
Prepared by
Thomas
Townsend
May 2006
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The Jack
Tale Players offer a special opportunity for students of all ages to share
in the unique experience of reliving a vital part of our Appalachian
heritage. Under the creative guidance of Dr. R. Rex Stephenson, the Jack
Tale Players hold the distinguished honor of presenting
The Jack
Tale Players represent a much larger idea than mere entertainment. The
stories and songs that they share are part of the grand circle that is oral
tradition. Though full of folk humor, fast paced physical comedy, and
endearing energetic characters, the folktales performed by the troupe draw
from the deep well of Appalachian culture that is disappearing from
around those of us who call the Blue Ridge and Smoky Mountains home. The
Jack Tales are not only the story of the ever-clever Jack, but the story of
the peoples of the
The following study guide is presented to help educators in preparing their students to enjoy fully the richness and depth of the Appalachian storytelling and the theatre experience.
The
study of Jack Tales and other Appalachian folktales must
begin with a brief look at Oral Tradition, then at Folklore, and finally at
the Appalachian stories known as
Jack Tales
Before the Internet, before television, before telephone, before radio, before even electricity, even before writing, people shared ideas with their mouths. For students to grasp the importance of oral tradition, they should try to insert themselves into that not-so-long ago time when oral language was the only communication people possessed.
Exercise: The
Grapevine/The Statue
Have the students
sit around you, asking them to use their imaginations to pretend they have no
modern technology, press, or electricity. Ask them: How would your life be
different? What would your entertainment be? How would you get news of
what was happening?
Tell the students a
short story of your choosing. Make the sequence of events simple to follow
and logically progressing.
Divide the students
into groups of four or five. Choose one person out of each group to retell
the story to their group
When all the groups
have finished, have the students come back together.
Ask the students:
What was different in the stories? What was the same?
Have the students
sit in a circle and play “Grapevine” (also known as “Gossip” or
“Telephone”). The rules are: you will whisper a message into the ear of
the student beside you. He or she will then whisper the same message to the
student next to him or her. Remember, the message can only be whispered once. When
the message has returned to you, ask the last student to speak out loud the
message he or she received. Explain that sometimes when a story is
only told orally, the details can change
Have the student go
back to their groups. Ask them to prepare a sketch of the earlier story,
using their own ideas and details.
Present the
sketches to the class, noting to the students how the story changes each time.
Ask the students to
go back into their groups. Ask them, “What do you think the biggest problem
you would have in living without modern conveniences?”
Have the students
then to create a living statue. Then build a scene, frieze, or statue that
describes their answer to your question.
Present the statues to the class and have them guess at the answers.
The following books and web sites are good resources in preparing to teach the basics of folklore, especially different kinds of folk narratives:
Lechner, Judith V. Allyn & Bacon Anthology of Traditional Literature. New York: Pearson/Allyn & Bacon, 2004.
Lindahl, Carl, ed. American Folktales: From the Collections of the Library of Congress. 2 vols. Armonk NY: M. E. Sharpe, 2004.
Yolen, Jane, ed. Favorite Folktales from Around the World. New York: Pantheon, 1986.
Folklore and Mythology Electronic Texts. edited and/or translated by D. L. Ashliman, University of Pittsburgh, http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/folktexts.html.
See also Complete List of AppLit Pages on Folklore.
When the
European settlers came into the
One of
the most frequent characters that lived through many of these tales was a
boy named Jack. He is the same Jack from the European tales (such as "Jack
and the Beanstalk") but given decidedly American traits. In many Jack Tales
and other folktales, the European traditions such as castles and kings are still
present, while some things such as golden geese and gold harps are
replaced. Jack is often naughty, misguided, silly, and a definite underdog,
but in almost every tale, he learns that resourcefulness, hard work,
cleverness, resilience, and straightforwardness will help him champion every
cause. His two older brother, Bill (or Will) and Tom are most times trying
to keep Jack in his place as the youngest and the dumbest. As Jack is our
hero, he always comes out on top with the loot, the food, or the hand of a
beautiful girl to marry.
Photo: Thomas Townsend (standing, right) and Rex Stephenson (standing, left) perform in "Jack and the Robbers" with school children and other Jack Tale Players in Woodstock, Georgia in 2002.
As part
of the WPA Writers Project during the Great Depression, scholars and writers
combed the Blue Ridge and
For further information on Blue Ridge folklore, the Blue Ridge Institute, http://www.blueridgeinstitute.org, is a great source of information and images. School groups sometimes visit the Blue Ridge Institute and Farm Museum on the Ferrum College campus and see a Jack Tale show on the same day.
Background
on the Jack Tale Players
"R. Rex
Stephenson originated the Jack Tale Players in 1975 with a grant from the
Virginia Commission for the Arts to present the traditional Jack Tales in
dramatic form for children. After a trial run in a hallway at
In the photo at left, Thomas Townsend plays the washtub bass and sings with the Jack Tale Players in 2002.
"Two Lost Babes" is a story from the Appalachian oral tradition. Several different transcripts of the telling of this story exist. "The Two Lost Babes" can be found in Richard Chase’s Grandfather Tales (1948). It is related to the traditional European version recorded by the Grimm Brother in their tale, "Hansel and Gretel." Different versions are compared and discussed in AppLit's Annotated Index of Appalachian Folktales at http://www.ferrum.edu/applit/bibs/tales/babes.htm. "The Babes in the Woods" and "The Little Babes in the Woods" are related tales reprinted in AppLit from the James Taylor Adams Collection in the Blue Ridge Institute archives.
