Riders of the Purple Sage: Opera Doc
  • Home
  • Film
  • Opera
  • Partners
  • Blog
  • Contact

Every good story needs a frame.

Goodbye to a Legend

10/4/2021

0 Comments

 
GOODBYE TO A LEGEND
We bid a reverent adieu to legendary composer Carlisle Floyd. Considered the "Grandfather of American Opera," Floyd was a deft composer and librettist who elevated regional themes to powerful universal stories. He was also the mentor of composer Craig Bohmler. Craig's new opera "Riders the Purple Sage" is dedicated to Carlise. We are honored Carlisle appears in our "Riders of the Purple Sage: The Making of a Western Opera' in one of his last interviews.
​
Carlisle Floyd, New York Times

Watch the Riders Film
0 Comments

We got the band back together!

4/9/2021

0 Comments

 
WE GOT THE BAND TOGETHER
​Great round table with the Creatives and Cast of "Riders of the Purple Sage," and special guests Laura Lee Everett from OPERA America and Douglas Ramirez from The Actors Fund.  Hosted by our good friend Shawn Jeffrey at ADA Artist Management. 
0 Comments

Who's got stars, yes we do?

3/30/2021

0 Comments

 

Who's got stars, yes we do!

​​https://www.broadwayworld.com/article/Peter-Coyote-Karin-Wolverton-and-More-to-Star-in-RIDERS-OF-THE-PURPLE-SAGE-THE-MAKING-OF-A-WESTERN-OPERA-20210330

0 Comments

Broadway World Sings Our Praises

3/30/2021

0 Comments

 
BROADWAY WORLD SINGS OUR PRAISES
​Broadway World said our film is "A soaring and epic testimonial to the creative process." 
We're grateful for this stunning review of 'Riders of the Purple Sage: The Making of a Western Opera." 
https://www.broadwayworld.com/phoenix/article/BWW-Review-RIDERS-OF-THE-PURPLE-SAGE-THE-MAKING-OF-A-WESTERN-OPERA-20210323
0 Comments

Art Dealer Diaries - Duex

3/25/2021

0 Comments

 
ART DEALER DIARIES - DUEX
It was an honor to sit down with Dr. Mark Sublette from Medicine Man Gallery and talk about Ed Mell's stage design for the opera "Riders of the Purple Sage" and how the landscape of the Southwest influences my filmmaking. 

https://youtu.be/HUbZvFuHzmc
0 Comments

ART DEALER DIARIES

3/17/2021

0 Comments

 
ART DEALER DIARIES - Part One
Thank you to Mark Sublette at Medicine Man Gallery for having me on his Art Dealer Diaries podcast to talk about my evolution as a filmmaker and Ed Mell's monumental stage set for the opera "Riders of the Purple Sage." We're delighted to unveil the film that explores the creative process of Ed mell, Zane Grey, and composer Craig Bohmler. "Riders of the Purple Sage: The Making of a Western Opera" premieres March 25 to April 11th at Watch.RidersOperaFilm.com

KRISTIN ATWELL FORD - Art Dealer Diaries, Part 1
​https://youtu.be/HFS3X0Zzlng


RSS Feed

0 Comments

A Year Without Theatre

3/12/2021

0 Comments

 
A YEAR WITHOUT THEATRE
​A year without theatre. It's been tough on a lot of people. Singers, musicians, costumers, stagehands, and audiences. 

The climax of our film is when the audience witnesses the opera for the first time. Sharing our film with our audience is what we have been working for the last eight years.

We are launching "Riders of the Purple Sage: The Making of a Western Opera" to help singers, musicians, and essential theatre workers make it through to the day we can create art together again.

The film’s streaming premiere will benefit The Actors Fund, a national nonprofit that provides a safety net for creatives sidelined by the pandemic.

