RIVERTON â Play directors in 1954 thought it was a good idea to portray a group of Native American characters onstage singing âUggawugg, uggawugg, uggawugg, wahh!â
But that doesnât fly as easily in 2024, with entertainers trying with more sincerity to understand rather than caricaturize indigenous culture.
And it also might not work in a large venue in the middle of Wyoming next to the Wind River Indian Reservation.
So, when Central Wyoming College theater director Joey West decided to bring the 1954 âPeter Panâ musical to the Robert A. Peck Arts Center theater in Riverton, his colleague, longtime community actor and Northern Arapaho tribal member Ron Howard, scratched his head.
âI was questioning why he would pick such a play,â Howard told Cowboy State Daily on Friday. âBut I think he had every confidence that heâd work something out, and weâd figure out how to portray it without insulting people.â
About That Song
The musical features the choreographed âUggawuggâ song when the lost boys unite with the Native tribe after the title character Peter Pan saves the tribeâs princess, Tiger Lily.
Earlier versions of the musical showed Peter Pan emulating Tiger Lilyâs dance and repeating her nonsense âuggawuggâ chorus as a peace gesture. The song also features an upbeat drum duet by the pair.
Two days after play auditions in mid-January, West and CWC box office manager Matt Hartman, who also plays Captain Hookâs dull henchman Smee, were brainstorming ways to perform âPeter Panâ without boxing its tribal characters into a 1954 stereotype.
They decided to change the nonsense lyrics of âUggawuggâ to Arapaho words.
âYou know, I wanted to honor the Native American tribes that weâre close to,â said West, who has directed CWC plays for seven years near the reservation the Northern Arapaho and Eastern Shoshone Tribes share. âAnd I wanted to let them know that there are workarounds to, I guess, culturally insensitive things that are in old shows.â
West asked for help from Howard, who speaks some Arapaho and whose daughter, 12-year-old Elizabeth Howard, plays Tiger Lily in the musical.
Howard agreed with the plan.

Jabberwocky
The new lyrics wouldnât make sense to everyone, but at least theyâll have meaning for the few Arapaho-language speakers in the audience, he said.
And they might make those Arapaho-language speakers laugh. Thatâs because the new lyrics, written in the program pamphlet for âPeter Pan,â are as zany as Jabberwocky. Â
âNeiâoohootoo,â Tiger Lily sings to Peter Pan, which the program translates to: âLook at it and learn it.â Â
Her tribe echoes her.
âChildren!â sings out the aggrieved Captain Hook, in Arapaho.
âI tied the trouble-maker,â Smee sings, using the Arapaho word âCeeceâino3eihiiâ for part of his line.
âLook at it! Look at it!â sings Peter Pan in Arapaho.
Peter and Tiger Lily sing of spotting a hairy frog.
Peter and the lost boys sing of milking cows, getting bread and pretending to be deer and antelope.
âThose words I thought were kind of funny,â Howard said with a chuckle.
He said the real trick was to find Arapaho words that matched the syllable count of the original lyrics.
âTrouble-Makerâ
Besides replacing the stage tribeâs nonsense words with Arapaho, Howard also removed the word âredskinâ from the song, replacing it with the Arapaho word for âtroublemaker,â he said.
He's not fluent in Arapaho, so he turned to a dictionary for some of the words.
There were other cultural elements that came under Howardâs hand.
The tribal charactersâ stock headbands (part of a purchased costume package) bore âmulti-colored Walmart turkey feathers,â said Howard, which he described as a tacky portrayal of the more revered tribal custom of wearing feathers.
He asked Kara Hancock, the wife of Riverton Mayor Tim Hancock and a gifted seamstress, to make red cloth headbands âlike Geronimo woreâ for the children instead.
Kara Hancock designed a few more costumes for the play also, Howard added.
Howard turned to his uncle, Gail Ridgley, to discuss Tiger Lilyâs drum.
It would not be appropriate to use a real powwow drum, Howard related from that discussion, since those are part of religious ceremonies.
The crew got a bass drum from the CWC music department instead and dressed it up to fit the scene, he said.
Opening Weekend
When the show opened Thursday night, Howard got to watch his daughter sing, dance and drum to his quirky new lyrics.
âI was pretty proud of her and she learned it really well,â he said, adding that she led the other children of Westâs very young cast.
West said the cast contains 20 children, some as young as 4 years old. The oldest actor in the play is about 43, he said.
Howard said the director has been âherding catsâ for two months; but West said itâs all paying off now that the showâs performance phase has finally arrived.
It shows again Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m., then Sunday at 2 p.m. and Monday at 7 p.m.
Evening shows kick off again next Thursday through Saturday, March 21-23, at 7 p.m. each night.
Clair McFarland can be reached at: Clair@CowboyStateDaily.com