As with all of his folktale scripts, R. Rex Stephenson writes a script that, while holding to the original charms and nuances of the oral narrative, also finds a way to captivate modern audiences with his own unique form of storytelling. Stephenson’s story theatre script combines the strongest elements from the tale "The Two Lost Babes," collected by Richard Chase, and "Babes in the Woods," collected by James Taylor Adams. The resulting tale, though faithful to the older tales, speaks with its own voice.
Stephenson’s scripting of the newest version layers the traditional
Appalachian narrative with an additional message about nutrition. This
added nutritional theme puts a significant twist on the traditional
“Babes” tale, as many older versions depict hungry children who find a house made of cake or gingerbread (or some other sugary
treat). With childhood obesity and the health complications that
accompany it becoming a national health concern, the message of the play is
not only timeless, but timely.
What is a Jack tale? Where do they come
from? Discuss with your class the following terms and their significance:
Appalachian Oral Tradition, Grandfather Tales, Jack Tales. Why are they
important? Why is folk heritage important? Do you think the
folktales
are important to all students or only students living in the
Discuss the play, characters, and events, seeing how much the students retained.
Have the students draw pictures of their favorite scenes or event or characters.
Read a Jack Tale or Grandfather Tale to the class. Have the students tell a new version, either oral or written. Pick one of the students’ versions and have them act out the new story for their fellow students.
Discuss nutrition and its importance. By using the health links below, have the students look up the daily recommended nutritional intake and figure out if they are eating healthfully or not. Have them write down what they eat in an average day. Begin to get them to think about the importance of what they eat. Have the students calculate their average caloric intake and then calculate their recommended caloric intake. Discuss also the importance of healthy body image; emphasizing that eating too little is just as dangerous as eating too much.
Discuss with the students what they
should do if they are ever lost. Where do they go? Who can they trust?
Why do you think Bess and Buck are treated so badly?
Was Buck’s plan to find their way out of the forest a good plan? What plan would you have conceived?
Why do the witches keep Cocklepea? Why does he stay?
What sorts of food do the witches feed Bess and Buck? Why?
How do Bess and Buck beat the witches' plan to fatten them up?
In what ways does Cocklepea try to help Bess and Buck? Can you think of another plan(s) that Cocklepea might have used to free his new friends?
What happens at the end of the story? Can you think of a different ending?
What do you think happens to all the different characters after the story ends? What are their futures like?
How is Stephenson's Jack Tale Players' version
different from the Grimm Brothers’ version of "Hansel and Gretel"?
Nemours Foundation’s Kid’s Health, www.kidshealth.org
The Center for Health Care and Health Care Schools, http://www.healthinschools.org/sh/obesity.aspAmerican Heart Association, http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4575
Dairy Management Inc.’s Nutrition Explorations, http://www.nutritionexplorations.org
United States Department of Agriculture, http://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_1OB?navtype=SU&navid=FOOD_NUTRITION
Portion Distortion: Seeing the Healthy Way to Eat.
Video for Ages 7-12/Grades 3-5. 20 minutes. "Real kids convincingly provide
viewers with solid strategies to make wise food choices. Live action mixes
well with animation to dish up a healthy serving of entertaining
information." Description from
American Library Association 2006 Notable Children's Videos
List.
The Edible Pyramid: Good Eating Every Day. Revised edition of a picture book by Loreen Leedy. Holiday House Books for Young People, 2007. A Reading Rainbow book in 1994, this book is now "revised to incorporate the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture's newly redesigned food pyramid, along with the latest research on nutrition."
BBC’s Parenting web site, http://www.bbc.co.uk/parenting/your_kids/safety_out.shtml
Keep Kids Healthy, LLC, http://www.keepkidshealthy.com/welcome/safety/safety_plan.html
Virginia Department of Education, http://www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/Instruction/sol.html
Another AppLit study guide:
Standards of
Learning Covered by Study of "Mutsmag" and "Ashpet" Dramatizations
(based on 2001 SOL's)
The Jack Tale Players Web Site
Bibliography of Dramas and Tales by R. Rex Stephenson
Study Guides on
Dramatizations by the Ferrum College Jack Tale Players
Activities for Teaching
Appalachian Folktales and Dramatizations by the Jack Tale Players
The Script as Story Theatre by R. Rex Stephenson
Chinese Students Learn Jack Tales - article by Tina L. Hanlon
Photos of Richard Chase at Ferrum College
Thomas Townsend, author of this study guide:
Thomas Townsend has worked with the Jack Tale Players and the Blue Ridge Dinner Theater at Ferrum College for six summers from 1997 to 2006. A native of Johnson City, Tennessee, he has a BA from Milligan College and earned an MA in theatre and storytelling from East Tennessee State University in 2003. He has worked in a variety of theatre jobs in Chicago, New York, and other parts of the U.S., including positions as an actor and house manager at the Chicago Shakespeare Theater. He spent 2005 teaching Oral English, literature, and Western culture to English majors at Dongying Vocational College, in Shandong province, eastern China. He used Jack Tales in his classes and directed the Chinese students in public performances of Rex Stephenson's Jack Tale dramatizations. He started out in 1997 playing inanimate objects such as a fire bush, then a donkey and half a horse, before advancing to human roles in Jack Tales. The mean blacksmith Wicked John is his favorite lead role. He has played the narrator in “Ashpet,” “Mutsmag” and one of Stephenson's longer children’s plays, The New Snow White. In 2001 he inaugurated the popular role of a foolish husband in “The Three Old Women’s Bet,” appearing onstage in a red suit of long underwear after his wife tricked him into wearing an invisible suit (see other photos at this link). Townsend was also assistant director of Stephenson’s adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book when it premiered in Ferrum in 1997.
Email address: thomas.townsend.1@gmail.com.
This page created 5/18/06. Last update: 04/13/2007
Complete List of AppLit Pages on Folklore
© Thomas Townsend 2006