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On stage, a lesson in civil rights

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Reichert said she prepared for the role by reading about Parks and listening to her voice, but she ultimately looked to her grandfather for vocal inspiration.

“Instead of using her Alabama accent, I used my grandfather’s Chattanooga accent,” said Reichert, who noted that it is slightly faster than how Parks spoke. “His accent speaks to me. It’s what I hear in my heart. It’s what I want to say out loud.”

Reichert added that it’s important for students to remember how vital the Rosa Parks story is to the history of civil rights.

“[Children] are all very aware of Martin Luther King and his legacy,” she said. “It’s nice for them to see that women were involved. That she was educated.”

“Walk On” currently is in the middle of a six-week national tour that began in Texas and will end on the East Coast.

The play was included in the Raue Center for the Arts’ Mission Imagination series, an educational outreach program designed to offer arts education to McHenry County students. The next performances will be “Martha Speaks” on Feb. 21 and “The Velveteen Rabbit” on March 15.

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