Adams Theater Presents the Northern Berkshire Story Slam

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ADAMS, Mass. — Community members will take center stage on Aug. 16 at 7:30pm for the Northern Berkshire Story Slam, an up-close-and-personal look at people's biggest mistakes, greatest triumphs, and painful losses. 
 
Hosted by actor, writer, and comic Diana Yanez and produced in collaboration with Life Jacket Theatre Company, this event offers real stories from real people–who have been working for months to get their performances just right. 
 
"You as an audience member might know everyone on the stage, but you're going to find out something new about them at this show," said Travis Russ, Life Jacket's director and a Fordham University professor who teaches communication, narrative and storytelling. 
 
Russ said his job is to give these community members a chance to shape their story– "we want to experiment, to reflect their own authentic voice back to them," he said. "We're coaching them to share that view, and it's our job to say, 'that sounds like the real you, keep going.'"
 
The cast
 
Jamal Ahamad, educator and Interim Dean of Student at Pittsfield High School, choreographer at dysFUNKcrew
 
Meg Bantle, six-generation farmer and co-owner and founder of Full Well Farm
 
Barby Cardillo, theatre teaching artist
 
Muriel Dyas, historical reenactor
 
Xavier Jones, Owner of Bigg Daddy's steak house Philly Steak House
 
Matti Kovler, composer, founder and artistic director of Floating Tower
 
Yina Moore, founder and artistic director of The Adams Theater
 
Timothy Olver, student at Hoosac Valley School
 
Diana Yanez, filmmaker, director, artist, and stand-up comic
 
NYC-based Life Jacket Theatre Co. bills itself as "a purveyor of undertold stories" through its storytelling events and original productions. Life Jacket's members work with communities to produce storytelling events where community members share their true, authentic, compelling experiences; the company's other productions take on heavy subject matter like the story of the "Fag Ward" — an isolated wing at the Men's Penitentiary on Welfare Island, NYC, for inmates convicted of homosexuality during the 1930s. Past Storytelling Project events have been produced in collaboration with rural and urban high schools, several universities, and organizations like GLSEN and the Queer Detainee Empowerment Project.
 
"It's vulnerable and insanely thrilling to watch people go through this experience onstage," Russ said. "There's something about when you come together as an audience and watch people you know let their guard down and speak their truth. It creates a sense of community and a strong bond within everyone in that room." 
 
Life Jacket Theatre Co. has been nominated for a Drama Desk Award, two American Theatre Wing Henry Hewes Design Awards, seven New York Innovative Theatre Awards, and eleven BroadwayWorld Awards. Our work has been selected as Critic's Picks by The New York Times, Time Out New York, Fest Magazine, Voice Magazine, and The List and has been named the "#1 Show at the Edinburgh Fringe" by Fest Magazine and among the "Top 10 Plays of the Year" by New, Now, Next.
 
See a full lineup of events this season at www.adamstheater.org/present
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Adams Community Bank Evens League Championship Series

By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com Sports
ADAMS, Mass. -- Adams Community Bank erased an early four-run deficit and held off a furious late comeback from Adams Police to claim a thrilling 14-13 victory Thursday evening, evening the best-of-three Adams-Cheshire Little League Championship Series at a game apiece.
 
Adams Police came out with plenty of energy in the opening inning. Austin Akroman drove in the game’s first run with an RBI single before the Police continued to pressure the defense with aggressive baserunning, including a steal of home, to build an early 4-0 advantage.
 
ACB answered immediately in the bottom half of the first. Luka Reidinger sparked the offense with a leadoff triple and raced home moments later on a stolen base. Bentley Martin followed with an RBI double, and another run-scoring double, along with a sacrifice fly, tied the game, 4-4 after one inning.
 
Both teams settled in during the second as the defenses took center stage. Adams Community Bank retired  Police in order in the bottom of the inning, while APD worked around a walk and a pair of baserunners to keep it tied.
 
The momentum shifted in the third inning as ACB’s bats came alive. Joey Milesi opened the frame with a double before consecutive RBI doubles erased the deficit and gave Community Bank its first lead of the evening. Mason Kucka and Max Pizani added base hits to extend the rally, helping Community Bank score five runs in the inning and take an 8-4 lead.
 
Adams Police answered back in the fourth. A passed ball plated one run before Avry Decker delivered a two-run single to pull the Police within a run. Community Bank responded immediately in the bottom half, as Mason Kucka reached base before Bentley Martin lined a two-run double into the outfield to stretch the lead back to 10-7.
 
The Police continued to battle in the fifth inning. Hudson Z. reached safely to begin the rally, and Decker drove in another run with an RBI single. Another run-scoring hit cut the deficit to 10-9 and kept the pressure on Community Bank.
 
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