The play is often really funny, but the humor comes from the children's refusal to give up. The kids have that same feeling, and i suspect that it's true of most kids, that they want to be useful. They want to do something about a problem. And so in our play, we have those scenes where kid quixote, our hero, keeps getting knocked down and she stands up again. She gets knocked down, she stand up again. Yes? And the desire to rescue people. Because it's not just me and my by polar grandiocity who wants to rescue people. It feels good to help."
Stephen Haff is the founder of Still Waters in a Storm, a one-room school serving mostly Spanish-speaking immigrant children in Bushwick, Brooklyn. Previously, he taught English at a public school in Bushwick for nearly a decade, before leaving to recover from the effects of extreme psychological stress that led him to re-evaluate how he would return to serve kids as an educator and activist. In his new book, Kid Quixotes (https://amzn.to/34zxPit). Stephen shares a powerful story about the kids and an incredible 5-year project to translate and perform a modern version of Don Quixote. He earned his MFA in Theater Studies at Yale, and has made a living directing plays and writing essays for the Village Voice and other publications.
You can find Stephen Haff at: Website: http://www.stillwatersinastorm.org/
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