The Long Road to International
By Maggie Ryan, Greater
Harrisburg Chorus, Region 19
They were so good, they made
you tingle.
A few made you nod and smile.
Some overwhelmed you, and in the dark you just let the tears tumble.
But these women, they gave you
a rush. Harborlites Chorus and “the Buzz” quartet blew
the doors off their competitors in Indianapolis. The Buzz redefined
artistry and precision, and Harborlites performed with an energy
that made you wonder if their hair was on fire. They left nothing
to chance and nothing in doubt.
They made it look easy, but
that’s the hardest part, isn’t it?
To set aside your crowns and
reputations and take up a new challenge is no small task. It takes
enormous trust to summon all your preparation, focus all your long-held
hopes and deliver a laser-beam performance that shimmers even after
the final note is sung. Courage and faith: the stuff of champions.
If there is one lesson to be
gained from Sweet Adelines International’s 59th convention,
perhaps it is this: Above all else, wear comfortable shoes.
Sweet Adelines found the only
venue on Earth that could make a 20,000-seat hockey arena seem cozy.
The Indianapolis convention center wasn’t just big, it was
you-gotta-be-kidding-me huge.
The concrete walkway from primp
room to stage door was more than 300 yards long. Entire ballrooms
were dissected to provide shortcuts. Once inside the building, you
needed to hike another five city blocks to reach the auditorium
entrance. Directors hitched rides on maintenance carts from warm-ups
to backstage. At times during chorus semifinals, the lineup of scooters
resembled a parade of precision-driving Masonic clowns.
So massive was the building
that Saturday, while Sweet Adelines competed for gold medals in
Exhibit Hall C, some of Indiana’s finest marching bands chased
glory in the RCA Dome, home of the NFL’s Indianapolis Colts.
All under the very same roof. And unless someone opened the wrong
door at the wrong time, you never even knew they were there.
Inside, the cavernous hall dwarfed
the stage and swallowed its occupants. Between performers, The Wave
was more like The Tide, it took so long to travel all the way around.
Even the big video screens with their images that make singers’
faces 10-feet tall took on nearly human-sized proportions.
So how is it that four tiny
women held 7,000 spellbound?
And how did one chorus reach across the chasm to electrify onlookers
half a mile away?
Distance, of course, is relative.
Some Sweet Adelines regions are so compact, a three-hour drive seems
lengthy. Others cross national borders and time zones. Christchurch
City Chorus merely absorbed three countries, 10 choruses, two continents
and 18 hours of airline travel to reach the Indianapolis stage.
Credit director Virginia Humphrey-Taylor
with dreaming up a scheme so wacky it just had to work. Virginia
knew it would be enormously expensive to haul a 70+ member chorus
all the way from Christchurch City, New Zealand, to Indianapolis,
Indiana, U.S.A. And with an unfriendly exchange rate giving the
Kiwis roughly 75 cents to the U.S. dollar, for many of her members
the trip was cost-prohibitive.
Virginia, who coaches throughout
regions 34 and 35 in New Zealand and Australia, seized upon an idea.
Why not open up the trip to everyone? Why not tap their friends
in Wollongong Harmony and Sydney Town, in Marlborough Harmony, Greater
Auckland and Melbourne, to name a few? Invite them all to be dual
members with CCC and join them on the trip of a lifetime. Oh, and
while we’re at it, how about a few from Minnesota?
Minnesota?
You see the connection, don’t
you? Down Under meets Iced Over? Somehow, it all made sense to Virginia
and CCC’s coaches, Mary Dick and Cindy Hansen. Mary and Cindy
flew to New Zealand to coach, and Mary’s daughter, Heidi,
was hooked, too. She signed up, and CCC became a multinational force.
These dual members became fast
friends, new sisters they labeled Ooters for Out-Of-Towners. Every
week, Ooter Vicky Gardiner drove four hours from Marlborough to
rehearsals, some flew in from Australia for retreat, and the really,
really out-there Ooters practiced by video and audiotapes. Meanwhile,
the CCC members who couldn’t go were cheering them on, opening
their homes and drawing them into their circle.
The first time the entire group
was assembled was the Saturday before their performance at International.
The first place they all met face-to-face was their rehearsal in
Indianapolis. Nearly 70% were first-timers to international, and
three had never competed at all. Two Ooters made the front row.
They called the experience magnificent,
fulfilling all their hopes. “It just felt so right,”
said one. “We got on the risers that night and it was so great.”
Imagine. Traveling halfway around
the world to sing two songs with women you’ve never met, and
may never see again.
“We don’t want to
leave them behind,” said another. “We don’t want
to let them go.”
In the end, 56 singers representing
10 choruses took the stage in Indianapolis under the umbrella of
Christchurch City Chorus. They finished in 26th place, down a few
notches from CCC’s last appearance in 2001. The placement
didn’t matter. The trip planted some seeds, opened some eyes
to the dynamism and energy of international-level performers.
Christchurch City has its sights set on a quick return to the International
stage. They’re hoping to capture a slot in the 2007 convention
in Calgary. The exchange rate is much more favorable with Canada.
More members will be able to go. And the Ooters? Don’t count
them out.
“Everybody repeatedly
said what a wonderful experience it was,” said Philippa Beckman.
“We’re talking about a reunion.”
Those who make a great journey
become masters of a million little things. All the details; every
moment at its essence. They don’t just seize a performance,
they inhabit it. They live it, breathe it, smell and taste it. To
become the master of the moment, to become its champion, you have
to do all these things.
You have to believe.
Return to Pitch Pipe main page