The little girl laughs and claps with delight at the dinosaur puppet’s playful banter. Now in her third month at the Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, she sits in her wheelchair, legs covered with a weighted blanket. She’s had anything but a normal childhood. But for this brief moment, that’s what she is: not a patient. Just a child.
A child and her caretaker watch with delight at Uncle Ty-Rone’s ventriloquism performance. (Photo credit: Eva Russo, Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU)
The moment is made possible by VCUarts Theatre professor and graduate program director Aaron Anderson, Ph.D., who also holds positions in the School of Medicine and the School of Business. Anderson’s program brings a theater and performances to the Children’s Hospital at VCU each week.
Kids can stay in the hospital for anywhere from one night or multiple weeks to months, depending on their medical needs. This performance space brings entertainment, fun and normalcy to kids of all ages.
“I’ve never seen a mission more simple,” he said. “A child in the hospital is feeling a lot of emotions. They’re afraid, uncomfortable or bored. All they want is some normalcy. Every week, this project delivers more than that. It creates magic.”
The project started as a simple question when Anderson was helping to design the hospital’s Pavilion Building with longtime friend and colleague P. Muzi Branch, former Director of Arts in Healthcare for the VCU Health System. During a planning session, Branch turned to Anderson and simply asked, “What do you think about making a theater for the children?”
With that, the vision was set. In the summer of 2022, Anderson and Branch met with architects to design and create the physical space. While that work was underway, Anderson also worked with graduate students to develop the programming to fill the schedule, beginning in fall 2023.