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A Bridge School musical

Dec 26, 2024 | Photos of the Week

BRIDGE SCHOOL SIXTH-GRADER Amelie McCue, right, negotiates with Gwendelyn, a magical animal, in the Middlebury school’s student-written musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” which was staged late last week. Independent photo/Steve James
THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James
THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James

THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James
THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James
THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James

THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James
THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James
THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James

THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James
THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James
THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James

THIS YEAR’S BRIDGE School musical, “Hijinks at High Noon,” boasted a blend of western tropes and magic. Written by a dozen students in the Bridge School’s Oldest Language Art Class, it featured bandits who rob a bank and are tracked down by townsfolk and a magical hoofed animal. It played to family and friends this past Thursday. Independent photo/Steve James

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