Volume 44, Issue 9
A lifetime of learning 72-year-old teaches classmates through her trials and triumphs By Anjulie Van Sickle etc4640@dcccd.edu
It’s the second day of professor Betsy Joseph’s creative writing class and her students have been asked to bring an object that represents them. The class sits in a circle, sharing the meanings behind their selections. The third to present is 72-year-old Charlotte Shields, who cups a hand-painted coffee mug tenderly in her hands. Her face lights up as she recalls her performance 15 years earlier in the mystery farce “The Murder Room.” On opening night, her
producer asked her to do a special favor: Buy some time on stage because the leading lady was late. Charlotte decided to ad-lib a song and a dance. The cast was so impressed with the performance that they signed the painted mug and presented it to her at the end of the night. For Charlotte, the mug represents a life that was long ago, a time filled with acting, dancing and a love for the stage. As she finishes her story, it is evident that although Charlotte is in the classroom to learn, she has many lessons to teach her classmates through her many life experiences. See SHIELDS, page 2 ➤
Wednesday, March 13, 2013