 |
| The
film Allegiance:
The Legend of
Isaac Jones was
a cooperative
project between
the Golden Ball
Tavern Museum,
Weston High School,
and the Screen
Actors Guild. |
It’s
a bitter cold Saturday
in January. Men and
boys in colonial breeches
and coarse linen shirts
gather in front of
the historic Golden
Ball Tavern on Boston
Post Road in Weston.
Some wear masks and
others have painted
faces. Suddenly a
stone is thrown and
shatters an upstairs
window. Another man
breaks down the door
with an ax, and the
mob storms into the
tavern carrying lanterns
and torches. They
overturn tables, splinter
chairs, and smash
earthenware
tankards. The mob’s
leader demands to
see the innkeeper,
Isaac Jones, but he
is away. In his bedroom,
his wife Mary is weak
from childbirth. The
baby, just two weeks
old, howls. Isaac’s
17-year-old daughter,
Elizabeth, confronts
the mob with a pistol.
They back off, leaving
Elizabeth and her
younger siblings terrified
but unharmed.
Under
the direction of
Weston High School
video production
teacher Ted Garland,
a re-creation of
the “Weston
Tea Party,” as
it is known, has
been made into a
film entitled Allegiance:
The Legend of Isaac
Jones. The
film tells the
true story of
Jones, a prominent
Tory-leaning
merchant and tavern
keeper, during
the turbulent
period leading
up to the Declaration
of Independence.
The completed
film of about 35
minutes will premier
on Tuesday, May
19, as part of
the Weston High
School arts festival.
The public is invited
to attend this
or other screenings,
which will be
listed
on the Web site
www.AllegianceFilm.com.
The movie trailer,
a short preview
demonstrating
an impressive professionalism,
is also posted
on the Web site.
 |
| The
historic Golden
Ball Tavern was
built in 1768
by prominent Westonian
Isaac Jones. The
tavern “at
the sign of the
golden ball” operated
from 1770 to 1793. |
Allegiance is
a cooperative
project of the Golden
Ball Tavern Museum,
Weston High School,
and a team of 11 volunteer
professionals from
the Screen Actor’s
Guild, all coordinated
by producer James
Searles. Unlike the
events of 1774, the
2009 reenactment caused
no real damage. The
shattered glass was
made of sugar, baked
in special trays at
the Weston High School
cooking room. The
window sash, fake
front door, and taproom
tables were made for
the occasion by Weston
resident Will McFarland
and Weston High School
Art Director Chris
Fehl, who also made
the tankards that
were broken. McFarland
and Fehl recreated
a bar enclosure known
to have existed in
the taproom. According
to Joan Bines, Director
of the Golden Ball
Tavern Museum, “we
are excited about
keeping the bar in
place, as it gives
such a wonderful
feeling of what that
room would have looked
like in its tavern
days.”
Bines
explained that the
idea of involving
students in making
a movie about Isaac
Jones’s
life originated with
the education committee,
headed by Kay Conrad,
Carolyn McGuire, Karen
Valovcin, and Susie
Nichols. Funding was
provided by the museum’s
Gambrill Education
Fund. One goal was
for students to produce
a high-quality film
depicting the Weston
Tea Party and the
important events that
preceded and followed
the attack. Bines
added that, “as
another goal, we
wanted to foster a
sense of community
through the collaboration
of students, teachers,
and Weston residents
of all ages.”
 |
| Weston
High School video
production teacher
Ted Garland directs
a scene in the
taproom of the
Golden Ball Tavern.
At right, note
the bar enclosure,
which once stood
in this location
and was reconstructed
for the film. |
The
committee contacted
Ted Garland, who
has overseen the production
of six student-made
films in recent years.
Dozens of Weston
High School students
participated in writing
the script, planning
the production, filming,
editing, and completing
post-production tasks.
World languages director
and teacher Cort
Mathers took on the
role of Isaac Jones,
and METCO director
David Fuller played
Caleb. High school
students Anna Been,
Kara Joseph, and James
Lichtenthal honed
their acting skills
as family members
or townspeople, and
Doug Stone played
a British spy. Students,
parents, teachers,
younger community
members, re-enactors,
and tavern volunteers
participated as extras.
Members
of the Screen Actors
Guild played the
roles of Mary Jones
(Rena Baskin), Elisha
Jones (Chris Conte),
Samuel Savage (Bill
Rossi), Veanus (Andrea
Lyman), Edward Stowe
(Don Warnock), Lucas
Green (Roy Souza),
Hezekiah (Rob Grey),
Thaddeus (Duncan
Putney), DeBernier
(Ted Garland), Hepzibah
Jones (Madison Garland),
Amos (David Lincoln),
and Captain Hawkins
(James Searles).
Allegiance explores the moral,
political, and social
turmoil of the pre-Revolutionary
War years and its
impact on an ordinary
family in Weston.
Although he was a
well-respected citizen
and tried to stay
neutral, Isaac Jones
incurred the ire
of patriot groups.
Not only was his
home
raided and ransacked
by the “Liberty
Boys,” but
a patriot convention
held the following
year called for Isaac
and his tavern to
be “shunned.”
 |
| Preparing
to shoot the clean-up
scene following
the “Weston
Tea Party”. |
In
a pivotal scene in
Allegiance, Samuel
Savage, Weston’s
most famous patriot
leader, scolds Isaac
for continuing to
sell tea in the months
after the Boston Tea
Party. Isaac replies
that he is selling
Dutch tea, to which
Savage responds, “That’s
not the point, Isaac.
