Cornerstone
The feature-length documentary
Cornerstone: An Interstate Adventure is an intimate,
humorous and provocative look at three very different Americans
and the way that theater changed their lives.
In 1991, the Cornerstone Theater
Company -- an innovative ensemble that mounts productions
of classic plays in small towns, using local residents as
cast and crew -- took on their most ambitious project to date,
a national tour of Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale.
Rather than drawing participants from a single community,
this production was composed of people – waitresses,
farmers, teachers, nurses, hairdressers – from the many
small, rural communities across America where Cornerstone
had lived and worked from 1986-1990.
From rehearsals in a deserted
schoolhouse in Norcatur, Kansas (pop. 193), to outdoor performances
on the main streets of towns across America, to their final
sold-out shows on the Mall in Washington, D.C., Cornerstone
follows the experiences of three cast members in this epic
national tour: Wanda Daniels, a waitress from Montgomery,
West Virginia; Rod Prichard, a day-laborer from Marmarth,
North Dakota; and Edret Brinston, a former All-American track
star from Port Gibson, Mississippi. Removed from their everyday
lives and surrounded, for the first time, by a group of people
with widely differing attitudes and backgrounds, these characters
battle against loneliness, isolation and the fatigue of a
10,000-mile national tour, while simultaneously participating
in, and often celebrating, their role in a uniquely American
theatrical experiment. Through their deeply personal stories,
Cornerstone explores the connections that hold us
together as a nation and the misunderstandings which keep
us apart.
Cornerstone is a production of
filmmakers Stephen Ives (The West, Seabiscuit, Reporting
America at War) and Michael Kantor (The West, American
Masters: Quincy Jones, Broadway). As Co-Directors, Ives
and Kantor lived and traveled with the Cornerstone company
for six months over the spring and summer of 1991, shooting
a total of over 300 hours of footage. Ives and Kantor continued
to work on the project while producing and directing other
PBS projects. After almost twelve months of editing, the ninety-minute
documentary had its premiere at the Taos Film Festival. It
was also shown as part of the first season on HBO Signature
in 1999.
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