on West Virginia and the way people view West Virginia?

Lacek: Yeah, you know, definitely in a way. People in West Virginia, whenever they’re ever portrayed in film or TV, it’s rarely in a good light. It was important to me, that, for the good or bad, that the people that come to see this, that they feel seen in their lives. 

I mean, I’ve lived all over the world. And I’ve never been to a place where the narrative of being a West Virginian is worn on people’s chest, I mean, just like a shield around here.

I have never been to any place like that. It’s really beautiful. But it’s a rare thing to have people just have so much pride, and that’s why that’s actually one of the reasons why I wanted to call it “A West Virginia Story.” Is just to be like, this is just what this is, it is reflective of the beauty in the details or the devil in the details of what makes the simple things of life here just really special. 

Heaney: Why did you decide to name it “A West Virginia Story?”

Lacek: Basically, the people from here, they love being in West Virginia. So, I wanted them to love the story. And I wanted it to feel like it’s theirs.

Heaney: Are there parts of your life here in West Virginia that you wove into this storyline?

Lacek: It’s more true than not in ways. Definitely the characters on stage are not based on my family, they’re more inspired by them. I work as a comic book writer and I do screenwriting as well. So it’s like, I know what I’m looking for in the narrative that I want to structure. It was kind of like this interesting practice to look back at mine and my family’s life and kind of cherry pick what  was going to be used as fact and, and what I was going to use as fiction.

Heaney: I see that you’ve got some Hunter S. Thompson, and some Quentin Tarantino books on your shelves. Is there any writing style that especially informed this play?

Lacek: Just in general, I think that a journalistic point of view, just in this kind of narrative writing process, is something that I put a lot of attention to. I actually worked as a journalist for a while before I got into writing fiction. Primarily, I’m a big fan of ’80s comedies. And I like a journalistic approach to storytelling. So I would say that both of those are pretty kind of interwoven. 

Heaney: Does this play exemplify a certain region of the state or the state as a whole? And how so?

Lacek: I would say because of the heavy coal strike content and the coal mining aspect of the family, I would say the southern part of the state mostly. I mean, West Virginia does kind of have like, it’s two parts, you know. So I would say it is like here, in kind-of the peak of the mountains region of the state.

Heaney: What inspired you to write this story?

Lacek: This was a product of the pandemic, you know, in the, like real peak of the pandemic, not knowing what the future was going to hold. I realized that this was kind of like a love letter to West Virginia and my family. As I was saying, I was coming back to spend time with them. And I thought, what better way to kind of be able to share this thing with our whole community.

Heaney: What are some key takeaways from this play? 

Lacek: Whoever came to this, I wanted there to be somebody on stage that they’re like, “oh that’s the ‘me’ character.” So I was very careful not to add too many specifics. The dad’s a coal miner. We don’t know exactly what he does at the coal mine. The mom works at the hospital. That’s all we know. One of the kids is a star football player, we never hear exactly what he does on the team, you know. I wanted to keep all those things as broad as possible. So people could come there, implant themselves over the story, and walk away from it being like, “That was my West Virginia story!”

Shepherd University’s Contemporary Theater Debuts Original Motown Musical

Shepherd University’s contemporary theater department is celebrating Black music by premiering an original musical on campus featuring arrangements of classic Motown hits. The show was directed and written by kb saine, director of the school’s contemporary theater studies program.

Shepherd University’s contemporary theater department is celebrating Black music by premiering an original musical on campus featuring arrangements of classic Motown hits. The show was directed and written by kb saine, director of the school’s contemporary theater studies program.

The musical, titled “Motown: Music from the Motor City,” takes Black music from the 60s and sets it against the backdrop of the civil rights movement. saine says she wants to give social and cultural context to the Motown music scene.

“By lifting up the Black voices in the story of the people who made the music, it does allow us to serve everyone, and it does allow for a sense of equity that we’ve been able to extend to our students and to our community members as well,” said saine.

Also involved as the production’s music director is the dean of the university’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences, Rob Tudor. As music director, Tudor wants to explore what makes the sound of Motown so universally loved.

“Why has it lasted as long as it has? Why is it still popular?” Tudor said. “I went to a wedding in January… and a few people were dancing, but the moment they put on Motown music, the whole room jumped up on the floor and started dancing because it was music for everybody.”

Both Tudor and saine are excited to contribute to the Eastern Panhandle’s artistic tradition.

“I often refer to [Shepherdstown] as sort of the cultural hub of the area,” said Tudor. “There’s a lot going on, not just in Shepherdstown, but around us, as well.”

“There’s a great music scene, there’s a great theater scene, and it’s professionally and community driven,” saine added. “And there’s an audience for the arts that really appreciates it.”

The show premieres Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Shepherd University’s Marinoff Theater. It will also run Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 4:00 p.m.

Duck and Cover, Because "The Blob" is Coming to FestivALL

In September 1958, The Blob, an independent horror, science-fiction film was released by Paramount Pictures and Umbrella Entertainment. Starring Steve McQueen in his debut role, the film left a permanent mark in Americans’ minds, and in 2006, Charleston’s Contemporary Youth Arts Company took the film a step further, writing their own adaptation of the classic film in the form of a musical.

