Sherbrooke Record

Opera to focus on Great War nurses 100 years after hospital ship sinking

- By Cassandra Szklarski THE CANADIAN PRESS

The creators of a planned opera about the tragic sinking of a Canadian hospital ship during the First World War say it’s time to resurrect the stories of nurses who died in heroic service.

The sinking of the HMHS Llandovery Castle was considered one of the worst atrocities committed against Canada during the Great War and yet it is little known today, says librettist Paul Ciufo.

He and Toronto composer Stephanie Martin are working on an opera they hope will be ready for public performanc­es by June 27, 2018 — the 100th anniversar­y of the sinking.

“I don’t think it’s well-known outside of historians. I like to think that I’ve taken an interest in my life in wartime history and done a lot of reading and it was unknown to me,” says Ciufo, whose Second World War radio drama “On Convoy” was produced and broadcast by CBC Radio in 2002.

“Everybody I tell seems to be hearing it for the first time.”

While recent centennial­s — which have included Vimy, Passchenda­ele, and the beginning of the First World War — have shed light on the war’s many triumphs and heart-shattering moments, Martin says there’s been precious little on the role women played.

“It’s really important to tell this story because it is a woman’s story,” says Martin, who found collaborat­ors in Toronto’s Bicycle Opera Project, a company that focuses on contempora­ry Canadian works.

“The Vimy celebratio­n was all about the people in combat and it wasn’t about those behind the scenes who were just desperatel­y trying to keep people alive.”

The story begins aboard the Llandovery Castle as it brings 600 wounded men to Halifax from Liverpool. Also aboard are nearly 260 crew members, among them doctors, nurses and other members of the Canadian Army Medical Corps.

As they return to Liverpool, they are intercepte­d by a German U-boat that torpedoes the ship under the mistaken belief it is secretly harbouring fighting men and munitions. What happens next is even more horrifying, says Ciufo.

“The (German commander) realized that he had just sunk a hospital ship, broken the laws of war, and that this would reflect terribly on Germany, so he decided to kill everyone in the lifeboats,” says Ciufo, who relied on a nurse’s diary, articles and transcript­s from a subsequent war crimes trial to build his dramatizat­ion.

In the end, 234 people lost their lives, including all 14 nurses.

Ciufo’s tale centres on real-life nursing sister Rena Mclean from Prince Edward Island, whose nickname was Bird. Other characters based on actual figures include matron Margaret Marjory Fraser, who went by Pearl; survivor Sgt. Arthur Knight, who was on one of the lifeboats with the doomed nurses; and the commander of the German U-boat, Helmut Patzig.

Ciufo says there will also be a chorus made up of nurses who died in wartime service — characters that have the ability to see the past, the present and the future.

Martin says she’s trying to collect financial backing for a 10-person orchestra with strings, flute, clarinet and a French horn to evoke bugle calls. The music will incorporat­e material from the time period, such as the actual tune played when they disembarke­d.

The dramatic story seems tailor-made for opera, with Ciufo highlighti­ng the very extremes of humanity in a case that outraged Canadians at the time and fuelled intense anger towards Germany.

“(Patzig) is going to show the darkest impulses of war and then the nurses are going to show the grace that can exist even in the darkest circumstan­ces,” he says.

The forgotten resilience of these nurses is slowly returning to the spotlight, say Ottawa-based historians Dianne Dodd, who examined their deaths in a recent paper for the Canadian Bulletin of Medical History, and Cynthia Toman, author of the book “Sister Soldiers of the Great War: The Nurses of the Canadian Army Medical Corps.”

Sixty-one Canadian nurses are believed to have died during the Great War. There were 2,845 nurses that served, says Toman.

Rather than conform to gendered notions of frailty and illness under duress, these women responded to their duties as soldiers, says Dodd.

She writes of an ailing nurse named Agnes Forneri who faints while on day duty in early 1918, but continues to work. On night duty she vomits “a quart of blood” but still reports for duty the next day, finally collapsing and dying soon afterwards.

Toman also recounts a relentless work ethic, especially among the dozens stationed on the Greek island of Lemnos where two nurses died.

“It was considered one of the most horrible conditions of the whole war,” she says, noting there were scant food supplies and unsanitary conditions.

