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            "id": "12-1-A (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "0 0/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/12-1-A%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/12-1-A%20(play)/?format=api"
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            "title": "12-1-A (play)",
            "description": "A play by\n  \n   Wakako Yamauchi\n  \n  that was first produced in 1982. Set in the concentration camp in\n  \n   Poston\n  \n  , Arizona—the same camp the author was incarcerated in—from May 1942 to July 1943, the play follows several Japanese American families at Poston as their characters grapple with the\n  \n   loyalty questionnaire\n  \n  , military service, and possible\n  \n   resettlement\n  \n  . The title of the play refers to the camp address of the Tanaka family,\n  \n   block\n  \n  12, barracks 1, unit A. Yamauchi wrote the play while the Rockefeller Playwright in Residence at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles. It premiered on March 11, 1982, at East West Players in Los Angeles, the third of four plays in their \"Internment Camp Series\". Subsequent productions include Asian American Theater Co, San Francisco (1982); Kumu Kahua Theatre, Honolulu (1990); University of California, Los Angeles (1992); and California State University, Los Angeles (2012).",
            "url_title": "12-1-A (play)",
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                "Arts"
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            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
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        {
            "id": "The Ancestors' Box (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "1 1/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
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                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/The%20Ancestors'%20Box%20(play)/?format=api"
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            "title": "The Ancestors' Box (play)",
            "description": "Play for children by Christina Hamlett that takes place during and after World War II and explores the wartime expulsion and incarceration of Japanese Americans. The play centers on Japanese American teenager Amy Sasaki, who is sent to an unspecified American concentration camp with her family, and her best friend Lily Danvers, a white teenager who stays behind. The play's scenes take play just prior to the Sasakis leaving for camp from their home in Anaheim, California, in 1942, upon their return in 1945, and in 2000. The estimated length of a performance is 35 minutes.",
            "url_title": "The Ancestors' Box (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        {
            "id": "A Question of Loyalty/The Betrayed (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "2 2/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
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            "title": "A Question of Loyalty/The Betrayed (play)",
            "description": "Play authored by\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  playwright\n  \n   Hiroshi Kashiwagi\n  \n  set in\n  \n   Tule Lake\n  \n  and centered on the dilemmas brought on by the\n  \n   loyalty questionnaire\n  \n  . The main characters are Tak Fujimoto, a country boy loosely based on the playwright, and Grace Tamura, a sophisticated city girl from Seattle, who fall in love in the concentration camp. But they are divided by the loyalty questions and go their separate ways. The play's second act is set forty years later, when Grace, a widowed redress activist from Chicago, visits Tak, a divorced farmer in Fresno, prior to a camp reunion.",
            "url_title": "A Question of Loyalty/The Betrayed (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
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                "plays"
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                "Adult"
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                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
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        {
            "id": "Baseball Saved Us (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "3 3/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
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                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Baseball%20Saved%20Us%20(play)/?format=api"
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            "title": "Baseball Saved Us (play)",
            "description": "Musical play for children based on the popular children's book of the same name. Produced by Seattle's 5th Avenue Theatre as part of its Adventure Musical Theater Touring Company in 2003, the play went to schools throughout Washington state. Ken Mochizuki, who also authored the children's book,\n  \n\n    Baseball Saved Us\n   \n\n  , wrote the script for the play, and Bruce Monroe wrote the music and lyrics. The approximately forty-five minute play tells the story of one family's wartime incarceration and how building a baseball field in camp provided an escape for the imprisoned population.",
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        {
            "id": "Block 8 (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "4 4/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Block%208%20(play)/?format=api"
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            "title": "Block 8 (play)",
