Arts & Humanities Month: Mount Holly Cemetery – “Tales of the Crypt” by Parkview Arts Magnet High School

The 17th Annual Tales of the Crypt takes place at historic Mount Holly Cemetery tonight from 5:30pm to 8:30pm.  As they have for the past sixteen years, students from Little Rock Parkview Arts & Science Magnet High School will portray the lives of few of the residents at the Mount Holly Cemetery.

Under the direction of Fred Boosey and Tamara Zinck, students have researched the life and times of the selected characters they are portraying and have written original scripts.  The actors are costumed in period clothes by Debi Manire. Among the fifteen grave sites which are stops along the way this year is David O. Dodd, boy martyr of the Confederacy.  He will be portrayed by a distant relative Walter Dodd, who is a senior at Parkview.

Mount Holly Cemetery is the final resting place of the famous, infamous and many ordinary Arkansans.  Eleven Arkansas governors, thirteen state Supreme Court Justices, four United States senators, twenty-one Little Rock mayors and two Pulitzer Prize winners are all residents of Mount Holly.  The land for the cemetery was deeded in February 1843 by Chester Ashley and Roswell Beebe.  Since 1915, the Mount Holly Cemetery Association has been the administrative organization for the cemetery.  In 1970, it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places, one of the first cemeteries to receive this designation.

Parkview Arts & Science Magnet High School opened in 1968. In 1987 it received magnet school designation focusing on arts and sciences.  Within the fine arts program, students select an area of emphasis in dance, drama, instrumental music, vocal music or visual arts.