As of: March 16, 2024, 8:02 a.m
By: Andrea Gräpel
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Compared to 375 years ago, the slate was already modern, but ink and paper were still rare even in the 1950s.
And today - neither one nor the other is actually necessary.
© illustrated book/Wartberg/Fruhstorfer
Innings School is celebrating its 375th anniversary next year as one of the oldest in the district.
Inning
– “Something has been found,” announced Jutta Göbber mysteriously at the spring meeting of the Inningen clubs on Wednesday.
And yet it wasn't that mysterious if you knew the 78-year-old, who still runs the local history association and the archives of the Ammersee community with verve.
It is the mother of all Inningen history games of recent years - most recently the “Kaisertraum”.
Now it has a new date: The Inninger School was one of the first schools in the district to be founded in 1650 - so next year will be the 375th anniversary.
“We shouldn’t leave this out,” said Jutta Göbber.
The proven author duo Jutta Göbber and Bärbl Mehnert-Jäger put their heads together long ago and wrote a text.
The clubs, now a well-rehearsed team under the direction of the retired teacher, should “actually want” to be there again, she said.
The revues always brought 90 actors or more onto the stage.
“It would be nice if I could at least catch you again today.” Mayor Walter Bleimaier anticipated the answer: “I am sure that the clubs will take part again.” All the performances were “great”.
“I’m looking forward to it.” If that’s not a word.
“We already have the cast in mind,” said Jutta Göbber.
The question of who would like to play the teacher from 1650 was therefore to be seen as rhetorical.
There are also concrete ideas for implementation.
The play will take place on two stages: the school from 1650 will face the school of today.
On the one hand there are lessons in the kitchen, on the other there are lessons with a laptop and whiteboard.
“It’s certainly not entirely uninteresting,” says the busy local historian.
“Especially from the children’s point of view,” because they are firmly planned.
“We will recruit them from the school.
There will be talking, singing, laughing and dancing,” promised Jutta Göbber.
“Humor is the order of the day.”
She deliberately made the venture so early so that interest would be aroused.
Performance days should be Friday, Saturday and Sunday on the penultimate weekend in July 2025 - “with a supporting program, you can still come up with a lot.
That would be great.
I will bully you a lot,” she promised with a wink.
She wants to distribute the textbook at the fall meeting.
She would have liked to read a few lines on Wednesday, but her co-author politely stopped her from doing so.