In celebration of Harriet Beecher Stowe's 211th birthday, the Fayette Opera House will showcase the Emmy® nominated and award-winning docudrama Sons & Daughters of Thunder on Saturday, June 25. Q &A with Emmy® award-winning filmmakers Kelly and Tammy Rundle of Fourth Wall Films will follow the film presentation. Doors open at 1:00 p.m. The film will be shown at 3:00 p.m. in the historic Ginnivan - Spiess Theater in the Fayette Opera House, 105 East Main Street, Fayette, Ohio.
The Bean Creek Valley History Center of Fayette, Ohio, Fulton, Williams County Historical Society and Lenawee County Historical Societies will have displays showcasing the abolitionist/Underground Railroad activities in their respective areas. Costumes and props from the film will also be on display. The event is sponsored by Bean Creek Valley History Center. Tickets can be purchased by calling 419-237-2721.
Sons & Daughters of Thunder is based on the play by Earlene Hawley and Curtis Heeter, and tells the unforgettable true story of the beginning of the end of slavery in America.
In 1834 discussing the abolition of slavery was considered radical, even in the North. Organized by firebrand abolitionist Theodore Weld (Thomas Alan Taylor), the nation’s first public debates at Lane Seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio led to near riot conditions in the city. The shocking oratory sparked intense controversy and awakened a young Harriet Beecher (Stowe) to the horrors of slavery. Harriet (Jessica Taylor) was captivated by Weld’s charismatic leadership at a time when Calvin Stowe was trying to win her heart. Inspired by Weld and the debates, Harriet later distilled her Cincinnati experiences into the world-wide best-selling novel “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”. This forgotten story was a prelude to America’s Civil War.
“Sons & Daughters of Thunder is a fascinating, inspiring slice of influential U.S. history told with characteristic grace, intelligence and emotional power…” wrote Jonathan Turner,
entertainment reporter/WHBF.
"This is an earnest and rewarding docudrama shedding light on the origins of one of the most influential novels in American history," Ed McNulty, Visual Parables.
Executive Producer Kimberly Kurtenbach cast the film and starred as Catharine Beecher. Los Angeles actor Mark Winn plays abolitionist Frederick Douglass, and Jaylen Marks
stars as former slave and Lane Rebel James Bradley. The film was shot by award-winning director of photography Kevin Railsback.
Principal photography for Sons & Daughters of Thunder took place at the Harriet Beecher Stowe House in Cincinnati, Ohio; the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center in Hartford, Connecticut; and several historic sites in Illinois, including Karpeles Manuscript Library Museum, Augustana College's House on the Hill in Rock Island; the Jenny Lind Chapel in
Andover; and the Dillon Home Museum in Sterling.
The producers note that the movie is not for young children, and the 96-minute film’s detailed discussions of slavery might suggest a PG-13 rating.
Sons & Daughters of Thunder continues to screen in independent theaters, at historic sites, museums, film festivals, and churches throughout the U.S.
Sons & Daughters of Thunder was partially funded by a grant from the Quad City Arts, provided by the Illinois Arts Council Agency, Hubbell-Waterman Foundation and John
Deere; and a grant from the Illinois Arts Council. The Moline Foundation and the Shell Rock Community Historical Society served as the fiscal sponsors for the project.
For more information about Sons & Daughters of Thunder, visit LaneRebelsMovie.com.
The Rundles are the producers of the Emmy® Award winning Over and Under: Wildlife Crossings, and Emmy® nominated documentaries Good Earth: Awakening the Silent
City, Letters Home to Hero Street (with WQPT-PBS), and Country School: One Room – One Nation. Other award-winning productions include Lost Nation: The Ioway, and The
Barn Raisers.
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