Saturday, April 25, 2020

My Son Joel Featured In Daily Herald Salt Lake City - March 3, 2020

Just before Disney On Ice shut down on March 13, 2020, due to the Coronavirus, my son Joel was featured in The Daily Herald. What a great article. I now wish so much "this" would all end so he and the other performers could get back to doing what they love.

BLADES OF STORY 

Disney on Ice to generate cool reception with 'Mickey's Search Party'

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Elsa From "Frozen" Appears In "Disney On Ice Mickey's Search Party."
Photo Courtesy of Tim Parnell


Though Vivint Smart Home Arena in Salt Lake City regularly serves as home to the Utah Jazz, hosting basketball games is far from the only thing the flexible venue is capable of. Other March engagements include tour stops for Post Malone, Celine Dion and JoJo Siwa, not to mention a literally icy reception set for this week as the arena freezes over and “Disney on Ice Presents Mickey’s Search Party” skates into town.
Skating along with it is Disney on Ice veteran Joel Farris of Colorado Springs, who has spent the last six years performing over 2,000 shows with the touring company, ever since graduating high school.
According to Farris, skating runs in the family, so joining up with Disney on Ice was in the cards for his future for quite awhile before it happened.
“My mother was a coach so I was pretty much already skating most of my life,” Farris said in a recent phone interview. “My grandfather skated, and everyone on my mom’s side. My sister also performs with Disney on Ice on a different show and my cousin also ... so that’s two different family members in the company.”
Farris was quick to note that the travel is one of the highlights of working with the company, with Japan, England and various parts of Europe making the list for his favorite places to visit so far. Though the positives of traveling also come with the reality that only around one month a year is spent at home.
“It is challenging but also very rewarding,” Farris said. “It makes you appreciate home more.”
During his six years skating with Disney on Ice, Farris said he spent four with “Frozen,” including time playing young Kristoff before joining “Mickey’s Search Party” two years ago in a variety of ensemble roles with some character work as well.
“The show is just amazing; it has so many acrobatic elements to it and so many different things to learn involved with skating,” Farris said. “There are some amazing special effects as well.”
Those effects also include extreme skating, which Farris described as “basically like a skate park on the ice,” with ramp jumping, a teeter board and tumble tracks.
“There are so many good elements in the show, along with amazing special effects,” he said.
Part of what sets “Mickey’s Search Party” apart from other Disney on Ice features is it’s the first time that Disney and Pixar’s “Coco” has made a full performance debut.
The show features a quest with Disney’s favorite icon Mickey Mouse and his friends as they follow Captain Hook’s treasure map in search of clues that will lead them to Tinker Bell after Hook attempts to steal her magic.
The journey includes a look at the mystical Land of the Dead with Miguel in “Coco,” a trip through the frosted land of Arendelle with Elsa and Anna from “Frozen” and a daring voyage in “Moana” as she bravely faces off against the fiery Te Ka, with other Disney favorites including characters from “Beauty and the Beast,” “The Little Mermaid,” “Aladdin,” “Toy Story” and “Peter Pan” also coming to the ice to join in the search party and magical Disney celebration.
“This show is quite different from the average Disney on Ice show,” Farris said of the production. “It was specially put together with acro elements to kind of bring a brand new feeling into this show, and it is absolutely amazing.”
As to his hope for audiences who come to the Salt Lake run, Farris said he wants them to sit back and enjoy the magic.
“Just have a blast!” he said. “This show’s all about fun and that’s the way I’d describe it. In the story, Tinkerbell is being chased by the pirates and we have to get the magic through each story. It’s a fairly simple story, but it’s really, really fun and has a lot of comedy along with all the acro elements.”
Farris said guests can expect a hearty dose of all their favorite Disney characters with some solid audience interaction moving the story along.
When he’s not on the ice, Farris said he’s looking forward to his second visit to Salt Lake.
“Salt Lake’s a beautiful city,” he said. “I’ll probably go skiing at Park City again. That’s really what I remember most.”
Though life on the road can be difficult, there’s something special about the magic Disney can bring.
“It’s really exciting, really fun and tiring at times,” Farris said. “But it’s a very rewarding job at the same time. You get to entertain people and do what you love, and that’s the point of it, I think.”

