Thursday, March 7, 2013

Mother Memorializes Marine Son in Dance

"A boy with a mess of brown hair leaps over a toy truck and metal bat, and for a moment, Colin Wolfe is alive.

For a moment, he is 7 years old again and spends his days playing baseball, comforting his little sister and sharing Sabbath dinner with his family. For a moment, there is no such thing as the Iraq war, and two Marines never showed up at his parents’ Manassas home early one morning to tell them that their 19-year-old son was gone.

Amy Wolfe knows these moments are fleeting, but they are why, despite the advice of those closest to her and the painful memories it would conjure, she has created an unusual tribute to her son: a ballet that captures the life of a young man who was a dancer before he was a Marine.

She describes working on the ballet, titled simply 'Colin,' as simultaneously 'cathartic' and 'extremely difficult.'

'For me, Colin is alive again,' she says. 'So when it’s all done and put to rest, he will die for me again.'

Across the nation, parents of more than 6,600 service members killed in Iraq and Afghanistan have found countless ways to honor their children—with benches, parks, poems, scholarships. But this weekend on a Manassas stage, an audience will see not just a production in Colin’s name, but his life story as choreographed by his mother.

'I don’t frankly know how she’s able to do it,' says Mark Wolfe, Colin’s father.

As executive director of the Manassas Ballet Theatre, the professional dance company where his wife is the artistic director, he has stood by her side through countless productions. But this one is different, he says. Early on, he advised his wife of 32 years against taking on such an emotional project, and he has since told her that he might not be able to watch it when it is performed [March 9 and 10] at the Hylton Performing Arts Center."

The Washington Post 03/06/2013