When 13-year-old Max Levy arrived for the first day of rehearsal on January 4, for his role as the Beast in The Random Farms Kids' Theater's production of Beauty and the Beast, Jr., he couldn't walk. The prospect of fulfilling the part that he was cast in last June seemed out of the question.
Confined to a wheelchair since mid-October, when a post-infection auto-immune disorder threw his central nervous system out of whack and caused him to lose feeling in his legs and feet, Max, of Pleasantville, NY, had barely been to school since September. He had missed out on everything from travel baseball and tennis to bar and bat mitzvahs. But, the eighth grader at HC Crittenden Middle School in Armonk had especially missed doing theater, one of his favorite activities. Last June, just days after auditioning for Beauty and the Beast, Jr., Max boarded the bus for sleep away camp in Maine and, within days, was diagnosed with the H1N1 virus, more commonly known as the Swine flue. After spending a week in quarantine, Max was diagnosed with mycoplasma pneumonia. Soon after, he began to lose feeling in his toes. By early fall, he couldn't move or feel his knees and, soon afterwards, his thighs. He also suffered from exhaustion, malaise and terrible headaches. Pain throughout his body made sleep difficult."We were heart-sick," says Random Farms producer, Anya Wallach. "While we didn't see anything wrong with having our leading man in a wheelchair, we knew we didn't have enough time to re-block the show so that Max could move around the stage safely. The set had already been built with all kinds of stairs and platforms."
Levy promised Wallach that he would walk within two weeks. Everyone was skeptical, as it had been months since Levy had been out of his wheelchair."I felt like everything in my life was taken away from me, due to this illness," said Levy. "I couldn't stand losing one more thing, especially since I had been looking forward to playing the Beast since before the summer."Videos