To an angry mob, tea
is tea. It’s
become a symbol of
British oppression.” Isaac
replies, “I’ve
taken no side in this,
Samuel, as you well
know. I’m
just trying to provide
a service.” Savage
answers in frustration, “That’s
the problem, Isaac.
You can’t
afford the luxury
of neutrality. People
want to know where
you stand.”
Despite
the raid and proposed
shunning, Isaac continued
to operate the Golden
Ball Tavern, receiving
his inn holder’s
license each year
from the town. In
1775 he harbored General
Gage’s
spies when they came
on a reconnaissance
mission to scout
the countryside and
decide whether to
go after patriot
ammunition
stores in Worcester
or Concord. But shortly
after the war began,
Isaac was persuaded
to come over to the
patriot cause and
began to help haul
supplies.
Joan
Bines and the museum’s
education committee
provided Ted Garland
with the primary source
material needed to
write the script,
including newspaper
accounts, judgments
of the Committees
of Correspondence,
diaries, and journal
entries of General
Gage’s
spies. Garland consulted
with writer and historian
Norma Jane Langford,
who researched every
part of Isaac’s
story and critiqued
the script.
 |
| The
Weston Militia
line up for drill
at Land’s
Sake farm. |
Most
of the filming took
place at the Golden
Ball Tavern, with
museum staff and
volunteers present
in an advisory capacity.
Susie Nichols arranged
for volunteers to
watch over the tavern
for six to ten hours
on each of the 22
days of shooting.
Karen Valovcin, who
was present at most
film shoots, was
in charge of acquiring
or sewing costumes
for more than 40
cast members and extras.
She borrowed clothes
and accessories from
colonial re-enactors,
made and rented costumes,
rummaged through
consignment shops,
and even recycled
curtains into costumes.
Weston
High School senior
David Reitano served
as Assistant Director
and headed a crew
of Video III classmates
including Jake Waxman,
Alex Aaronson, Ethan
Warman, and Doug
Stone. To keep the
shivering crew warm
during long hours
of shooting outside,
producer Searles
purchased
an outdoor heater.
Reitano, who plans
to study film next
year at Northwestern,
also made the movie
poster. Students
Suzanne Detour and
Katie Graves assisted
Searles in coordinating
schedules, assembling
call sheets, and “breaking
down the script” by
logging the cast,
props, and special
effects needed
for each scene.
According to Searles,
the students “got
more experience
with
actual movie production
than most film
school
graduates, in terms
of the technical
side.”
Teacher
Cort Mathers enjoyed
working with the
high schoolers on
an even plane, different
from the classroom: “The
crew is the boss,
and it was gratifying
to see how responsibly
and professionally
they handled that
switch in roles.” Weston
High School senior
Anna Been said she
was grateful for
the acting experience
and excited to learn
more about the history
of the town.
 |
 |
| Weston
High School students
worked as film
crew and helped
edit the film. |
One
scene was filmed
at the Josiah
Smith Tavern. |
Each
minute of the finished
film took at least
one hour to shoot.
Within the limited
budget, every effort
was made to be historically
accurate. Actors
removed 21st century
nail polish, earrings,
watches, and wedding
rings. Orthodontic
braces are nowhere
to be seen. While
90 percent of the
film is based on
fact, the scriptwriters
created a fictitious
villain, Lucas Greene,
to highlight the
moral ambivalence. “Lucas
is a patriot but also
a terrorist,” Searles
explained. “The
patriots did awful
things from the point
of view of those
loyal to the British.”
Searles
hopes to show the
film at least once
in a commercial theatre,
which would make
it eligible for award
competitions. If
Allegiance should
prove to be a moneymaker,
the Screen Actors
Guild contract requires
that the SAG professionals
share any proceeds. “But
the real reward is
the opportunity to
mentor the students,” says
Andrea Lyman, the
Newton actor who
plays Veanus. Ted
Garland summarized
the project with
this observation:
“This
is a great example
of what people can
do when they pull
together for an educational
goal. Here we have
a community group
[the Tavern] that
can provide resources,
a professional group
[The Screen Actors
Guild] that can provide
expertise, and a high
school video class
with a lot of drive
and energy. They all
benefit from the collaboration.
In the end, the tavern
gets an educational
and promotional movie
that they can show,
the guild members
get to give back to
their industry by
mentoring up-and-coming
moviemakers,
and the students get
an education that
rivals the very best
film schools. It’s
a win-win-win.
We
should look for
more
cooperative opportunities
like this, especially
in these challenging
economic times.”
 |
| Because
of the cold weather
and hours spent
filming outside,
producer James
Searles purchased
the outdoor heater
seen here. |
The
Golden Ball Tavern
Museum was formed
in 1964 after the
death of Ralph Jones,
the last of six generations
of the family who
lived in the former
tavern. The non-profit
organization has worked
for more than 40 years
to research, preserve,
teach, and exhibit
the history of Isaac
Jones and the Jones
family. The museum’s
education program
shares this history
with school children
in Weston and surrounding
communities. Weston
public school children
visit the tavern in
the third and fifth
grades, when they
study colonial life
and the Revolutionary
War.
The
Golden Ball Tavern
is open all year
round by appointment,
which can be made
by calling the museum
at 781.894.1751. Architectural
historians have called
it “the
most beautifully proportioned
example of Georgian
architecture in Weston.” Preservation
architect Allen C.
Hill wrote that, “this
is probably the most
unusual and without
question the most
evocative house museum
in New England.” Museum
founders adopted
a sophisticated preservation
philosophy that shows
layers of change
over time. The house
contains a remarkable
accumulation of Jones
family furniture and
artifacts. Above all,
the Golden Ball Tavern
has a compelling story
to tell, the story
of Isaac Jones and
his Allegiance.
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