Celebrating creativity and the spirit
Young Chang
Bill Wolfe’s pants have smatterings of stripes, flowers and spirals in
every color of the rainbow. His shirt is a loud green. His hat has spokes
shooting out like a jester’s.
The ensemble is a symbol of his spirituality -- a belief that artistic
creativity is a divinely inspired product that is present in everyone,
Wolfe said. His position is that the spirit is nondenominational and
encompasses any religion.
As the director and founder of Sunday Night Alive, a self-expression
group that meets monthly at the Center for Spiritual Discovery
(previously known as the Costa Mesa Church of Religious Science), Wolfe
heads up his actors, singers, dancers and writers by talking the talk and
wearing it too. As a musician, he said he uses his art to convey the
presence of God.
“To me, there’s only one God,” Wolfe said. “And he has many different
names. So there’s only one source or energy you could call it because I
believe that God is present in everything and everyone. We all have that
spark.”
Every month, participants from a gamut of religions perform using
almost every art medium. Wolfe, a composer and conductor, plays the piano
at every Sunday Night Alive gathering.
Sometimes they pray. Sometimes it’s more of a humorous, lighthearted
program.
To Arline Kaplan, Sunday Night Alive offered a safe place to overcome
her fear of public speaking. By speaking and singing in front of a group,
her knees have literally stopped quivering, her hands have stopped
shaking.
“Part of spirituality for me is a loving environment,” Kaplan said.
“Creative expression to me is . . . spirituality is always creating.”
For a special Halloween celebration on Oct. 28, the group will sing
karaoke, put on skits and dance at a Huntington Beach clubhouse instead
of its usual Costa Mesa location.
In November, participants will return to the Center for Spiritual
Discovery for a program on Native Americans and Thanksgiving.
“Take Beethoven,” Wolfe said. “Music was divinely inspired through
him. That’s what happens in the community. We have all different kinds of
levels of ability, but everyone has that sense of and the presence of God
and the beauty of music.”
Wolfe -- who has been involved with Filipino Baptist, Methodist,
Religious Science, Unity and Episcopal churches -- started the group 16
years ago from a workshop called “Life Song,” which had the mission to
“celebrate creativity in people.”
Sunday Night Alive shares that mission.
“It’s a place for people to try different things that under other
circumstances, they would be made fun of,” Wolfe said.
FYI
* WHAT: Sunday Night Alive celebrates Halloween with a special program
* WHEN: 5 to 8:30 p.m. Oct. 28
* WHERE: Brookfield Manor Clubhouse, 9850 Garfield Ave., Huntington
Beach
* COST: Free
* CALL: (714) 969-4778
* WHAT: Sunday Night Alive will present a program on Native Americans
and Thanksgiving
* WHEN: 7 p.m. Nov. 25
* WHERE: Center for Spiritual Discovery, 2850 Mesa Verde Drive East,
Costa Mesa
* COST: $8 for adults, $5 for seniors, $3 for children
* CALL: (714) 969-4778
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