In keeping with MAA & PAA’s efforts to combine historical subject matter with current performance styles and technology, we attempt to step into the 21st century with a more interactive page for this year’s site. Let us know if you find it useful, or find problems in its use.
Information on all of our previous shows can still be accessed here.
Edmonton’s MAA & PAA Theatre teams up with noted historian and author Debbie Marshall on a vivid, passionate new play at the Fringe. Firing Lines: Journalist Beatrice Nasmyth Covers the First World War blends Nasmyth’s articles, letters and photos with compelling performances to bring the Great War vividly to life.
Now that Canadian troops are withdrawing from combat in Afghanistan, and ongoing battles in Libya are making us reconsider our military role in the world, there is no better time to consider Canada’s first war, a war in which a generation proved that we could stand with the best forces in the world, and had a place in post-war peace and reconstruction. Through Beatrice Nasmyth’s eyes, we see how that war radically transformed the lives of individuals and nations.
In 1914, Nasmyth was assistant women’s editor at the Vancouver Province. When war was imminent, she jumped at the chance to go overseas and cover it from the “women’s perspective.” It wouldn’t be easy. Her paper only paid her by the article—she had to find a full time job to support herself while hunting up stories. Nasmyth not only found paid work, she wrote over 100 feature articles and made history as one of the first female journalists from Canada to be allowed into France during the war.
Over twenty of Nasmyth’s wartime letters home have been preserved by her daughter, along with most of the articles she wrote for the Province. They reveal what life was like, not only for the soldiers who fought the war, but for those who struggled to survive at home. Firing Lines is based on this precious archive.
Firing Lines: Journalist Beatrice Nasmyth Covers the First World War
Strathcona Library
8331 – 104 Street
Fri, Aug 12 12:30pm Sat, Aug 13 6:45pm Sun, Aug 14 3:30pm Mon, Aug 15 5:00pm Tue, Aug 16 2:30pm Wed, Aug 17 7:00pm Fri, Aug 19 8:30pm Sat, Aug 20 4:30pm Sun, Aug 21 Noon