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...People don’t know that deaf people can dance,” Cook signed during his performance...

Author: By Devon M. Newhouse, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Deaf Performance Entices the Senses | 2/17/2010 | See Source »

While at one point in the show Cook assured his audience that his act would be “a very visual story,” some audience members still found it difficult to follow along with the action. For example, one little boy sitting in the back row would repeatedly ask his mother in a loud whisper to explain what was going...

Author: By Devon M. Newhouse, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Deaf Performance Entices the Senses | 2/17/2010 | See Source »

...Cook touched upon this idea of adjustment with his last anecdote, a sad story about his second kiss. He explained how a girl he liked as a kid turned him down because, as she said, they “couldn’t communicate...

Author: By Devon M. Newhouse, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Deaf Performance Entices the Senses | 2/17/2010 | See Source »

...what Cook successfully points out is that there are many ways to communicate, and the problem only arises when a person is not willing to make the necessary effort to adapt...

Author: By Devon M. Newhouse, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Deaf Performance Entices the Senses | 2/17/2010 | See Source »

After all, Cook himself has adapted the art of storytelling for deaf audiences. The stories he tells does not become imbued with life through the way he speaks but with the way he moves...

Author: By Devon M. Newhouse, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Deaf Performance Entices the Senses | 2/17/2010 | See Source »

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