The “pieces” on a giant chess board were live actors dressed as
Vikings, fairies, wizards, unicorns, Goths, Grim Reapers and bat-like
gargoyles.
Controlling the action were a pair of pint-sized chess players, Fred Marvel, 9 and Raahul Shah, 10.
After the boys made their moves on a normal-size chess board, they shifted the living proxies.
The
human chess pieces taunted their opponents as they knocked them out of
the game. “I think you’ll make a lovely slave,” said Shah’s queen,
checking Marvel’s knight.
It was all part “Lords of the Board,” a
performance sponsored by Sonoma County Arts Council, Chess for Kids and
8-TrackMinds Productions.
Onlookers said the live chess pieces
added a new dimension to the game. “It makes chess exciting,” said Jim
Ryan, a visitor to Santa Rosa from Dublin, Ireland. “It’s the first
time I’ve seen this anywhere.”
Marvel pushed Shah to the limit,
but lost in the end. He had fun directing his live chess pieces, he
said. “It was kind of crazy,” said Marvel, who attends Binkley
Elementary School in Santa Rosa.
“It was challenging,” said Shah, who goes to Strawberry School in Santa Rosa.
He learned a lesson from Sunday’s match, Shah said. “Even though you might be losing, you can find a way to win,” he said.
The
human chess event will be repeated from noon to 4 p.m. Sept. 20 at
Healdsburg Plaza and Sept. 27 at Cotati’s downtown square. It is free
to the public.
Chess for Kids also puts on a six-week
after-school chess education program in Santa Rosa’s elementary
schools. More than 50 kids took part in the first all-district chess
tournament in January. More information about the nonprofit program is
available at www.chessclubforkids.com.