


















 |
"The Civil War remains this nation's
single
most defining experience, ultimately giving
new meaning to the word Freedom."
Performances:
8 PM,
November 14, 15, 21 and 22
Charles Wadsworth Auditorium
Newnan, GA.
Townspeople stand before the audience as Matthew Brady prepares his
photograph. He turns and addresses the audience. The
gunpowder flashes, the picture is taken, and the cast position
themselves, north against south, brother against brother, as war echoes
across the land.
The actors step into character: Union Soldiers,
Confederates, Slaves and Civilians. The image of the flag rips apart, as
men from the North and the South form into battle lines. Emmet Lochran
sings of the coming conflict ("BROTHER, MY BROTHER"), and after a moment
of indecision, joins the Union army.
On the eve of the First Battle of Bull Run, young
recruits from both the North and the South shout war slogans and mock
their opponents ("BY THE SWORD/ SONS OF DIXIE".) They boast of their
strength and envision the glory the battle will bring them.
The slaves are thrown into the spectacle of a slave
auction on a Savannah wharf. The Auctioneer sells off a young black man
who stands, head bowed, following the Auctioneer's barked commands. A
tableau of a plantation house on a wide green lawn is juxtaposed with
the scene of the slave auction. The Slaves sing of the ordeal of being
sold as merchandise, separated from those they love, and of the terrible
life they endured on the plantations. Frederick Douglass prays that "the
Lord God send/ all his wrath down upon what he knows isn't right. ("THE
PECULIAR INSTITUTION")
A man and a woman, sold on the auction block and soon
to be separated, sing of their devotion to one another and their
desperate longing for freedom ("IF PRAYIN' WERE HORSES").
The scene changes to the aftermath of the battle. One of the
Northern infantry-men, Nathaniel Taylor, lies near death. Horatio Taylor
sits away from his dying brother, cradling his rifle. Lochran observes.
Nathaniel's spirit sings to his brother to "TELL MY FATHER" that "his
son/ didn't run or surrender" and "wore the blue/ proud and true like he
taught me". Nathaniel is taken to a place upstage by the Young Girl,
where he (and the other characters who die during the course of the
play) observe the proceedings.
A slave family is silhouetted against the image of the
ruined flag. A chained figure leaves their midst; he removes his chains
and iron collar and puts on a cut-back swallow-tail dress coat,
transforming into the elegant figure of Frederick Douglass.
The voices of two politicians debate slavery's
importance to the survival of the Union. Douglass steps forward, and
brandishes a copy of the Declaration of Independence. He trumpets the
words of the Declaration: "We hold these truths to be self evident, that
all men are created equal". He exhorts his followers to demand freedom,
and to pray to be "FREEDOM'S CHILD".
McEwen's wife, Sarah, writes a letter to him from their
Minnesota farm. She tells him how she is learning to run the farm alone,
but confesses she is still "MISSING YOU (MY BILL)".
Pierce, a captain in the Confederate Army, sings of his
homeland, "VIRGINIA". He dreams of the planatation of his youth and
wonders if the way of life he has known has gone forever.
On a country road, we see Autolycus Fell, a businessman-con
artist-thief, accompanied by three feathered and corseted ladies: Mabel,
Violet, and Portia. He instructs the ladies that where there is marching
military, there is money, and the only thing that matters in the midst
of war is the almighty "GREENBACK". Fell displays the women to some
passing Union soldiers, offering them some 'horizontal refreshment'. The
soldiers pay no attention. Fell then reveals to Pierce and the
Confederates what he has seen of the Union troop movements.
The captains of the opposing sides, Pierce and Lochran,
confront their thoughts on the eve of battle. They are observed by
Nathaniel Taylor, the dead soldier. ("JUDGEMENT DAY") They each pray,
asking for God's mercy for sending men to their deaths in battle. As the
sun rises, Lochran and Pierce think of all the letters they have written
to mothers whose sons have died in battle and the faces of all the
soldiers they have lost.
In a Military Field Hospital, a Nurse moves among the
Confederate wounded calming and reassuring the injured soldiers. She
tells us how she talked with a young soldier, sick with dysentery and
typhoid fever, who spoke with her and asked her to read to him from the
Bible. He told her he did not fear death, and he dies as she tries to
comfort him. Hanna Ropes, a nurse in the Union Hospital, laments that "I
NEVER KNEW HIS NAME", an elegy for all the wounded men who meet their
end in the make-shift hospitals which often seem to be little more than
warehouses for the dying.
Frederick Douglas appears again, proclaiming that it is
"better to die free, than live as slaves." A gravedigger laments,
wondering "FATHER HOW LONG?" until he can sing freedom's song. On the
plantation, the slaves loose their chains, and sing a gospel anthem of
the freedom that awaits them on the banks of "THE RIVER JORDAN."
