Monday, February 23, 2015

Make-A-Wish

We were recently able to partner with Tulsa Ballet and the Make-A-Wish Foundation to help make a little girl's dream of becoming a ballerina a reality.
Here is Tulsa Worlds article about this special opportunity:


"Mahlia Venegas decided she wanted to be a ballerina even though, as of Sunday afternoon, she had never seen one in person.

But that did not deter the Make-A-Wish Foundation and Tulsa Ballet from making Mahlia’s dream come true.
Four-year-old Mahlia was diagnosed more than a year ago with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), a cancer of the bone marrow. Although her leukemia is now in remission, her family wanted to make sure Mahlia had one special wish come true.
“We’re always dancing around the house, and we had even talked about enrolling her in dance classes before she got sick,” her mother, Samantha Venegas, said. “I said to her, ‘Why don’t we do something where you get to dance?’
“And that’s when she said, ‘I want to be a ballerina.’ She’s been practicing her twirls ever since.”
The Make-A-Wish Foundation annually receives hundreds of requests for special events to brighten the lives of seriously and terminally ill children. Often these requests are for family vacations, ocean cruises, or the chance to meet a favorite celebrity or sports figure.
“But this was the first time we have ever had a request to be a ballerina,” said Amy Ramsey, a Wish Coordinator for the Oklahoma Make-A-Wish Foundation. “Fortunately, one of our staff members is friends with people at Tulsa Ballet and got in touch with them early on.
“Tulsa Ballet just took the idea and ran with it,” Ramsey said. “They came up with a ton of ideas for things to do.”
Most of those ideas centered around the fact that Tulsa Ballet was presenting its final performance of “The Sleeping Beauty” on Sunday at the Tulsa PAC.
“When the Make-A-Wish people came to us with this idea, everyone at the ballet was so excited about it,” said Kara Pryzbyl, marketing director for Tulsa Ballet. “Our thought was, whatever we can do, we will.”
The Make-A-Wish Foundation made arrangements for the entire family to come from Caddo to Tulsa on Friday. They stayed at the Hyatt Regency Hotel and spent Saturday visiting the Oklahoma Aquarium and playing the games at Andy B’s bowling and entertainment center.
On Sunday, Mahlia, her mother and her grandmother Anna Wong came to the Tulsa PAC with representatives of the Make-A-Wish Foundation for Mahlia’s day as a ballerina.
It began with a brief tour backstage, where Mahlia got her first look at the brightly colored costumes the ballet uses in “The Sleeping Beauty.”
She then had a brief dance class with Lexie Sweeney, a teacher at the Tulsa Ballet Center for Dance Education. It took a little coaxing to get Mahlia to attempt some basic steps, but after a few run-throughs of “Let It Go,” Sweeney had Mahlia following her lead.
When two of the com pany’s pre-professional students, TyLeigh Baughman and Sylvia Zhu, joined in, Mahlia’s own inner dancer came to the fore — so much so that the Tulsa Ballet dancers, watching from the wings, burst into applause.
“Now you’re a real ballerina,” Sweeney said.
Mahlia’s illness “just came out of the blue,” Venegas said.
“She went from being this very healthy, active little girl to having these odd fevers,” she said. “Nothing else seemed out of the ordinary, so the doctors thought it was something viral.”
Then, in September 2013, Mahlia woke up with an extremely high fever and nosebleed. Venegas said the doctors again thought the problem was not serious and suggested the family take Mahlia home.
“But I said, no, I wanted them to do some blood work on her because I knew something wasn’t right,” she said.
Tests revealed that Mahlia’s hemoglobin level — the protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen to the body — was 4.4. The average level for someone Mahlia’s age is 12.5.
“If we had taken her home that night,” Venegas said, “we probably wouldn’t have her here today.”
Mahlia has been undergoing treatment, and “she’s pretty much bounced through everything,” her mother said. “They’d tell us the medicine would make her sick, but the next day she’d be running down the halls, riding her bike, taking care of her little brothers.”
If Mahlia’s leukemia remains in remission until March 2016, doctors will consider her cancer-free. But until then, Venegas said, the family remains vigilant, looking for any signs that the cancer has returned.
“That’s why today is such an amazing day,” she said, watching her daughter get her face done up in stage makeup and her hair coiled into a bun by Tulsa Ballet costume assistant Madison Rice. “She’s been through a lot and deserves a special day. And this all has been so awesome.”
While Rice was working on Mahlia’s makeup and hair, two Tulsa Ballet dancers stopped by to share some personal gifts. Erin Pritchard baked cupcakes that she decorated to look like tutus. Maine Kawashima presented Mahlia with a pair of toe shoes that she had worn on stage, along with a handmade card.
Black and Pink Dancewear donated a ballerina dress that resembled that worn by Aurora in “The Sleeping Beauty.”
As for the ballet itself, “She really enjoyed it,” her mother said. “I think her favorite part was when the ballerina fell asleep.”
It seems that Mahlia decided to do something similar herself for the ballet’s second act.
That was probably why she was not interested in the last event of her day at the ballet: presenting dancers with flowers after the show.
But she did agree to pose among the Tulsa Ballet dancers for one final photograph.
And right as the picture was about to be taken, Mahlia treated those watching to her widest, happiest smile."
By JAMES D. WATTS JR. World Scene Writer
Tulsa World

Thank you Make-A-Wish and Tulsa Ballet for including us in the wonderful experience.

 

  • MAKE A WISH
Picture Credit MIKE SIMONS/Tulsa World

 Tulsa Ballet
Make-A-Wish Foundation

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