If you go

DISNEY ON ICE PRESENTS MICKEY’S SEARCH PARTY
What: Favorite Disney characters from shows such as “Moana” and “Coco” hit the ice in this skating spectacular.
Where: Vivint Smart Home Arena, 301 S. Temple in Salt Lake City
When: Thursday-Sunday at 7 p.m., with additional performances Saturday and Sunday at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Cost: Tickets starting at $17 with select opening night tickets priced starting at $10.
Info: vivintarena.com/events/707, disneyonice.com
Mickey’s Search Party by the numbers
3-4: The number of loads of laundry per day to keep costumes in tip-top shape.
10-12: How many hours it takes to set up the production in each city.
12: The total number of projectors used in each production, with two high-powered media playback servers.
15: The number of trucks it takes to transport the production, with four buses to transport cast, crew and staff.
Under 30: The number of seconds for the fastest costume change in the show.
36: Height in feet of the tallest point on the set.
50+: Sound effects added live to the show.
100: Speaker enclosures with 42 channels on the sound console and 200,000 watts of power for the sound system.
Over 100: The number of artisans who worked on the show’s costumes, with 2-3 fittings required for each new costume.
173: The approximate number of costumes in the show, with thousands of yards of fabric used to create them, and hundreds of thousands of Swarovski crystals set by hand into them to add color and detail.
221: The total number of lighting fixtures, with 185 movable lights, 76 light tracking packs and 14 cameras used for light tracking packs.
689: The total number of gobos, or special lighting patterns used in the show, with 13 per fixture.
1,000: The weight, in pounds of the largest prop in the show.
6,720: Feet of network cable, or 1.2 miles, used to power the show’s effects, with 75 feet of projector power cable and a mile of audio cable.
12,000: The total weight of the entire set, in pounds.
31,000: Lumens per projector. For perspective, imagine an average classroom projector having 2,000 Lumens. It would take about 186 to offer the same amount of power to transport guests into the Disney stories being presented.

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Schneider-Farris Family In Cheyenne Edition Due to COVID-19 - April 15, 2020

Colorado Springs figure skating siblings off ice due to pandemic


The Schneider-Farris children – from left, Annabelle, Rebekah and Joel – together in front of Cutler Hall at Colorado College. All three are professional figure skaters. Courtesy of Jo Ann Schneider-Farris


Jo Ann Schneider-Farris and her husband Dan received word on March 12 that their three children — all professional figure skaters — would be coming home to live with them due to circumstances surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Things are a little crazy right now,” said Jo Ann, a figure skating coach and author, who has resided in the Broadmoor area for decades. “We’re trying to adjust like everyone else.”

Joel, 25, and Rebekah, 23, skate for Disney On Ice. The youngest sibling, Annabelle, 20, lives in New York City and teaches at The Ice Theater of New York while taking online classes at Pikes Peak Community College.

All three kids grew up training with The Broadmoor Skating Club and are all still members.

On the morning of March 12 the sports world began to shut down due to concerns over the pandemic. Joel was in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, with his Disney On Ice cast he was told that weekend’s shows were canceled, as well as the rest of the tour. “It was so unexpected,” Joel said. “I was thinking we’d be canceled for the weekend, but not the rest of the tour.”

Disney officials told Joel and the rest of the cast to go home. Several days later he was back in Colorado staying with his parents.

“I was on three different flights getting back here,” Joel said. “There were a lot of sick people around me. I was concerned about getting the virus, but I ended up being OK.”

Rebekah was in Phoenix with her Disney On Ice cast when she got word that the tour was canceled. She rented a car and headed back to Colorado to stay with her parents.

“The next week we were supposed to perform at The (Broadmoor) World Arena,” Rebekah said. “I was really looking forward to skating here. When I found out the tour was over I was crying. We all were crying.”

Rebekah and Joel’s Disney On Ice seasons were scheduled to end in May. They were laid off by Disney along with 5,000 company employees.

Rebekah already had a gig lined up to skate in South Africa this summer. That has also been canceled. Joel was scheduled to skate in Japan in June, but that has also been canceled.

“This whole thing is really strange,” Rebekah said. “We went from hearing (COVID19) was not going to affect us at all, to our lives being changed forever. It has layers to it. It’s surreal.”

Annabelle didn’t know it at the time, but she was living in the epicenter of the pandemic in her New York City apartment. When she got word that the Ice Center of New York was closing, as well as an art gallery where she was an intern, she rented a car, packed up her belongings and headed to Colorado.

“All the stores were closing, and the grocery stores were running out of food. The subways were empty, which was strange,” she said.

Annabelle plans to return to upstate New York next fall to begin classes at Binghamton University.

Jo Ann, knowing her kids would be coming back to Colorado, also had to figure out a way to care for 91-year-old father who resides alone in Larkspur. She and her husband decided to move to his home to care for him. Joel, Rebekah and Annabelle joined them.

“My dad has a big house with a lot of property, so we’re all doing well and settling in,” Jo Ann said. “We’re trying to make the best of the situation. We’re all so grateful we’re together.”

Danny Summers
Pikes Peak Newspapers Sports Reporter