When the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered schools and extracurricular classes throughout Southwest Washington this spring, theater teacher Heather Lundy Kahl knew she would have to move in a different direction to help her tightknit group of students.
“I was very fortunate to have a group of students who felt very attached to my teaching style,” Lundy Kahl, founder of the Vancouver-based nonprofit Downstage Center Productions, said.
Like so many educators have done over the past few months, Lundy Kahl relied on teleconferencing platforms like Zoom to meet with her students.
“We’ve been meeting every Thursday on Zoom. At first, they were heartbroken, so I spent a couple hours every week just listening to them,” Lundy Kahl said. “I told them, ‘Theater will always survive. This tradition will survive. You are the storytellers and we’ll always find you. So, hang in there.'”
Weeks after moving her students to online classes, Lundy Kahl felt driven by the racial justice movement that erupted after the May 25 death of George Floyd, a Black father who died in police custody after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes while three other officers stood by as witnesses videotaped the incident and cried out for police to help Floyd.