3 minute read
SPORTS
TheMesaTribune.com | @EVTNow /EVTNow
Follow us: @GetOutAZ
Mesa, East Valley kids to present ‘Junie B’
GET OUT STAFF
Twelve-year-old Savannah Springer doesn’t get in trouble very often. The Mesa seventh grader is pretty good at following the rules and helping around the house.
But as one of two performers playing the title role of Junie B. in the Arizona premier of “Junie B.’s Essential Survival Guide to School,” Savannah is trying on a different personality for size.
The new musical, produced by Limelight Performing Arts in Gilbert, is based on the bestselling books by Barbara Park and shares the saga of the wisecracking Junie B. – a self-appointed expert on all things �irst grade – who is determined to write the ultimate guide to school.
The production features a cast of 16 young performers from across the East Valley.
“Junie B. is constantly making jokes and getting in trouble,” said Savannah. “It is so much fun to play a trouble-maker in this show and do things I would never try to get away with in real life.”
“Junie B.’s Essential Survival Guide to School” is the hilarious and heartwarming follow-up to “Junie B. Jones, The Musical.” The show uses highenergy music and comedic dialogue to take audiences through a series of stresses and mishaps as precocious Junie confronts the challenges of �irst grade – and gets in a lot of trouble along the way. “One of my favorite lessons of the show is that Junie B. learns how to control her anger when things aren’t going her way,” said director Rio Chavez of
ALYX HARDEN EDWARD OSTER SAVANNAH SPRINGER
���JUNIE B ���� 34
Mirage mirrors Fleetwood Mac’s talents
BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI
GetOut Editor
Michelle Tyler of the Fleetwood Mac tribute act Mirage has heard the words many long to hear: Stevie Nicks would like to meet you.
Tyler, who was playing in the Nicksonly band Belladonna, was performing acoustically with her husband when a woman approached her back-up musicians backstage.
She said her husband was Steve Real, Nicks’ vocal coach, and she was so impressed that she was hoping to get Tyler on the phone with the legendary singer. Unable to get to Tyler, she recorded Belladonna with her phone and sent it to Nicks. “They �lew my husband and I up to Reno and we went backstage during a meet and greet,” Tyler recalled. “I said, ‘Hi Stevie. I’m Michelle Tyler. I think you heard me on a phone call?’ She put her hands on my shoulders and said, ‘We tried so hard to Mirage is, from left, Bob Weitz as John McVie, Keith Foelsch as Lindsey Buckingham, Annie Boxell as Christine McVie, Richard Graham as Mick Fleetwood and, seated, Michelle Tyler as
Stevie Nicks. (Photo by Tyler Weitz) get that call through. It was great to hear somebody doing a good job with my muyou just let me know. I’ve about had it.’”
The two shared a laugh and that was the �irst of a handful of meetings.
“She’s been very supportive, and her backup singers have said imitation is the sincerest form of �lattery,” she said. “That’s the only endorsement that Stevie would give anybody. They’re not a band that goes around and does that. Saying I could take over at any time, that was a pretty good pat on the back.”
Fans can see what Nicks admires when California-based Mirage plays a number of shows in the area, including Thursday, Sept. 23, at Seville Golf and Country Club, and Wednesday, Oct. 27, at IronOaks in Sun Lakes.
Mirage sticks with the “Rumours”-era of Fleetwood Mac.
“We’re very authentic,” she said. “Everyone plays an actual role. We play the very biggest hits, the best of Fleetwood Mac.