            "description": "Two character play set in\n  \n   Topaz\n  \n  by Matthew Ivan Bennett. A production of the Plan-B Theatre Company of Salt Lake City, Utah,\n  \n   Block 8\n  \n  premiered on February 20, 2009, at the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center's Studio Theatre. The play centers on Ken, a twenty-three year old\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  from San Francisco who had been a student at the University of California at Berkeley prior to being forcibly removed with his family and incarcerated at Topaz, and Ada, a Mormon woman from Salt Lake City with a son fighting the Pacific who becomes the librarian at Topaz. Initially wary of each other, the two form a surrogate mother/son relationship as Ken struggles with the decision on whether or not to enlist.",
            "url_title": "Block 8 (play)",
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        {
            "id": "Behind Enemy Lines (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "5 5/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
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            "title": "Behind Enemy Lines (play)",
            "description": "Play by Rosanna Yamagiwa Alfaro that tells the story of the Toda family and the travails brought on by their expulsion and incarceration in \"\n  \n   assembly center\n  \n  \" horse stalls and concentration camp barracks. The\n  \n   loyalty questionnaire\n  \n  splits the family, with one son joining the\n  \n   442nd Regimental Combat Team\n  \n  and another ending up a\n  \n   renunciant\n  \n  . The play was had its first reading in 1980 and was produced by the Peoples Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1981 and the Pan Asian Repertory Theatre in New York in March of 1982 as part a series of three plays about the Japanese American incarceration.\n  \n\n    [1]",
            "url_title": "Behind Enemy Lines (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
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        {
            "id": "Bronzeville (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "6 6/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            },
            "title": "Bronzeville (play)",
            "description": "Play by Tim Toyama and Aaron Woolfolk about an African American family moving into\n  \n   Bronzeville\n  \n  —the abandoned Little Tokyo in Los Angeles—during World War II and encountering a Japanese American in hiding.",
            "url_title": "Bronzeville (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
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        {
            "id": "Christmas in Camp (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "7 7/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Christmas%20in%20Camp%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Christmas%20in%20Camp%20(play)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Christmas in Camp (play)",
            "description": "Musical play set in a Japanese American concentration camp at Christmastime.\n  \n   Christmas in Camp\n  \n  , by playwright Dom Magwili, was the second play in East West Players' 1981–82 season—entitled \"Kidoairaku\"—in which all four plays centered on the Japanese American incarceration story. It premiered December 10, 1981. The central character is Hannah Sasaki, a disabled teenage girl in camp, whose letters to an older sister who had escaped camp through \"\n  \n   voluntary evacuation\n  \n  \" propel the story. Hannah ends up organizing a Christmas show to improve morale in the camp. The show, consisting of popular Christmas songs, is then performed for both the camp and theater audiences.",
            "url_title": "Christmas in Camp (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        },
        {
            "id": "Citizen 13559 (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "8 8/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Citizen%2013559%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Citizen%2013559%20(play)/?format=api"
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            "title": "Citizen 13559 (play)",
            "description": "Play for children by Naomi Iizuka, based on the children's book\n  \n   The Journal of Ben Uchida: Citizen 13559, Mirror Lake Internment Camp\n  \n  by Barry Denenberg. The story focuses on the wartime experiences of twelve-year-old Ben Uchida, whose family is incarcerated at the fictional \"Mirror Lake\" camp in Wisconsin. After workshop productions at the Kennedy Center and the Mark Taper Forum's Asian Theatre Workshop, the hour-long play premiered in March 2006 as part of the Kennedy Center Family Theater's first season.",
            "url_title": "Citizen 13559 (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
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                "Grades 3-5",
                "Grades 7-8"
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        {
            "id": "Conjunto (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "9 9/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Conjunto%20(play)/?format=api",
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            },
            "title": "Conjunto (play)",
            "description": "Play by Oliver Mayer that explores interactions between Japanese, Mexican, and Filipino American farmers and farm workers in California during the World War II years. Min Yamada, a reluctant\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  farmer in Burbank who dreams of city life, is confronted with the prospect of losing his farm when he and all other West Coast Japanese Americans are forcibly removed to inland concentration camps. He decides to sell the farm to his trusted foreman and friend, Genevevo, a Mexican American. He also arranges for his\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  wife, Shoko, to remain behind, disguised as a Mexican laborer. Returning from incarceration three years later, he finds that much has changed.",
