More Than a Show: How Honey Pearl Productions is Building Community Through the Arts
What happens when a lifelong dream meets a community willing to embrace it?
For Connie Kiehn, co-founder of Honey Pearl Productions, the answer has been something much bigger than theater. It's become a way to strengthen community, create opportunities for people to grow, and bring neighbors together through the shared experience of storytelling.
Connie's journey to community theater wasn't exactly a straight line.
As a child, she loved theater and dreamed of directing productions one day. But like many people, life took her in a different direction. She studied economics, served in the military, built a career, married, and started a family. When she and her husband moved to Sandpoint in 2022, she thought her theater days were largely behind her.
Then came an audition for Legally Blonde.
To her surprise, Connie landed the lead role of Elle Woods. Her husband, Stephen, was cast opposite her as Emmett Forrest. What began as a fun community experience quickly reignited a passion that had been waiting quietly in the wings for years.
That experience ultimately led the couple to launch Honey Pearl Productions.
Together, Connie's background in theater and Stephen's experience as an artist and graphic designer created a unique partnership. What started as a dream evolved into a shared family mission: using the performing arts to enrich lives and strengthen the community they now call home.
Their first production, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, was met with overwhelming enthusiasm. Soon followed Cheaper by the Dozen, and now Honey Pearl Productions is preparing for its first musical, 1776, opening over the Fourth of July holiday.
But the organization's impact extends far beyond the stage.
Connie believes theater creates a rare environment where people from vastly different backgrounds, personalities, and skill sets work together toward a common goal. Actors, artists, musicians, builders, technicians, designers, introverts, extroverts, students, retirees, and first-time performers all find a place within a production.
In a world where people often stay within their familiar circles, theater invites them to collaborate with individuals they might never otherwise meet.
That experience can be transformative.
Participants discover talents they didn't know they possessed. They build confidence. They learn leadership, communication, teamwork, and problem-solving. Some even find themselves stepping into roles they never imagined for themselves. As Connie shared, one of their behind-the-scenes volunteers recently decided to audition for a stage role after previously insisting she would never perform in front of an audience.
Perhaps most importantly, Honey Pearl Productions is committed to making participation accessible.
The organization operates entirely through volunteers, and performers are not charged to participate. Their goal is to ensure that financial barriers do not prevent someone from experiencing the joy and personal growth that the performing arts can provide.
This year's production of 1776 also marks a new chapter for the organization.
On July 4th, Honey Pearl Productions will host a special dinner and performance event benefiting local veterans through Thin Line Community Support. The event combines live music, community gathering, and charitable giving before audiences enjoy the musical itself. Connie hopes it will become the first of many productions that intentionally give back to local causes.
At the heart of it all is a belief that art has the power to bring people together.
Whether through music, storytelling, costumes, set design, or performance, creative expression allows people to connect in meaningful ways. It creates space for confidence to grow, friendships to form, and community to flourish.
At the Community Resource EnVision Center, we often talk about the importance of connection. Honey Pearl Productions is a wonderful reminder that some of those connections happen not in boardrooms or meeting halls, but under stage lights, behind the curtain, and through the shared experience of creating something beautiful together.
Because sometimes the greatest impact isn't measured by the number of tickets sold.
It's measured by the lives changed along the way.
For tickets to the show visit 1776: Honey Pearl Productions
"This is how we serve the community while using our own gifts and also enriching our own souls in the process."
- Connie Kiehn, co-founder of Honey Pearl Productions





















































