Local theater company seeks to curb child sexual abuse
The thespians at Open Door Theatre act out examples of sexual abuse and coping mechanisms at local elementary schools, giving kids the opportunity and the vocabulary to ask for help.
Open Door Theatre
Open Door Theatre
A quartet of professional actors performs a play that depicts a girl trying to fend off sexual advances by her mother’s boyfriend. Afterward, a fourth-grader approaches one of the actresses and begins to cry. “What if you’re scared?” she asks. The red-haired actress reassures the girl and escorts her to the school counselor. A few minutes later, the counselor emerges with tears in her eyes, her arm around the girl.
It’s just another day for Dorothy Pierce, team leader with Open Door Theatre, one of the few professional theater troupes on the West Coast with a mission to stop and prevent child sexual abuse. Part actor, part guardian angel, the thespians perform plays at elementary schools around the county. Stop it Now is geared for the primary grades, and Talk about Stuff, for grades four to six.
The plays teach children three Safety Rules, including, “Keep telling until you get the help you need,” and during some scenes the students help coach the characters. Meanwhile, the actors scan the audience for signs of distress. Afterward the cast hangs out, chatting and high-fiving the kids — in a period primarily designed for the students to disclose any abuse they are suffering.
Open Door Theatre’s offices reside in a small yellow house, with slate blue trim, belonging to the Arlington School District. Its charming exterior belies the ugly secrets stored within on disclosure reports.
Some suggest the plays struck close to home — a boy with fingers in his ears, a first-grader becoming physically ill, a girl hiding her head. A young boy, sucking his thumb and pulling it in and out of his mouth rapidly. A fourth-grader jamming her hands down her pants. The plaintive voices of children leap off the pages, describing ongoing abuse, the fear of a jailed offender who is back in the family circle, or an innocence lost too soon.
It turns out that, after most performances of the plays, at least one student discloses abuse for the first time — often to the actors themselves, who are trained by law enforcement and child advocates. “This is some of the hardest work you can do as an actor, but the most rewarding," said Brian Giannini-Upton, the troupe’s former artistic director.
Since its 1983 founding, ODT has served more than 300,000 kids, both locally and on American military bases in South Korea and Panama. Managing Director Wendy McClure estimates that 1 percent of the audiences disclose sexual abuse. That means 3,000 child victims of sexual abuse have been helped by ODT — in addition to the numerous students who report bullying.
But ODT’s budget has been steadily decreasing, from an all-time high of $132,000 to $45,000 this fiscal year. That means reaching fewer students — about 2,200 this year, half of those it reached two years ago. That’s troubling, especially because the risk of child abuse increases during an economic downturn. “The actors want to do more shows, but they can only do as many as they get the funding to do,” McClure said.
“As a special assault prosecutor, I know the importance of eliminating the silence and shame often associated with sexual abuse of children,” Snohomish Deputy Prosecutor Adam Cornell wrote in an email. “Open Door Theatre provides a light to children and families on a dark experience, by re-educating children in a non-threatening way that it’s not okay to be harmed sexually and it’s okay to talk about it with people who care.”
Sparked by the leadership of victim advocate, Bill France, and former Snohomish Prosecuting Attorney, Seth Dawson, the early 1980s, Open Door Theatre grew out of a group of prosecutors, child advocates, and educators. Their goal was to create a prevention program that would encourage authorities to intervene more quickly.
At that time abuse was treated as a family problem and the stories of victims were often ignored or believed to be lies. The newborn organization licensed a play on the subject being performed in Minnesota. In 1993, local playwright and former chair of the Cornish Theater Department, R. N. Sandberg, penned a new version.
France and Dawson also revolutionized Washington's legal framework around child sexual abuse investigation and prosecution, making the state a leader in progressive laws. “We were young, radical and pissed off,” recalled France, a silver-haired man who speaks with quiet determination.
After the 1986 beating death of 3-year-old Eli Creekmore by his father, Dawson led the fight for state laws that would make death by child abuse equivalent to first degree murder, and that would require and fund child sexual abuse prevention programs in the schools.
There was certainly push-back. When France testified, several of the lawmakers he faced claimed, "‘You’re teaching kids to report on their parents. It’s like Communism.’”
Still, the pair wasn't deterred. In one case, France marched into a police chief’s office to demand he question a sexual child abuse suspect, a prominent businessman. “The things we tried to do hadn’t been done before,” France said. “You don’t counteract that by being polite. You have to be confrontational.”
