Sentinel 11-21-12

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Sentinel The Shorewood

Vol. 17 No. 50

Enterprise Publications • www.shorewoodsentinel.com

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

In good ‘Company’ Shorewood actress returns to stage for local production

By Sherri Dauskurdas Staff Reporter

By Sherri Dauskurdas Staff Reporter

S

arah Page appears to be an ordinary suburban mom. With Shorewood as her home, she has raised twin girls, together with her husband, with all the usual play dates, diapers and bottles. Like many moms, she put on hold a career she relished to care for the family she loved. In Page’s case, it was an acting career that showcased her talents at such venues as Drury Lane, the New American Theatre, Light Opera Works and Pheasant Run. But this month, Page returns to the spotlight, starring in the BrightSide Theatre production on “Company,” a musical comedy by Stephen Sondheim. “This past June, I decided it was time to slowly restart my acting career,” she said. She saw an audition post for the Stephen Sondheim musical comedy “Company” from BrightSide Theatre - a newer professional theater performing in

Submitted Photo

Naperville. “I felt that would be the perfect project to start back with,” she said. Page received her BFA in Musical Theatre from Roosevelt University (Chicago College of Performing Arts). And by chance, or perhaps kismet, it so happened that the director of the show, Jeffery Cass, was a fellow student from Roosevelt, whom she had not seen since they graduated more than 12 years ago. “I purposely didn’t call to schedule an audition appointment, but instead wanted

to surprise him,” she said. Surprise him she did, and the result was a successful casting by Cass. “Company” is a winner of seven Tony Awards. The comedy follows Bobby, a single man unable to commit to a steady relationship, the five couples who are his best friends and his three on-again-offagain girlfriends. Page plays the role of Jenny, a younger wife of a married couple raising their See PAGE, page 2

Crest Hill woman’s death was homicide police say Crest Hill Police are calling the Nov. 18 death of an 89-year-old Crest Hill woman a homicide, after responding to her residence for report of a fire. The Will County Coroner’s Office said the woman, Dorothy Dumyahn, was pronounced

Shorewood ends role in subdivision projects

dead at 9:30 a.m. Sunday. He said it appeared the fire started in the bedroom, but referred all other questions to Crest Hill Police. Crest Hill Deputy Chief Ed Clark said they determined it was a homicide following an autopsy on Monday. He said the

department, assisted by the Will/ Grundy Major CrimesTask Force, will continue investigating the woman’s death. Lockport Fire Chief Dave Skoryi said an off-duty firefighter noticed fire coming from a house in the 2300 block of Caton Farm Road as he was

passing by Sunday morning. After seeing that a neighbor was calling 911, Skoryi said, the off-duty firefighter kicked in the door of the burning home and pulled the woman out. He then went back in to see if there were any others in the house, the chief said.

Shorewood took yet another step to ready local housing for market, as it contracted with an area surveyor to complete work on Shorewood residential developments. The Shorewood trustees approved a $155,000 contract with Ruettiger, Tonelli & Associates of Joliet to detail the location of such items as sewer systems, water mains, street signs and street lights in several village subdivisions nearing completion. Typically handled by developers, the village has taken on the task as part of an ongoing effort to work with developers to complete unfinished subdivisions, left abandoned following the crash of the housing market in 2008. While mortgage foreclosures are on the rise across the suburban market, sales of existing homes are up some 44 percent in October over last year, and the number of existing homes for sale is dropping fast. It follows a nationwide trend, as the U.S. inventory of homes fell some 3.3 percent, or 2.32 million in October, according to the National Association of Realtors. To date, new construction hasn’t picked up the pace.Reports indicate that groundbreakings on See SUBDIVISION, page 2


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