The soldiers sing of "JUDGEMENT DAY (Reprise)" in the
darkness. A single soldier, Stewart, a private in the Confederate Army,
studies the area. He realizes that he has never really looked at the
countryside around him, the land that is his home. Even as he longs to
linger, he knows that "I'LL NEVER PASS THIS WAY AGAIN".
The Confederates trudge forward through the winter
rains. ("HOW MANY DEVILS") Time passes on endlessly as they march. The
exhausted soldiers wonder if the war they thought would be so easy to
win will ever come to an end. Winter turns to a blazing summer as the
Union soldiers pick up the song. Their strength is ebbing, and they
dream of home, knowing all the while they are likely never to return
there. Another battle ensues; some of the soldiers are killed. The
survivors regroup and start marching again through the rain. The two
armies are exhausted, dispirited and numb; they seem to blend into one
group, marching endlessly.
Abraham Lincoln sits alone in the White House in the
winter of 1862. Late into the night, he wrestles with his thoughts.
("CANDLE IN THE WINDOW")
On the road to battle, Autolycus Fell hawks his
concoction "OH BE JOYFUL" -- a mixture of "bark juice, tar-water,
turpentine, brown sugar, lamp oil and alcohol". He sells it to the weary
soldiers who gratefully gulp it down to escape their troubles. Lochran,
their Captain, appears and seems ready to put an end to the revelry. To
everyone's surprise, he takes a swig of the stuff and joins in with his
troops.
The sound of artillery is heard. As time stands still,
a wounded Confederate soldier sings the thoughts that run through his
mind in the instant between being under fire and the moment he is struck
by the bullet. ("THE DAY THE SUN STOOD STILL") He describes the endless
sea of soldiers who converge in a mass of blue and gray, under a sun
that seemed to blaze for days on end. The soldier, who has been struck
by gunfire, goes to take his place among the dead.
Lincoln appears, reading a condolence telegram to the
mother of five sons who have died in battle. He admits that mere words
cannot assuage such an overwhelming loss, but asks her to take comfort
in the fact that her sons died to save the Republic. The mother, Mrs.
Bixby, sings of her "FIVE BOYS". She still hears them and sees them
"playing in a field with angels."
Slaves surround Sojourner Truth as she preaches outside
a rural barn. She tells them of the freedom that God has promised them:
"gonna break these chains and walk the walk/ gonna free the sparrow from
the hawk". ("SOMEDAY")
Bill McEwan and Sarah receive letters from each other.
He tells her that the Union Army crossed the Potomac into Virginia,
where one of their men was killed by sharpshooters. In his pocket, the
man had a letter from a girl, which reminds him to write every day how
powerfully he misses his "SARAH". Now a ghost, he sings to her that he
must leave but he will always be watching her from above. She receives a
black-bordered condolence telegram; she vows she will struggle on to
raise their son and survive in the midst of tragedy for "THE HONOR OF
YOUR NAME".
Near a Confederate camp, Autolycus Fell rifles through
the clothes of the dead soldiers, scooping up small change and paper
money in "GREENBACK" (Reprise). He addresses the corpses, claiming that
the money will do them no good anymore.
A full moon illuminates a river: on one side Lochran,
the Union captain, and on the other Stevens, the Confederate sentinel.
At first they taunt one another, but soon they are talking of the simple
realities of their situations: comparing bullet wounds and bad rations.
Speaking to one another simply as men, not as enemies, Stevens realizes
that "We could solve this war in thirty minutes, if they left it to us."
Lochran pulls out a letter from his wife. He tells her
of his meeting with the young Confederate sentinel: "We were both
scared/ As two men can be". He hangs on to the thought that only thirty
days remain until he can return to her aboard a "NORTHBOUND TRAIN".
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July 2, 1863. The two armies
are massed, waiting for dawn to break on the second day of the battle.
The Confederate soldiers sing "THE LAST WALTZ FOR DIXIE", knowing the
fate of the South hangs on the moment at hand. The slaves reprise "THE
RIVER JORDAN", as the sun rises on a wall of mist and the two armies
face each other.
The Union soldiers train their guns on the Confederate
line, hidden by the fog. Lochran stands apart, calling on his soldiers
to give their utmost for "THE GLORY". Pierce emerges with his men,
knowing "the time to stand has come at last.../ the bridge is burned,
the dye is cast." The battle commences, fog and smoke cover the stage,
revealing only battle flags and bayonets. As the rebel soldiers advance,
Lochran fires his cannon; he is killed in the explosion.
The earthen floor of the stage is now blood red. The
bodies of slain men fill the stage to the horizon. There is stillness.
Heavenly angels descend, familiar figures from the artwork of the
period. They sing to the dead as the image changes to a green,
unbloodied field. The company stands and faces the audience, singing
"for the truth we hold so dear/ Let us give the last full measure
gathered here/ For the glory."
|