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After a rewrite by Richardson's cousin, William Berney, it was presented at the [[Brattle Theater|Brattle Playhouse]] in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]], where the Shuberts saw it and transferred it (mainly re-cast) to the 46th Street Theatre in New York City on March 14, 1945, directed by Robert E. Perry. Although ''Dark of the Moon'' is not a musical, it was originally billed as a "legend with music" and characters do sing in most productions.<ref name=berney>[http://encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Article.jsp?id=h-2362 Encyclopedia of Alabama: William Berney]</ref> [[Paul Newman]] and [[Richard Hart (actor)|Richard Hart]] once played the role of John.
After a rewrite by Richardson's cousin, William Berney, it was presented at the [[Brattle Theater|Brattle Playhouse]] in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]], where the Shuberts saw it and transferred it (mainly re-cast) to the 46th Street Theatre in New York City on March 14, 1945, directed by Robert E. Perry. Although ''Dark of the Moon'' is not a musical, it was originally billed as a "legend with music" and characters do sing in most productions.<ref name=berney>[http://encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Article.jsp?id=h-2362 Encyclopedia of Alabama: William Berney]</ref> [[Paul Newman]] and [[Richard Hart (actor)|Richard Hart]] once played the role of John.

Most recently the show was performed in the fall of 2014 by the students of B. Reed Henderson Senior High School's drama department. While controversial because of some of the dark themes in the show, it was a hit with the students. The show was directed by Dan Lammey and Marc Umile, the teachers in charge of the drama club.


==Characters and story==
==Characters and story==
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*Uncle Smelicue
*Uncle Smelicue
*The Smeli Beard
*The Smeli Beard
*Floyd (or Flora) Allen
*Floyd Allen
*Marvin Hudgens
*Marvin Hudgens
*Mrs. Allen
*Mrs. Allen

Revision as of 10:30, 8 September 2016

Dark of the Moon is a dramatic stage play by Howard Richardson and William Berney which had a ten-month run on Broadway in 1945, followed by a national tour and eventually numerous college and high-school productions.[1] It is also revived professionally, e.g. by Pittsburgh's Quantum Theatre in 2005. Original London production 1948 – 1949, at Ambassadors Theatre, was an early much admired production by the distinguished director Peter Brook..

Set in the Appalachian Mountains and written in an Appalachian dialect, the play centers on the character of John, a witch boy who seeks to become human after falling in love with a human girl, Barbara Allen. Originally written by Howard Richardson in 1939 as a dramatization of the centuries-old European folk song "The Ballad of Barbara Allen", it was first performed at the University of Iowa in 1942 under the title Barbara Allen.[1]

After a rewrite by Richardson's cousin, William Berney, it was presented at the Brattle Playhouse in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where the Shuberts saw it and transferred it (mainly re-cast) to the 46th Street Theatre in New York City on March 14, 1945, directed by Robert E. Perry. Although Dark of the Moon is not a musical, it was originally billed as a "legend with music" and characters do sing in most productions.[1] Paul Newman and Richard Hart once played the role of John.

Characters and story

This perennial favorite is based on the haunting folk ballad of "Barbara Allen." Employing a large cast and imaginative settings in the Smoky Mountains, it recounts the story of John, a strange "witch boy" who upon first beholding the beautiful Barbara Allen immediately falls in love. He is given human form to woo and marry her on the condition that she remain true to him. The marriage is consummated and Barbara gives birth to a witch child whom the townspeople destroy in a superstitious frenzy. During a religious revival Barbara is led to betray John thus breaking their spell of love. As she dies, he returns forever to the world of the mountain witches.

Characters

Principals:

  • John: a witch boy turned human, in love with Barbara Allen
  • Barbara Allen: a beautiful, lusty mortal girl who falls in love with John

Supporting (in order of appearance):

  • Conjur Man
  • Dark Witch
  • Fair Witch
  • Conjur Woman
  • Miss Metcalf
  • Uncle Smelicue
  • The Smeli Beard
  • Floyd Allen
  • Marvin Hudgens
  • Mrs. Allen
  • Mr. Allen
  • Preacher Haggler
  • Mr. Summey
  • Mrs. Summey
  • Miss Atkins
  • Hank Guder
  • Edna Summey
  • Burt Dinwitty
  • Greeny Gorman
  • Hattie Heffner
  • Mrs. Bergen
  • Mr. Bergen
  • Ella Bergen
  • Miss Jenkins

"The Ballad of Barbara Allen"

A witch boy from the mountain came,
A-pinin' to be human,
Fer he had seen the fairest gal...
A gal named Barbara Allen.

O Conjur Man, O Conjur Man,
Please do this thing I'm wantin'
Please change me to a human man,
Fer Barbara I'll be courtin'.

Now Barbara had a red, red dress,
And one she had of blue,
And many men did Barbara love,
But never was she true.

Oh, you can be a man, a man,
If Barbara will not grieve you,
If she be faithful fer a year,
Yer Eagle, he will leave you.

O Barbara will you marry me,
And will you leave me never,
Oh yes, my love, I'll marry you,
And live with you ferever.

Three other alternate verses were used in the 1953 production of "Dark of the Moon" at the Totem Pole Playhouse:

I'll sing a song from down our way
From the mountains where I'm dwellin'
'bout a witch boy almost got a soul
Fer the love of Barbry Allen

Was in the merry month of May
The greenbuds they was swellin'
A witch boy saw a mountain gal
And wished that he was human.

Oh can you hear, how loud and clear
The church bells are a-ringin'
The valley folk from round about
Have come to git religion.

Through no doin' of her own,
Poor Barbara was unfaithful,
She lost her life on the mountain high,
And ne'er no more was witch boy human.

They laid poor Barbra by the old church gate,
With the wild, wild rose growin' nigh her,
And witch boy roamed the mountain high,
'Til mountain fog became him.

And then one morn, before the dawn,
The fog rolled down that mountain,
It came to rest nigh Barbara's rose,
and watered there a briar.

The rose and briar climbed the old church gate,
'Til they could grow no higher,
And there they tied in a true love's knot,
The rose wrapped 'round the briar.

And so a witch and human gal,
Had conquered death eternal,
And 'neath the darkness of the moon,
Their love's entwined forever.

Other songs in the show

  • "Down in the Valley", sung by Floyd Allen.
  • "Give Me That Old Time Religion" and "Lonesome Valley", sung at the church.

Reactions

Dark of the Moon is a controversial drama and is not recommended for young children. It challenges an audience's comfort level regarding ideas of tolerance and justice in a situation of two star-crossed lovers fighting to just live simply and happily against pressures from two diametrically opposed worlds.

In the late 1990s, the town of Honey Grove, Texas launched a campaign to halt the production at the local high school, citing protection of the underage against inappropriate and lewd material. The small-town Texans continued their rampage all the way to the Texas UIL One Act Play State Meet where there were two productions of Dark of the Moon, with one of the plays placing third at the 1998 State Meet.

At Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota, the theater group, Players, performed the play in 1963. The folk music craze was aflame at the time and some of the campus "folkies" replaced the old chestnut musical numbers in the play with current favorites. The play was a great success. The production was directed by John R ("Jack") Woodruff and featured a number of Carleton students including Erica Rosenfeld, Jim Ekberg, and Jack Turner.

References