Festival 56 host families change lives

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All this made my summer stays memorable and enjoyable, but what didn’t hit me until recently, is the long-term impact these families are having. They’re not just being generous; they’re teaching generosity ... by example. For the most part, they’re housing cast/crew members in their late teens and early-20s, an impressionable time in their lives. Then again, I’m in my late 20s, and I know for sure that these families are affecting me in a permanent way.

I remember when I left after my first summer. I drove to Minnesota, and off and on during the nine-hour drive, I caught myself thinking about Gary and Rita Hanna – and the love between them. In every room of their home, it was almost palpable. Every word they said to each other was filled with it, and every action each of them made seemed to take into account how it would affect the other. No selfishness. They were a true team — a partnership — not to mention best friends who couldn’t get enough of one another. I was surrounded by that every day, and before I left, I made sure they knew I not only noticed their love, selflessness and generosity, but that it consciously made me want to have that kind of marriage one day. I want to be like them.

I’ve never seen it, but I’m sure Gary and Rita (and other host families) have their bad days ... and not just when the Bears lose. But it’s not about being perfect. Not at all. It’s simply about the willingness of these people to actively support their community, to generously invite strangers into their homes, and ultimately, for two months, invite them to be part of their families (and in the luckiest of cases, like mine, to act as life-long friends and mentors).

I hope with all my heart that the theatre and the memories we help to create for these families at least starts to repay the debt we owe them.

Drew Hampton

Arlington, Texas

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