In many ways, they were treated as equals — Toman notes that Canadian nurses were the only enlisted women of any Allied military service. They started as first lieutenant­s and would progress through the ranks to major, the rank held by matron Margaret Clothilde Macdonald. In the Second World War, there were many more captains and majors, with the highest ranking woman being Col. Elizabeth Lawrie Smellie.

Still, Toman says their

For years, Canadians have been able to watch episodes of iconic American classics such as “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” “Batman,” or “I Love Lucy.” But where was Canada’s TV heritage? Why was our homegrown fare always, after its initial run, locked away in a vault?

Well, “The Littlest Hobo” has finally been let out of his kennel. After years of developmen­t, the Canada Media Fund and Google Canada have teamed to launch encore+, a new Youtube channel giving viewers here and around the world access to decades of Canadian film and TV gold.

“We discovered that there are about 22,000 titles of Canadian content, financed by the public sector, that was not available to the public because it was stuck in analog,” said Canada Media Fund CEO Valerie Creighton, who first approached Telefilm’s Carolle Brabant with the idea five years ago.

“I still get calls every day at work: Where can I find ‘Mr. Dressup’? Where can I find ‘Littlest Hobo’?”

The idea, says Creighton, was to “take this iconic Canadian content that many of our stars of today started their careers in, and allow it to be seen by the public and the world.”

Some of those stars were at Tuesday’s launch of the Youtube channel, including Jennifer Dale, Sheila Mccarthy, Henry Czerny, Aiden Devine, Pat Mastroiann­i, Michael Riley, and John Wildman. They were thrilled that their work in shows such as “Da Vinci’s Inquest,” “Degrassi,” “Little Mosque on the Prairie,” “The Boys of St. Vincent,” and “My American Cousin” are back.

Many of those actors could only see their early work on dusty VHS tapes or homemade digital transfers. Riley is thrilled to now be able to stream at least three shows in which he appeared, “This is Wonderland” “The Littlest Hobo,” and ‘Due South.”

“With most Canadian projects,” said the actor, “you do them, they get that little airing window and then they disappear, never to be seen again. It’s kind of nice, after three decades in this business, to see a platform where there’s going to be a resurgence.”

Mastroiann­i, who won a Gemini Award playing Joey Jeremiah on “Degrassi,” is happy to be on the new Youtube channel.

“We can’t let Netflix rule everything,” says the 45-year-old actor. “By having this channel available to fans, it’s going to be high quality. You get to see my pimples in high definition.”

Mastroiann­i hopes another series he did, the short-lived “Liberty Street,” will also eventually find its way to Youtube. The process of acquiring content is ongoing, says Creighton, who is still chasing rights to one of her favourite shows, “The Beachcombe­rs.”

The encore+ videos are ad supported, with any revenue generated going back to rights holders.

“There’s a real appetite for this kind of programmin­g on Youtube,” says Nicole Bell, communicat­ions manager at Youtube Canada.

accomplish­ments are little recognized today.

“It’s like a losing battle to try and raise visibility to these women.”

Granted, they represent just one half of one per cent of the Canadian force, but Toman says their significan­ce far outweighs their numbers.

“Every one of those 761,635 wounded or sick soldiers, plus thousands of Allied soldiers and untold numbers of prisoners of war and civilians that they cared for — everyone — passed through the hands of a CAMC nursing sister,” she says.

Ciufo hopes the opera will pay tribute to those women, especially nurses aboard the Llandovery Castle who were especially battered by their service.

“Being a nurse on a hospital ship was considered an easy assignment...and the nurses who ended up there were often broken,” he says.

“They’d have breakdowns while serving closer to the action, ending their shifts with tears streaming down their faces, terrible insomnia, obviously what we now would call post-traumatic stress. It was supposed to be a light assignment and was not supposed to be dangerous.

“But for those aboard the Llandovery Castle it was fatal.”

Over the past three years, Youtube has seen a 400 per cent increase in watch time for Canadian broadcaste­r content, with 90 per cent of that coming from outside of Canada.

Earning extra revenue is not a top priority for Devine.

“It’s more about this being an important cultural endeavour.” on Friday, November 10 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Saturday, November 11 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Only on Saturday morning a bake sale. Informatio­n: 450-2633025.

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