Village Living December 2011

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Village Living

www.VillageLivingOnline.com

| December 2011 |

neighborly news & entertainment for Mountain Brook

Jan Ware’s Holiday Gift Guide -pg 14

Cross country wins state again

Volume 2 | Issue 9 | December 2011

-pg pg 18

A magical fit for Clara By ANNE WOOD

Elizabeth Lindsey traded in her ballet shoes for soccer cleats when she was only 3 years old. At age 10 she put on the ballet shoes again, and the first role she auditioned for she got. After only two and a half years of dance experience she was cast as Clara in The Nutcracker. “She had tried everything,” her mother, Frances Lindsey, said. “She played soccer and other things for a while and tried a couple of different dance studios.” Nothing seemed to stick the way ballet dancing did, though. Today, in her fourth year in The Nutcracker and her second year as Clara, Elizabeth has grown to know and love the story. “My favorite part is the pas du trios,” she said. “It’s where me, the Nutcracker, and Drosselmeyer all dance together and get to do partnering.” Elizabeth, who attended a prestigious, three-week summer intensive dance program in Philadelphia, has continued to impress her family, friends and choreographers with her skill in spite of the lack of experience. “I remember when Elizabeth first

December Features Editor’s Note City Council Magic Moments artist Community Dish Village Fashion Kari Kampakis Village Sports School House Business Spotlight Restaurant Showcase Around the Villages Calendar of Events

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MBJH student Elizabeth Lindsey will play Clara for a second year in the Birmingham Ballet production of The Nutcracker. Photo courtesy of the Birmingham Ballet.

auditioned for The Nutcracker about three years ago,” Birmingham Ballet Director Cindy Free said. “Even then, as a Gingersnap, she stood out as a promising and dedicated student. I’ve

enjoyed teaching her at Birmingham Ballet Academy and seeing her progress into such a proficient young dancer as well as a smart young woman. The future is very bright for Elizabeth.”

Her performance is due in part to the countless hours she dedicates to dancing. Elizabeth, an eighth grader at Mountain Brook Junior High, is able to manage her studies, 18 hours a week of dance practice and still have time to see her friends. “I am amazed that she does all this and still keeps an A/B average,” her mother said. “If the grades were being affected, then it would be too much.” Not only does Elizabeth show no signs of slowing down, she truly enjoys the long practices. “I wish I could do more,” she said. “She really does absolutely love it,” her mother said. “When [your kids] find their thing, as a parent, you are so excited.” And she doesn’t plan to stop any time soon. “If I could fit into the costume again next year, it would be fun to be Clara for a third time,” Elizabeth said. Go see Elizabeth, and other Mountain Brook dancers, bring to life the holiday classic Dec. 9, 10 and 11 at various times at the BJCC. For more information and tickets, contact Cindy Free at the studio, 979-9294 or cindy@ birminghamballet.com.

Where there is no hope By mADOLiNE mARKHAm

David and Whitney Milton drove through a colonial square on a recent trip to Peru. The area was full of tourists by day but a different world at night. Women scantily clad in bikini tops and boots stood on street corners. Girls huddled together against the wall, terrified. Whitney remembers seeing a 13 or 14-year-old girl in pigtails with tons of makeup on from her taxi window. “What is her story?” she wondered. “Who is taking care of her?” “It was the first time I had seen it with my own eyes,” said David, who resigned from his position as a Spanish teacher at MBHS last year to pursue full-time missions work with his wife. “Part of our calling is to go where there is no hope,” Whitney said. The couple, who are members of Brookwood Baptist Church, is preparing to live in Peru to help fight human sex trafficking through Make Way Partners, a Birmingham-based nonprofit started in 2003 by Whitney’s parents. They hope to leave in February, but the exact timing will depend on fundraising. The U.S. is a destination country for human trafficking; girls are sent here from countries like Peru. It is because of this that the Miltons plan to go to Peru, to the root of

Brookwood Baptist Church members Whitney and David Milton traveled to Moyobama, Peru, to prepare to move there to fight human trafficking at its source. Photo courtesy of Whitney Milton.

the pattern of evil. “How much better would it be to prevent suffering in the first place?” David said. In villages along the Amazon there, women approach parents and say they need children to work in their restaurants. They promise to care for the children

and give them a better chance in life. The parents send their children off with well wishes only to never hear from them again. It is this lack of understanding that the Miltons will seek to prevent through education. They will travel to

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