“It’s the Steve McQueen movie,” said playwright and director Dan Kehde, “and we just thought wouldn’t it be fun to put it on stage. We turned it into a full-fledged musical, so this is song and dance. And it’s not high-tech and there’s no…it’s an interesting Blob when you see it. It’s just campy. But it’s been a lot of fun, and over the years, I finally…actually we got permission from Jack Harris, who was the original producer of the original movie, who’s still alive, to go ahead and do this for FestivALL this year. And it’s been pretty exciting. But it’s funny, and it’s family friendly, and the worst thing that’s gonna happen is parents are gonna have to explain the history of the Cold War to their kids. But besides that it’s just a lot of fun.”

This is the third time the Contemporary Youth Arts Company of Charleston will produce The Blob, the first of which was in September 2006 and the second in September 2009. The story takes place in the year 1957 in the small town of Downingtown, Pennsylvania. One fateful night, a meteor falls from space and lands in the middle of a farm, where a curious farmer goes to investigate. What he finds however, is a small oozing blob slinking out of the meteor. To the farmer’s horror, the Blob attaches itself to his arm, and soon after, Steve and Jane, the main characters, find the farmer pleading for help. They agree to aide him, and the two teens take the farmer to the town’s doctor.

Credit Dan Kehde / The Contemporary Youth Arts Company
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The Contemporary Youth Arts Company
Dan Kehde, co-founder of CYAC.

“And his arm is slowly being consumed, and so the doctor calls in the nurse, and as the doctor calls in the nurse, the Blob consumes the farmer, and then the Blob consumes the nurse, and then the Blob consumes the doctor. And nobody believes the two teenagers who found the original, the farmer, that there’s a monster out there. So they’re running around the town trying to convince the town that there’s a monster out there.” 

Kehde says that even though this is CYAC’s third time producing The Blob, things haven’t necessarily gotten easier and that with each new production, they are presented with new ideas and new challenges.

“To try to adapt a movie onto the stage, without any kind of camera angles, close-ups, special effects, it’s very difficult. It’s very hard to make it entertaining and keep the plot line going, and I don’t know what the hardest thing was, I guess maybe that final scene with the diner and the fire-extinguishers has always been tricky, it should work this time. We’re going to build the diner on stage. Yeah, that would be the toughest one. And to educate everybody in the cast what this thing is about, and about the Cold War and about people worried about flying saucers, and the whole nine-yards.”

The Contemporary Youth Arts Company was founded in 1995 by Kehde, his wife, Penny, and composer Mark Scarpelli and they have been producing original theater in and around the Charleston area ever since. The Blob is just one of many shows Kehde and Scarpelli have written together. Their first show, MARY: A Rock Opera was met with critical acclaim, and they continue to perform it annually around Christmastime. Kehde says CYAC began with a small group of high school kids who were looking for a theater outlet that spoke to them.

Credit Liz McCormick
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The Contemporary Youth Arts Company’s, The Blob

“Just a bunch of kids showed up at my front doorstep, actually. And were looking for a place where they could do shows that usually weren’t acceptable on the high school level, that were a little bit more sophisticated. And that they could have time for, because most of the kids were taking advanced classes, and nobody was going to accommodate them. So we started Contemporary Youth Arts for them, and their friends, and then started to incorporate some original pieces that Mark and I were interested in writing as we went along, until we got a pretty good mix now of kids coming in to do kind of fringy theater as well as a couple of goofy things like The Blob. And we get to write new pieces all the time, and try out new stuff all the time.”

Since its inception, CYAC has expanded to include performers of all ages, but with special emphasis on giving roles to younger people when possible.

“We work with young ones from knee-high, you know all the way up to, you know young adults,” Scarpelli reflected, “of course The Blob actually has some older folks, mom and dad type characters too, just you know, community theater, that’s the fun of it is just being involved and meeting new people, and just watching some of the talents develop on stage. It’s pretty exciting.”

Caitlin Moore and Austin Susman, two recent graduates from George Washington High School are regulars of the Contemporary Youth Arts Company and both say it’s the atmosphere of the company that keeps bringing them back.

Credit Liz McCormick
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The Contemporary Youth Arts Company’s, The Blob

“I love that the pieces are challenging,” said Moore, “and they’re new and it’s different from what every other theater company is doing.”

“It’s the shows and the people,” said Susman, “You know, Dan and Mark write some wonderful shows, and I’ve made some great friends with other cast members and a really great relationship with Dan and Mark as well. And also the theater, the Capitol Theater is a beautiful venue, and I love to perform here any chance I get.”

“CYAC has kind of become my second family,” Moore noted, “I’ve only been doing shows for two-in-half-years, but it was the first time I ever stepped on stage, acting, and I fell in love with it as soon as I did it. So ever since then, I cannot bring myself to take a break.”

“The Blob is a really cheesy show,” Susman said, “but it’s a lot of fun, and you can’t leave this theater without smiling.”

The Blob will open at the West Virginia State University Capitol Center Theater on June 19th.

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