A Spooktacular Halloween show teaches grade schoolers to Trick or Treat safely

[October 31, 2025]  Lincoln Community High School Thespian Club welcomed Halloween with their 25th annual Spooktacular, an entertaining show about Halloween safety performed for area schoolchildren the week of Halloween every year. The 30-minute show is written, directed, crewed, choreographed, and performed entirely by LCHS students. Preparations begin after Fall Play at LCHS, so this year there were three weeks, a week longer than usual, to put together this show for their young audiences.

This year’s performances were on October 28 in the LCHS auditorium with 400 children attending in the morning and 550 in the afternoon. Children ages preschool through third grade came from almost every school in Logan County including District 27, West Lincoln-Broadwell, Chester-East Lincoln, Carroll Catholic, New Holland-Middletown, Mt. Pulaski, and preschoolers from Christian Child Care.

The Spooktacular features a different cast of characters and a new story every year, but teaches the same lessons about safety and incorporates the same original songs from year to year. This year’s show was set on Sesame Street and featured familiar characters from the children’s program preparing for Halloween together. Elmo, Big Bird, Grover, Cookie Monster, Abby, Zoe, Bert, Ernie, and Oscar taught lessons through skit, song, and dance about Halloween safety. Lesson one taught costume safety: make sure costumes are visible in the dark and are not so long they cause tripping hazards. Ensure visibility and safe passage by carrying a light, or even a glow stick to make safety more fun. Lesson two was how to stay safe if children are separated from their families while trick-or-treating. Families should agree on a “safe word” so that when searching for a lost child, adults can identify themselves as a safe person with the secret word upon locating the child. If a stranger tries to persuade a child to go with him, children learned to just say “No.” The third lesson was to not eat homemade treats or unwrapped treats to avoid tummy aches.

During the production, costumed dancers sang and danced in the aisles of the auditorium making the production more interactive for the children seated in the audience. The aisle dancers were members of the Thespian Club, along with 10 members of the LCHS Pom Squad. All members of Thespians participate in Spooktacular, and this is the largest cast since before the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Thespian Club President Emery Kitterman.

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Photo by Stephanie Hall

This year’s Spooktacular was written and directed by Thespian Club officers Kitterman, Marin Luckhart (Vice president), Maelee Cunningham (Secretary), and Alaina Bauer (Treasurer). The Thespian officers worked collaboratively on the script for this year’s Spooktacular and it took them approximately a month to write. LCHS staff sponsor Samantha Murphy said, “Our student directors have done a really great job.”

The cast of this year’s Spooktacular featured Joshua Hellman as Elmo, Grant Eales as Big Bird, Zachery Eckhardt as Oscar, Ryne Manuel as Grover, Sophia Wilkerson as Cookie Monster, Hailee Rempe as Abby, Mady McEvers as Zoe, Mackenzie Plummer as Bert, Kenidie Evans as Ernie, and Emersyn Keith as the Ominous Voice.

Stage and technical crew included Kamy Battin, Rory Snyder, Arielle Rempe, Abby Newlun, Sammy Lewis, Jude Snyder, Ellie McFadden, and Charlotte Judd. Aisle dancers were Malina Luckhart, Cameron Wilmert, Baileigh Shehorn, Ruby Thomas, Cynthia Flener, Alexis Lamb, Violet Loeffler, Kay Coers, Sarah Dahmm, Ashlan Bruns, Alexia Merritt, Ryann Lile, Grace Nutter, Elle Fults, Brenley Bruns, Kori Singleton, McKinlee Stoltzenburg, Myah Bowman, and Hattie Roland.

Stephanie Hall

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