            "url_title": "Conjunto (play)",
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            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        {
            "id": "Dear Miss Breed (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "10 10/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
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            "title": "Dear Miss Breed (play)",
            "description": "Play about a San Diego librarian who corresponded with incarcerated Japanese American children during World War II. Playwright Joanne Oppenheim adapted\n  \n   Dear Miss Breed\n  \n  from her children's book\n  \n\n    Dear Miss Breed: True Stories of the Japanese American Incarceration During World War II and a Librarian Who Made a Difference\n   \n\n  .",
            "url_title": "Dear Miss Breed (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 3-5",
                "Grades 7-8",
                "Grades 9-12"
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            "rg_theme": [
                "Communication – verbal and nonverbal",
                "Evils of racism",
                "Growing up – pain or pleasure"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "No availability"
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        {
            "id": "Dust Storm (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "11 11/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Dust%20Storm%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Dust%20Storm%20(play)/?format=api"
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            "title": "Dust Storm (play)",
            "description": "One-person play by Rick Foster inspired by the beating of\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  artist\n  \n   Chiura Obata\n  \n  at\n  \n   Topaz\n  \n  in 1943. Originally produced for Duende, a nonprofit that develops plays about history for schools,\n  \n   Dust Storm\n  \n  was most recently produced in 2013 by Colorado's Theatre Esprit Asia (TEA).",
            "url_title": "Dust Storm (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        {
            "id": "E.O. 9066 (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "12 12/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/E.O.%209066%20(play)/?format=api",
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            "title": "E.O. 9066 (play)",
            "description": "Play that tells the story of one family's wartime incarceration through puppets made out of ordinary objects. Performed by the San Francisco Bay area based \"object theatre company\" Lunatique Fantastique, which was founded by Liebe Wetzel,\n  \n   E.O. 9066\n  \n  tells its story nearly silently, with objects such a tea set, table cloth, and old suitcase brought to life by company members, dubbed \"manipulators.\" Debuting in 2003, the show was performed at several venues in the Bay Area over the next few years as well as in Utah in 2005 to commemorate the 60th anniversary of\n  \n   Topaz\n  \n  , where the play is set.\n  \n\n    [1]",
            "url_title": "E.O. 9066 (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-ticket"
        },
        {
            "id": "The Gate of Heaven (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "13 13/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/The%20Gate%20of%20Heaven%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/The%20Gate%20of%20Heaven%20(play)/?format=api"
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            "title": "The Gate of Heaven (play)",
            "description": "Play by\n  \n   Lane Nishikawa\n  \n  and Victor Talmadge about the lifelong friendship between a\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  who helped liberate a Nazi death camp as a member of the\n  \n   522nd Field Artillery Battalion\n  \n  and a Holocaust survivor. The main characters, Kiyoshi \"Sam\" Yamamoto and Leon Ehrlich, are based on the lives of the playwrights' fathers. The play begins in April 1945 and follows the two men over the course of their lives. It was first produced at the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego on March 5, 1996. Nishikawa adapted the play into a short dramatic film titled\n  \n\n    When We Were Warriors, Part I\n   \n\n  , which he directed and starred in alongside Talmadge.",
            "url_title": "The Gate of Heaven (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        },
        {
            "id": "Gila River (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "14 14/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Gila%20River%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Gila%20River%20(play)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Gila River (play)",
            "description": "Play by Lane Nishikawa, set in the\n  \n   Gila River\n  \n  , Arizona, concentration camp, that tells the story of the Wakabayashi family. Told in a flashback after\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  daughter Mitsue revisits the site in 1972, the play incorporates the arrest and internment of the\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  patriarch, the military service (in the\n  \n   Military Intelligence Service\n  \n  ) of a baseball loving son, and relationships with Native Americans on whose land the camp had been built. The play premiered in 1999 at the Gila River Arts and Crafts Center and has been subsequently performed at the World Theater at California State University at Monterey Bay and the Japan America Theatre in Los Angeles.",
