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The Village Squire, 1981-10, Page 8LITTLE THEATRE A passion to entertain Eighty miles round trip. Two and a half to three trips a week. Fifteen to twenty weeks. All of this after his normal working day and all for no money. For most it would be a pain. For Floyd Herman it's a passion, a craving to entertain people, to make them laugh, to help them escape if only for a few hours. Floyd Herman is a thirty-year-old actor, an amateur actor. He and scores of others like him are what keep little theatre alive throughout western Ontario. A teacher by profession (eight years at Grey Central in Ethel and now in his second year at Colborne Central, just outside Benmiller), Herman was bitten by the stage bug back in his high school days in tobacco -belt Delhi. The symptoms included a driving desire to perform, and the cure, he found, was in roles with school and youth group productions. At least it was a step in the right direction. He's not sure there is a cure. After secondary school there were stints with the York University Players, the Kitchener -Waterloo Little Theatre and rural community theatre to help Grey Central's home and school association raise money. Now there is the Grey -Wellington Theatre Guild and Herman is looking forward to his fourth season with what he calls "the most professional amateur group I've ever worked with." Somewhat less he is looking forward to all the time he must once again spend piloting his '79 Chrysler back and forth to Harriston from his home in Blyth. Eighty miles round trip He uses the road time to unwind, plan his next day or, more often, recite at full volume the lines he's expected to know at the three-hour rehearsal. He remembers the driving being a problem on just one occasion. It was during a week-long run and he was late leaving home. He decided on an untried short-cut but icy roads sent him through a t -intersection and into the ditch. The theatre had no phone so he called the director's wife at home. She relayed the message and the stage manager was dispatched to lend assistance. "The play was Not With My Daughter and we got to the theatre a minute before the curtain went up," says Herman. "I was playing the taxi driver and fortunately Floyd Herman I didn't have to appear until the first scene of the second act. So I had time to get into costume and everything went fine." Passion such as Floyd Herman's have destroyed family life and marriages. In this case his wife, Liz, shares in the passion and daughter Laura, at two and a half, sleeps through a lot of it. "I haven't found any cutback in family time yet," says father Floyd, "though it might affect me in the future when Laura gets older." The Hermans were married while both of them were involved with the K -W little theatre's production of The Boyfriend in 1977. The wedding was followed by a whirlwind three-day honeymoon in New York City (chosen for its playbill) and they made it back in time for the play's final dress rehearsal. "It was pretty crazy," says Floyd, "teaching up here, all that commuting, and getting married. I sort of wonder now how we worked it all in, but I guess you find time if you have to." In the summer of last year the Hermans moved from their converted school house in Grey Township to mainstreet Blyth, where they opened the Blyth Saga. a gift and craft shop. They bought the building and their living quarters are upstairs. The store is a dream -come -true for Liz, and a broader economic base for her family. For her husband it's a little bit of temptation, with the Blyth Summer Festival, and its company of professional actors, right across the street. The yearning to do a professional role has always been with Floyd Herman, though the passing of time and the settling of ways have slashed greatly into the probability. "1 suppose if I'd really wanted to do it I would have," says Herman. "But I've just finished the principal's course and I want to start a master's of education this fall. "Sometimes there are conflicts, usually time conflicts, but there's never any question about which comes first. My job is teaching and it has to come first. There are good days and bad days for both teaching and acting but a professional actor has nothing to fall back on. I have teaching. "Still, I think that's what I admire about them (the professionals). They are willing to take those chances. Sometimes I wonder if some of us amateurs aren't professionals without guts." There are professionals who likely would say that Floyd Herman has the best of both worlds. And on most days Floyd Herman would agree . He loves the classroom because that's as much a stage for him as the Harriston townhall. And he loves directing his school kids in their annual productions. "To be a good teacher you have to be part actor," he says, "and my night time experiences are just an extension of that. It's just another part of me. Little theatre seems to bring enjoyment to a lot of people and it's nice to be a part of that. I think any community group. a service club or theatre or whatever, can only add to a town. "And I think the people who are involved in little theatre get as much out of it as they give. We all think in terms of what we are giving but we are also getting something. For us it's a social life and we have a whole new circle of friends because of it. I think people who have thought about getting involved, should. "What makes Harriston so good is that they have the right mix of people, for props, for publicity, for acting, for directing. And they have organization. Not everybody has to act or wants to act. It takes a variety and little theatre means different things for different people." For Floyd Herman it has meant thousands of miles, long nights, and sixty to eighty roles in thirty to forty plays. I t 's also meant that rush that comes with a standing ovation. He can't imagine his life without it. PG. 8 VILLAGE SQUIRE/OCTOBER 1981