Their efforts paid off. “By the early 1990s, the Prosecutors Office was able to document that the average age of the reporting victims in child abuse cases fell from about 12 years to nine and concurrently, there was a marked increase in the number of sexual touching charges, as opposed to crimes involving penetration,” said Dawson. “Unfortunately, kids need to be taught the skills, because abusers are still out there.”
In fact, one in four girls and one in six boys will be victims of sexual abuse during their childhood. In Snohomish County alone, 35,000 children are in potential need of intervention and treatment. These numbers come courtesy of the website of Dawson Place Child Advocacy Center, a revolutionary center established by Dawson and France in 2006.
It is the only child advocacy center statewide to house law enforcement, prosecutors, medical and social services personnel, victim/witness advocates, and counselors under one roof for sexual abuse investigations, according to Snohomish Prosecutor Mark Roe. It was also the first of 12 in Washington to be nationally accredited.
Last week Dawson was in Olympia, fighting to save their two-year $1.2 million budget, which Gov. Chris Gregoire has proposed the state eliminate.
Meanwhile, the importance of addressing child sexual abuse has once again come to the fore of national attention. The arrest of former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky has been splashed in the headlines; his former boss, Coach Joe Paterno, was fired in November for failing to contact authorities after a graduate assistant reported seeing Sandusky rape a boy in the school showers. Syracuse University also fired its long-time assistant basketball coach, Bernie Fine, in November after evidence surfaced that he sexually abused three boys.
France compared these recent events to the international child abuse scandal rocking the Catholic Church. “The leaders are almost worshiped,” France said. “There is a code of silence. Paterno is the winningest coach in church history and that church is the United States.”
Sandusky’s justification to television journalist Bob Costas, describing the alleged shower attack as “horseplay” and his halting reply when asked if he was sexually attracted to children, had a familiar ring to France, who counseled offenders for a time. “I’ve been hearing that for 30 years. It sounds like most of the interviews with the guys who have been caught.” The accused, “has to create a story you can make distorted sense of,” said France. “It’s all an elaborate lie.”
Like what you just read? Support high quality local journalism. Become a member of Crosscut today!











Twitter
Facebook
RSS Feeds
Comments:
Posted Thu, Dec 8, 7:48 a.m. Inappropriate
this has nothing whatsoever to do with theater but with the american
forever witch hunt.
Posted Thu, Dec 8, 11:46 p.m. Inappropriate
The one and only goal of Open Door Theatre is to teach children 3 safety rules to protect themselves from bullies and sexual predators. A by-product of this mission is that children will sometimes disclose abuse on their own. Children are neither asked nor encouraged to do so. The company is called Open Door because it opens the door to discuss such sensitive topics like this at home. Educating both adults and children is the only way we, as a society, can put an end to such atrocities.
Posted Fri, Dec 9, 7:52 p.m. Inappropriate
I'm a former cast member of Open Door Theatre and was so happy to see your article! The work this group does is amazing. Many children in abusive situations have found help and healing through the important work of this troupe. ODT also helps bring sexual abuse of children out into the open, which, as Tadman above states, is the only way we can put an end to abuse of children and remove the stigma and shame that accompanies this conversation in our society. Thank you for writing this article!
Posted Mon, Dec 12, 10:29 a.m. Inappropriate
Open Door Theatre is amazing. They teach children ownership of their bodies, empower them, help them learn appropriate boundaries and help them understand that no one is allowed to ask them to hold on to a secret that hurts them. Children are so smart and perceptive - they know what a bad secret feels like - they need to know that they can talk about things that hurt or bother them. They need to know that they are allowed to say they don't want to be touched. It's about safety, respect...
It's about the kids. It's about helping THEM to feel better - not a witch hunt at all. Those people can rot for all I care - it's the KIDS who get help.
Posted Mon, Dec 12, 10:30 a.m. Inappropriate
Mikerol - you silly goose. Yes, it's a witch hunt. The thousands upon thousands of raped boys (and girls) by Catholic clergy. The millions of kids molested by troop leaders, gross uncles, step-fathers (biological fathers), the physical abuse of children my husband sees every year as a teacher, the date rapes, the men who say the children seduce *them*, the Jerry Sanduskys. It's all fabricated. You're so right.
(Actually, that kind of attitude makes me think probably you are criminal.)
Login or register to add your voice to the conversation.