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Unto These Hills
Cherokee outdoor drama opens for fiftieth summer season |
Unto These Hills, the Cherokee outdoor drama
that has been acclaimed as a leader in the field of outdoor drama, has
opened for its fiftieth summer season in Cherokee, North Carolina.
It has been selected as one of the Southeast Tourism Society's Top 20
Events for the month of June 1999.
This half-century run began July 1, 1950. A capacity audience at the
Mountainside Theater witnessed the first performance telling about the
Cherokee history from 1540 until the tragic removal of the Cherokee to
the west in the late 1830s.
Covering three hundred years of their history, the Cherokee drama is
masterfully done. From the beginning scenes when Spanish Explorer Hernando
DeSoto and his soldiers encounter the Cherokee people to the closing minutes
that show the beginning of the divided Cherokee Nation, the legacy unfolds.
Scenes are humorous, tense, tragic, sentimental and moving. Audiences
leave Mountainside Theater with a deeper understanding of the Cherokee
people, their history and their struggles in a non-Indian world.
Unto These Hills is the story of the coming of the white man to Cherokee
country, the sacrifice of Tsali who gave his life so that a handful of
his people could remain in their homeland. It is the story of the wise
Chief Junaluska, of Sequoyah who gave the Cherokee an alphabet, and the
story of the brave Cherokee people who were finally forced to remove to
Indian territory in the West. Interwoven into this story is the famous
Eagle Dance, the mountain square dance, and finally the establishment
of a reservation in Western North Carolina for the small Cherokee remnant
remaining in the Smokies.
Many veteran actors are returning to the Cherokee stage this summer.
One hundred thirty actors, actresses and technicians mix their talents
and experience in an unforgettable two and one half-hour performance,
six nights each week from June 11 through August 21. Many of the cast
members are the Cherokee descendants of those who actually lived the story
that is told on stage.
The Unto These Hills schedule for 1999 is nightly, except Sundays. In
the past 49 seasons of operation, Unto These Hills has recorded paid attendance
of 5,485,181, and has presented 2,942 performances portraying the history
of the Cherokee people.
The Cherokee Historical Association also sponsors Oconaluftee Indian
Village, replica of a Cherokee community of 1750.
Information and tickets: phone (828) 497-2111.
Copyright 1999, Blue Ridge Digest Publishing
Company
All rights reserved.
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