            "url_title": "Gila River (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        },
        {
            "id": "Gold Watch (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "15 15/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Gold%20Watch%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Gold%20Watch%20(play)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Gold Watch (play)",
            "description": "A 1972 play by\n  \n   Momoko Iko\n  \n  that was one of the first to take up the wartime mass removal of Japanese Americans from the West Coast.",
            "url_title": "Gold Watch (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        },
        {
            "id": "Harry Kelly (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "16 16/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Harry%20Kelly%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Harry%20Kelly%20(play)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Harry Kelly (play)",
            "description": "Two-act play by Harold Heifetz set during World War II that dramatizes the romance between Hanako, a young Japanese American outcast woman in a concentration camp who has just lost her parents, and Anyay, a Native American man living in the neighboring \"Mojave Indian Reservation.\" As the play begins, the stage is literally divided down the middle by a barbed wire fence separating the two worlds. The play juxtaposes the romance with the conflicts over the institution of the\n  \n   loyalty questionnaire\n  \n  .\n  \n   Harry Kelly\n  \n  debuted at East West Players (EWP) in Los Angeles on April 4, 1974, in a production directed by\n  \n   Mako\n  \n  . With the support of the California Arts Council, EWP toured the play to various community institutions in California in 1976–77.\n  \n\n    [1]",
            "url_title": "Harry Kelly (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-ticket"
        },
        {
            "id": "Heart Mountain (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "17 17/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Heart%20Mountain%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Heart%20Mountain%20(play)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Heart Mountain (play)",
            "description": "Play first produced in 2012 that tells the story of a Japanese American family from Venice, California, and their wartime removal and incarceration at\n  \n   Heart Mountain\n  \n  . The play was conceived and commissioned by Perviz Sawoski, the chair of the Theater Arts Department at Santa Monica City College in Southern California and written by G. Bruce Smith, the school's public information officer and a playwright of over twenty plays. The dramatic play incorporates archival images and dance inspired by Butoh. First produced at the college in November 2012, the play was also selected to be performed at the Kenney Center American College Theater Festival, Region VIII at the Los Angeles Theater Center in February 2013.",
            "url_title": "Heart Mountain (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
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            "rg_rgmediatype": [
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        {
            "id": "The Heart No Longer Silent (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "18 18/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/The%20Heart%20No%20Longer%20Silent%20(play)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/The%20Heart%20No%20Longer%20Silent%20(play)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "The Heart No Longer Silent (play)",
            "description": "Storytelling performance with digital imagery by storyteller Megumi and artist Elaine Sayoko Yoneoka. Funded by the\n  \n   California Civil Liberties Public Education Program\n  \n  ,\n  \n   The Heart No Longer Silent: Stories with Images from the Japanese American Internment of World War II\n  \n  was performed several times in Central and Northern California in 2002.",
            "url_title": "The Heart No Longer Silent (play)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "plays"
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                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
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            "rg_theme": [
                "Quest for discovery",
                "Power of the past",
                "Evils of racism",
                "Will to survive"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "No availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        },
        {
            "id": "Hold These Truths (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "19 19/{'value': 50, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            "description": "Theatrical adaptation of the\n  \n   best selling novel\n  \n  by Jamie Ford, first produced by the Book-It Repertory Theatre in Seattle in 2012. The play proved very popular with audiences and was extended twice.",
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            "description": "Play by Ken Narasaki centering on a dying eighty-year old\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  man and his recollections of the World War II years.",
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            "description": "Storytelling performance by Megumi in which she tells stories of the World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans from the perspective of various characters. Based on interviews with Japanese American former inmates, she has been performing\n  \n   Japanese American Detention Camps\n  \n  since 1997.",
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