Geronimo, Life on the Reservation, booking video
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Director- Steve Railsback Written by- Janelle Meraz Hooper
Tickets: (805) 495-2163
Please share with your friends in the Thousand Oaks, CA area.
My thanks, Janelle
A Kindle short from the writer of the one-man show Geronimo, Life on the Reservation
See the story on Amazon
To escape a greedy brother-in-law, Gregoria Marteen and her children are fleeing to America on a train after the death of her husband. A pastry chef, Gregoria’s first job in Texas is at Bettye Buford’s Bed & Table. It does not go well. Suitable for all ages.
…The conductor didn’t collect tickets until the train had left Mexico and had stopped in Laredo to pick up new passengers before it chugged its way across the Texas desert. The landscape was completely bare, and the passengers looked out across the hot, dry land without hope of seeing anything of interest through the windows of their stuffy railroad car. Not a tree. Not a bush. Not even a tarantula skittering across the desert floor.
“Tickets…tickets…tickets…,” the conductor droned as he moved down the train’s aisle. Gregoria watched him as he briefly stopped to talk to a group of cowboys who had just gotten aboard and were on their way to join a cattle drive. He politely refused when a cowboy offered him a swig of whiskey from a bottle he pulled out of a saddlebag. “There are no laws against drinking on a train as long as you’re a passenger, but rules prohibit my drinking with you,” he cheerfully explained.
The cowboys were in a good mood and looked forward to a long cattle drive on the Chisholm Trail up north toward Kansas with a big paycheck at the end. As the train rolled on, several cowboys settled in for a lengthy game of poker while a younger man softly strummed a guitar. The card players mostly ignored him now but later on in the middle of a long, boring cattle drive, they’d all come to appreciate their friend’s songs a lot more.
Gregoria held her breath when a banker in the middle of the car peppered the ticket-taker with questions about the likelihood of an Indian attack and she was relieved when the idea of seeing Indians excited the children more than frightened them. The eastern banker, a fiftyish man dressed in a three-piece suit that was much too warm for the trip, was beginning to hyperventilate. Unable to hide his nervousness, he kept up a list of questions that all started with “What if?” and ended with “What then?” The conductor tried to console him but some of his truthful answers made matters worse.
Finally, the cowboy with the bottle passed the whiskey up the aisle and told the man to take a drink. The banker gratefully took a big glug before he passed it back. When the banker noticed the soldiers on board and asked if they would protect them from robbers and Indians, the conductor had to honestly answer, “Probably not. There are only a few soldiers aboard the train and they are new recruits, unarmed, and untrained.”
Next, the banker wanted to know if there were armed guards in the boxcars to protect the bank’s money that was being transferred to Dallas. Patiently, the train employee admitted that “Company policy is to not put lives at risk to protect train shipments.”
The man’s whining was escalating and a soldier across the aisle from the panicky businessman became annoyed with the man’s cowardice and snorted underneath the cap he’d pulled down over his face, “Unless you see Geronimo and his band of Apaches,” the soldier said, “you’ll be fine. All of the other Indians are on the reservations.”
“And if I see Apaches? What then?” the banker queried.
“Then, you’ll be dead. No more problem,” the soldier answered matter-of-factly. Before he went back to sleep, he smiled at Gregoria and said out of earshot of the banker, “Don’t worry, ma’am. I’ve never heard of Geronimo chasing down a train. He seems to prefer stagecoaches…”
If you like this post, please share! Many thanks! Janelle
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Janelle Meraz Hooper is also the writer of the one-man show
Geronimo, Life on the Reservation
starring Rudy Ramos,
who is now working on the Yellowstone TV series.
Raised in Oklahoma, she has other Western books and stories
Available on Amazon.
My Turtle Trilogy
It was A Three-Turtle Summer- and Grace had to dump a man who her sister said was “meaner than a rattlesnake and dumber than adobe.” Women’s fiction.
As Brown As I Want, The Indianhead Diaries- “I don’t want to be dead, but what can I do? I’m just a little kid. If dad wants to kill me, he’ll kill me.” Suspense/Humor.
Custer & His Naked Ladies- Sometimes, Naked Ladies are just old women in capri pants, and Custer is just an ole yeller dog… Suspense/Humor/Romance.
All available on Amazon. Paperback & Kindle.
Click on each book for a free sample!
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Thanks for stopping by! Janelle
The author outside the Joel Mc Crea Ranch
just before the Geronimo, Life on the Reservation show.
Also:
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(A participant in the Worldreader, Books for all! program)
Review of Geronimo, Life on the Reservation
Radomir Vojtech Luza, theatre critic, has written an incisive and comprehensive review of the Rudy Ramos show, Geronimo, Life on the Reservation playing on Saturday nights in January 30th and February 13,20, & 27 at the Whitefire Theatre in Sherman Oaks,California.
I began researching this project in 2010 for Rudy Ramos, and have been honored to be a part of Rudy’s concept of the great Apache leader.
If you’re near Sherman Oaks, don’t miss it! Show starts at 8:00 PM! Tickets:
Please share this post!
Note: This is an old post. Since I wrote this, Rudy has taken his Geronimo show to many theatres, including The Joel & Frances McCrea Ranch in Thousand Oaks, CA and two shows during The Western legends Roundup and Film Festival.
Currently, he’s working on Kevin Costner’s Yellowstone that will premiere during Summer, 2018 on Paramount Cable.
2015
The Whitefire Theatre– Sheman Oaks, CA, every Sat. night from Jan. 3rd-Feb. 7th,
The High Chaparral Reunion, Casino del Sol, Tucson, AZ , March 21
Alburquerque, NM, March 28, 2015
Muskogee, OK, April 4th
Winnsboro, TX, April 11th & 12th
The Memphis Film Festival, June11-13
GERONIMO,
Life on the Reservation
Starring Rudy Ramos
Directed by Steve Railsback
Written by Janelle Meraz Hooper (Visit her website)
This is a story about the last 23 years of Geronimo’s life as a prisoner of war. It starts with his final surrender in 1886. After stops in Florida and Alabama prisons he was sent to his final stop at Ft. Sill Oklahoma where he spent the last 15 years of his life. It focuses on the resiliency, humor and genius of the great Apache warrior.
In this presentation, Geronimo cleverly evolves from a surrendered Indian leader into a celebrity and entrepreneur. Keenly aware of how to work the political system he joins the same church that Theodore Roosevelt belongs to and rides in his Inaugural Parade. Although he isn’t successful in getting everything he wants he certainly succeeds in making the best of his situation.
Geronimo was never beaten. He simply adapted to his present circumstances.
“To my knowledge no one in the history of American stage has ever played him or told his side of the story at this stage of his life. I am honored to play him and give him the voice he deserves… the voice he never had.” – Rudy Ramos
Tickets are now available through Brown Paper Tickets at www.brownpapertickets.com or call (800) 838-3006.
The show will play on Saturdays at 8:00 pm January 03, 10, 17, 24, 31 and February 07 at the Whitefire Theatre 13500 Ventura Boulevard Sherman Oaks, CA 91423 www.whitefiretheatre.com
Valet Parking is at the Boneyard Bistro 13539 Ventura Boulevard Sherman Oaks, CA 91423. It is 1/2 block west of the theatre.
Don’t miss this one-man show! Rudy does a wonderful job of portraying this multi-faced Native American. I thank Rudy from the bottom of my heart for the opportunity to work with him and Steve Railsback (Director) on this well-received performance! More information can be found on www.GeronimoLifeontheReservation.com/