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Last updateFri, 19 Apr 2024 5pm

Local historian presents honour roll to Strathcona County

    A volunteer Drumheller historian who has played a part in documenting the war history of a number of communities throughout Alberta, has completed his most recent project.
    Reg Bennett has been compiling honour rolls and remembrance books to commemorate the role many Alberta communities played in conflict and war. It was his research that allowed the Drumheller Cenotaph to be updated when unveiled last spring. His more recent project is helping to commemorate the war dead of Strathcona County.

Reg Bennett was in Sherwood Park on August 24 to present his latest book of Remembrance to the community. Pictured are (l-r) co-author Bonnie Ferguson, Bennett , Strathcona County Mayor Linda Osinchuk and Starr Hansen, Strathcona Museum curator.

    “It was a very ambitious project,” museum curator Starr Hanson said, noting that two of her staff members have been fully dedicated to the project since May to get it completed in time for Strathcona Celebrates.
    Bennett attended the Freedom of the County Parade at Sherwood Park on Saturday, August 24. Bennett and fellow historian  Bonnie Ferguson presented the book to Mayor Linda Osinchuk and a high-ranking officer of The Lord Strathcona’s Horse.    
    This was a project that Bennett played a role in creating.

Commanding Officer Lieutenant-Colonel Paul Peyton of the Lord Strathcona’s Horse, right, is presented a copy of  the Strathcona Book of Remembrance by Bennett.

    Bennett said it was an extensive project and originally he was to do Sherwood Park, but the project grew to encompass the entire County. His research came up with hundreds of names. One issue they ran into in making the book was that at one time the boundary of Strathcona County went clear to the Saskatchewan border. So the honour roll was paired down to reflect the current county.
    Bennett’s part was to find the names of those who died and prepare the honour roll as well as cover sheet for each solder.  Ferguson worked on putting together a biography of each soldier.  There were service men in the area that fought in the Boer War, many soldiers from World War I and World War II and in-service soldiers before and after World War II. There were also three soldiers killed in Afghanistan honoured.
    It was a busy day and Bennett was honoured to be a part of it. At the Freedom of the County Parade Day, the Lord Strathcona’s Horse Regiment was presented the key to the city. There was also the unveiling of a monument to two of the soldiers who died in Afghanistan.

It takes a Hamlet to create Our Town

    It is often said that it takes a village to raise a child. Well, in Rosebud, Alberta, it takes a hamlet to create a play.
Our Town, one of the greatest plays of all time, opens on the historic Opera House Stage September 13. Over 50 people from this ‘little hamlet with a big heart’ are busy rehearsing, designing and building it.
    The Pulitzer Prize-winning play, written by Thornton Wilder, is a timeless drama about life in the village of Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire. It tells the story of two young neighbours, George Gibbs and Emily Webb, whose childhood friendship blossoms into romance, culminating in a rather chaotic marriage ceremony.
    Narrated by an all-knowing stage manager, the play chronicles the seemingly ordinary—but ultimately profound and universal—lives of the town’s residents, including Joe the newspaper boy, Howie the milkman, family physician Dr. Gibbs, young Wally Webb, temperamental choir conductor Simon Stinson and many others.
     Morris Ertman, artistic director of Rosebud Theatre and the director of this production has wanted to produce this play for some 35 years.
    “Our Town is a theatrical classic and one of the most beloved and most produced plays in North America,” he says. “This year, the play is 75 years old, and we at Rosebud Theatre are simply delighted that it is a big part of our own 30th Anniversary Season.” He adds, “Rosebud is a place where life is chronicled. We live out the notion that art is an extension of life and life is a reflection of art, a perspective we share with Thornton Wilder. It’s as if this play was written for our stage and our stage was created to produce this play. There is a palpable air of excitement in the hamlet right now.”

The cast of Rosebud Theatre’s Our Town. The Production runs from Sept. 13 to Oct. 19, 2013 on the Opera House Stage.

    And there should be. The production is comprised of resident company members, apprentices from Rosebud School of the Arts (RSA), and guest artists from across the country.
    RSA education director Paul Muir (playing Editor Webb in the production) echoes Ertman’s excitement about the project. “Guest artists work hand in hand with the resident acting company. Students rehearse with their teachers,” Muir says. “The work we are doing in this play exemplifies the work we do here in Rosebud with the theatre, the school and the Rosebud Mercantile.”
    There are even familial ties in this production. Ertman’s son Luke is the sound designer and composer for Our Town. The elder Ertman deftly directs, with the younger creating an original, organic auditory experience for the audience. Father and son David and Donovan Snider will share the stage as Mr. Gibbs and Wally Webb respectively. Resident company member David (Matthew in Anne of Green Gables, Mitch in Tuesdays with Morrie, Joseph in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat™) is widely known to and beloved by Rosebud audiences.
    “There is a deep power in doing this play with my son Donovan,” says Snider. “In light of the play’s theme of accepting life as ever-changing while living in hope of life everlasting, I am so proud to witness Donovan learn and grow. But it is humbling to accept the reality of how quickly his boyhood will change to manhood - beautiful and terrible both. It is a great gift to share this experience with him.”
    Judith Buchan (Marilla in Rosebud Theatre’s Anne of Green Gables) takes on the pivotal role of the Stage Manager, the third-party observer who narrates this bittersweet story of small-town life, love and loss. “Working on this play has personally affected me more than any other I’ve done,” says Buchan. “I am moved to be more present and see more in my own life.”  
Heather Pattengale (My Name is Asher Lev, Mary’s Wedding and Queen Milli of Galt), plays Emily to Byron Allen’s George. Says Pattengale, “There is so much Rosebud in Our Town. We are in a unique position to create and show people how important their everyday life is.”
    David Snider sums up the communal feeling that Our Town has brought to the residents of Rosebud: “To our audience I would say, bring your WHOLE family to see this play, whether kindred in blood or spirit. It will bless the bonds that hold you together.”
     And there is a plethora of the hamlet’s population who can attest to that. Come to Rosebud and experience your life... your town... with Our Town.
     Our Town opens on September 13 and plays until October 19 on the Rosebud Opera House Stage. To purchase tickets for this limited engagement, please contact the Rosebud Theatre Box Office at 1-800-267-7553 or www.rosebudtheatre.com.


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