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Here some of the emails that came in after the show. You'll enjoy them! I warn you that the last one is very strong. I think we reached these people!
2. Kenny (Mon, Jun 8, 2009) attended Sunday
3. Judy (Monday, 6/8: phone message) attended Sunday
4. Curt (Saturday, 6/6) attended Friday
5. Alan & Lisa (Sunday, 6/7) attended Saturday
6. Joyce (Monday, 6/8) attended Sunday
7. Janice (Tuesday, 6/9) attended Sunday
8. Paula (Tuesday, 6/9) attended Friday
To Allen and each person involved in A Son at the Front:
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Characters in order of vocal appearance
Willis McGrath (Will), The Son at the Front. College student -- Travis Palmer
Pat McGrath, father of A Son at the Front, now divorced -- Nich Radcliffe
Ruth, Pat's housekeeper -- Claudia Vasilovick
Billy Delaware, Will's boyfriend, working-class, skilled mechanic -- Jose Nateras
Mattie Hyatte Hill, divorced mother of A Son at the Front -- Susan Griffith
Alfred Hill, husband of Mattie, step-father of A Son at the Front -- Dan Taube
Emma Lawson, Will's girlfriend -- Megan Brown
Sally, wotking woman from Bartlesville -- Laura Rauh
Butch Smith, a bond salesman -- Thomas C. Lucas
Mlle. Catherine Ferré LeFevre, a French aristocrat & singer visiting Bartlesville -- Jessica Thigpen
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Prologue: Somewhere on the Western Front A SON AT THE FRONT concerns an idealistic college student from Oklahoma who volunteers as an ambulance driver in World War I. The drama explores the effect of his decision on those who love him. Will leaves for France in December 1916, before the U.S. enters the War. He is a magnet for the ambitions and aspirations of his family and friends, including his girlfriend and his secret boyfriend. The Son emerges as a composite of ideas expressed in his letters; of details, facts, and rumors about him reported by one person to another; and of fleeting impressions he leaves behind. The title and some plot elements were suggested by Edith Wharton's A Son at the Front (1923), but this is an American story set in Oklahoma, not Wharton's Paris. When the Great War began, in August, 1914, organizations in the U. S. began offering relief of all kinds. But neither public opinion nor President Wilson favored a declaration of war. The sinking of the Lusitania in May 1915 and further loss of American lives in similar attacks roused sentiment against the Germans, and the disclosure of an attempted alliance between Germany and Mexico in January 1917 forced more Americans to realize that the war did, after all, directly involve their interests. One of Wilson's most famous speeches before the war was made in Omaha in October, 1916 (moved here to St. Louis, same date), and is instrumental in motivating Will, The Son at the Front, to leave for France. Although he was re-elected on a platform of peace in 1916, Wilson called for a declaration of war in April 1917. A massive mobilization began at once (seen here in Act 2). Oklahoma had an unusual political profile at this time, having only recently become a state in 1907. The new state had a high percentage of poor tenant farmers who were even poorer than the Delaware and Osage natives whose land they worked. The hero grew up on such a farm; Billy Elkhair, the hero's best friend, is a Delaware (Lenahpe; "Elkhair" is a Lanahpe name; the tribe's headquarters is located at Bartlesville). The state was also bursting with newly discovered oil. The resulting disparities in wealth made the state an exceptionally rich organizing ground for various socialist groups, including the International Workers of the World. Odd though the conjunction might seem today, it is a well-documented and distinctive aspect of Oklahoma political history that the socialists supported and were supported by evangelical Christians. Oklahoma people, events, and activities form part of the background to the drama. In addition, certain details of the hero's life and his family history have been drawn from the papers of the Elmer Patrick McClarney family, some of whom lived in Vinita, Oklahoma, until the mid-1990s (two of Elmer's sons fought in the War; one of them, also Elmer, is the elegant fellow on our poster). Certain details of the family history that seem typical of sharecroppers' lives at the time have been folded into the plot, but to be sure nothing in the libretto claims to represent the McClarneys' views as their papers preserve them. In the libretto "McClarney" has become "McGrath" (which means "son of grace"). |
A Son at the Front has been in development since 2006. If you are interested in readings held in 2006 and 2007, click here for details.
John Frantzen, the composer, lives in Los Angeles.He writes music for film, television, and the concert hall. With works for orchestra, chorus, wind ensemble, theater, and a wide variety of chamber groups his distinctive style has earned high praise from musicians and audiences throughout the United States, Germany, Switzerland, and Taiwan.
Allen Frantzen, the author of the play, teaches at Loyola University Chicago and specializes in medieval studies and the cultural history of World War I, the subjects of his book, Bloody Good: Chivalry, Sacrifice, and the Great War (University of Chicago Press, 2004).
Edith Wharton's A Son at the Front is one of her great novels, although it was not one of her commercial successes. Written in 1918, the book was not published until 1923 because the market for war fiction declined rapidly after World War I ended. It remains a powerful and moving novel. This link goes to the home page of the Wharton Society, a great source for information about her and her work.
Pictures from the dress rehearsal & performances. All photographs by Mari Provincher unless otherwise noted.







Here are some pictures that might be useful in getting the flavor of life at the Front and in Oklahoma c. 1900-1920.
Program
Program from the performances (downloads an 8-page pdf)
| Tickets on sale starting Tuesday, May 5, 10 a.m., at TicketMaster. Tickets will be available at the door before each performance. (Note: the Athenaeum box office does not sell tickets over the telephone.) $20. |
Two maps of the theater area are below. As you will expect, street parking can be difficult to find. But it is rarely impossible. There is a small parking lot behind the theater (entrance off of Southport). Be wary of parking in the church parking lot next to the theater. The ticket machine there does not give change, and if you do not have a ticket displayed your car will be towed. The recovery fee is very steep.

updated 7/12/09