Interplanetary theater
Young Chang
Kelly O’Reilly held planet Earth on Monday during a theatrical
production staged by the Mad Science Theater at the Orange County
Fair.
She was spaced 15 million imaginary miles from Venus, held by
another young audience participant. To the 8-year-old’s right was
Mars.
Select children still seated in their seats got to hold things
like Jupiter and Uranus in a pattern that was proportionately
accurate to how things really are in outer space.
‘’We make science fun,’’ said Annemieke Wade, one of two actors in
the 30-minute show.
Mad Science Productions creates this theatrical world between the
World Famous Sourdough Bread stand and a prominent and yellow hot dog
stand at Centennial Way, at the fair. The medium-sized theater houses
an elaborate stage decorated as a launch pad for a show titled ‘’Mad
Mission to Mars 2025.’’
Mad Science Productions, a part of the Canada-based educational
group called the Mad Science Group, rotates between three shows every
touring season, but only ‘’Mad Mission’’ will run through the
duration of the fair.
‘’It’s all about sparking the imagination and learning,’’ said
Jean-Sebastien Drouin, technical coordinator for the show.
He added that ‘’Mad Mission’’ was originally created with NASA and
for use at the Kennedy Space Center.
The story follows a professor named Pruvitt and an
astronaut-in-training named Crash during an unexpected astronaut
training session. Crash’s funny and lighthearted ways counter the
seriousness of her professor. Automated cast mates, including
“robonaut” WD-4D, help to teach lessons on gravity, propulsion,
space, Newton’s Laws of Motion, micro-gravity, the solar system and
orbits.
The set is sterile and silver to convey the mood of a real-life
launch pad. Two rocket chairs and an inflatable sun complete the
scene.
Wade, 26, auditioned for the part of Crash. She is an astronaut
accompanying Professor Pruvitt, played by 26-year-old Cameron
Johnston. The two put on a comedic show filled with innocent jokes
and over-the-top humor for the sake of teaching young audiences a
thing or two about science.
‘’It’s fun for the 5-12 year olds, but also for adults as well,’’
Wade said. ‘’We slip a couple family-oriented adult jokes in there.’’
Kelly said learning about science through watching a play of sorts
-- at the Orange County Fair, of all places -- will make the
experience more fun.
‘’Science might help me in the future because I’m going to be a
veterinarian,’’ she said.
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