KENYON, MINN.
Tom Ersland's family farm is always in his head. When his aged parents die, Ersland must decide what to do with the land he grew up on, just south of Kenyon. Rent? Sell? Move there and work the farm?
His situation is not unique, nor is it new. More than 100 years ago, Anton Chekhov wrote "The Cherry Orchard" about Russian aristocrats who lose their country estate. Chekhov examines how land becomes part of family identity. "Without the cherry orchard, my life makes no sense," cries the owner, Lyubov Ranevskaya.
Ersland, a high school speech teacher, recently played Lyubov's brother in a "Cherry Orchard" production brought to Kenyon by Twin Cities actors Luverne Seifert and Darcey Engen. This summer they are staging the play in historic homes in five Minnesota towns, recruiting local actors along the way.
The rolling tour -- underwritten by Minnesota's Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund -- brings to farm communities a classic play that resonates with the modern-day reality of land being bid up because of high commodity prices and aggressive agribusiness.
"We could have done this project in Minneapolis, but a big mission for us is to offer art to people who normally can't attend theater," Seifert said.
Good fit for Legacy funds
Seifert, a longtime actor with Theatre de la Jeune Lune, the Guthrie and Ten Thousand Things, grew up in the southern Minnesota community of Sleepy Eye, about 85 miles west of Kenyon. His uncle still owns the family farm.