Teacher will attend documentary encore
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Rafe Esquith spent years developing a rapport with inner-city
students, devoting his career to convincing them the public school
system isn’t broken.
Esquith -- the Los Angeles teacher whose no-nonsense style is
captured in an hourlong documentary entitled “The Hobart
Shakespeareans” -- will be on hand to share his insights with the
audience tonight when the film is shown at the Orange County Museum
of Art.
The film begins at 8:30 p.m. on an outdoor screen as part of the
museum’s free Cinema Orange series, which is co-sponsored by the
Newport Beach Film Festival.
This is the third of seven films in the summer-long series, which
presents encore presentations of films shown at this spring’s
festival. “The Hobart Shakespeareans” won the award for an
outstanding achievement in a documentary.
“It stood out as one of the strongest documentaries,” said Leslie
Feibleman, a Newport Beach Film Festival outreach coordinator who
handles the Cinema Orange series. “The story is moving, especially as
a parent.”
This film follows Esquith, 51, and his fifth grade students at
Hobart Boulevard Elementary School in their quest to study and stage
Shakespeare’s “Hamlet.”
When Esquith entered the school, his project seemed unlikely to be
executed. Most students found literature uninspiring, and the school
district’s resources were scarce.
So Esquith took matters into his own hands.
“I never ask for permission from administrators,” Esquith said. “I
ask forgiveness. I’m a grown man. I know what my class needs.”
His solution: structured activities.
On top of teaching them advanced literature, Esquith took students
through an economic exercise in which they were charged rent for desk
space and had to pay him in classroom currency.
Students applied for jobs -- banker, clerk, police officer -- and
received a monthly paycheck. They could also collect money by earning
good grades.
Esquith said the method taught students to make prudent financial
choices, a habit that will serve them well in their adult lives.
In each of Esquith’s classes, a Shakespearean play is the
culminating project. Students arrive at class at 6:30 a.m. and don’t
leave until 5 p.m., sometimes making trips to school on the weekend.
“When they get to school, I’ve been there for an hour,” Esquith
said. “Kids see me walking through their neighborhood. I don’t have
to tell them to work hard -- they see it.”
Esquith shared this philosophy in a 2003 book, “There Are No
Shortcuts.”
Outsiders have noticed his work as well.
He was named teacher of the year in 1992 by the Walt Disney
Company.
Actor Ian McKellen is an unofficial sponsor of the class. Other
private donors have helped bankroll Esquith, who began by purchasing
supplies with money out of his own pocket.
The class also caught the attention of Hollywood director Mel
Stuart, who shadowed Esquith and his students for one school year to
make the film.
Stuart attended the initial Newport Beach Film Festival screening.
Esquith is scheduled to address the audience at the free event
tonight.
“Whenever possible, if there is a director or someone involved in
the making of the film, we want them to come,” said Karen Moss,
director of education and public programs at Orange County Museum of
Art. “We are lucky to have Rafe in attendance.”
Esquith said he is honored by the attention, though he credits
much of his success to “luck.”
“I’m a regular teacher, but I learn from mistakes and I work
hard,” he said. “I hope that inspires people.”
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