Join us anytime from Thursday, March 25th to Sunday, April 11th.
Tickets are $10: watch.RidersOperaFilm.com
​

For those of you in our creative posse who've had a rough go during Covid closures, if you work professionally in theater, film, television, music, opera, radio or dance, The Actors Fund likely has a program that can help. Services include emergency financial assistance, affordable housing, counseling, secondary career development, and more.

Creative professionals can apply for emergency pandemic grants at:
actorsfund.org/am-i-eligible-help

Thanks for being our audience, and for helping performers and artisans make it through until the curtain goes back up!
Picture
0 Comments

Director's Statement

5/6/2020

0 Comments

 

RSS Feed

DIRECTOR'S STATEMENT
"Westerns carry meaning and value, codes of conduct, standards of judgment that shape our sense of the world and govern our behavior without our having the slightest awareness of it.”
Jane Tomkins – “West of Everything.”

Some of the grandest things America thinks of itself are symbolized by the settling of the western frontier. Zane Grey helped define the American character by creating Lassiter, the man in black, the first anti-hero bent of vigilante justice, a man who takes matters into his own hands. Regardless of our heroic notions, the themes in “Riders” - sexual harassment, religious zealotry, isolationism, gun control, even a church shooting, are issues we still grapple with. At its core, “Riders” is a power struggle over water. Jane Withersteen owns it. Her churchmen want it to build their empire - and they stop at nothing to demonstrate God is on their side.

If Grey's story provides the blood in this film, mounting the opera is its beating heart. Opera is larger than life, requires the cooperation of legions of artists, is terrifically expensive, and must adapt to survive. Before witnessing this work, even as a musical theatre-lover, opera seemed like a stilted way to tell antiquated stories, but new works are telling stories that matter. Opera gathers all the arts in a single heightened explosion of human experience. It may, in fact, be the perfect art form for our operatic times.

“Riders” is the seminal Western. It’s a story about grief and redemption and what it takes to live in the punishingly beautiful land I call home. With its musical storytelling and grand setting rendered by my favorite living painter, this film about the artistic process and the landscape that inspires it fulfills my soul’s thirst for wilderness and art. 

Kristin Atwell Ford
Director/Producer
Scottsdale, Arizona
Picture
0 Comments

The Landscape of Zane Grey

11/24/2017

0 Comments

 

Pipe Spring National Monument
Zane Grey's Inspiration for the Withersteen Ranch

Picture
Last fall, the artistic team of the new opera "Riders of the Purple Sage", set off for fabled landscapes steeped in history. We followed to places Zane Grey visited in Arizona over a century ago that were the novelist's real life inspirations for two key locations in “Riders of the Purple Sage”. We visited Pipe Spring National Monument on the Arizona Strip - a remote sliver of Arizona nestled between the Grand Canyon and the Utah line. Zane Grey visited Pipe Spring in 1908 and discovered the Mormon tithing ranch that would become the bedrock of the plot for his most popular novel.

PIPE SPRING NATIONAL MONUMENT
With its spring fed water supply in the middle of an arid stretch of land, and access to some of the best grazing land on the Strip, it is easy to see how Grey could craft this lonely outpost into the focal point of the struggle for wealth and power that drives “Riders of the Purple Sage.” When we dropped into the valley a rush of wonder engulfed us like a stampede. What a confluence of landscape and longing, what sublime beauty and reverent desolation. What was life like here in the late 1800s on the dusty frontier? Perhaps Zane Grey thought the same thing when decided to turn Pipe Spring into the fictional Withersteen Ranch.

Picture
NOW: The fort doors on Winsor Castle have been restored by the National Park Service.
Picture
THEN: Ranch foreman Edwin D. Woolley, his family and the Chamberlain family, and ranch hands on April 27, 1891. Photo courtesy of National Park Service, Pipe Spring National Monument, PSIP 1074
More Pipe Spring history

The red stone fortress of Winsor Castle is as breathtaking in its own way as the geologic wonder of the Vermillion Cliffs that frame it. Pipe Spring was established by Mormons as a tithing ranch in the early 1870s and brought the first telegraph to Arizona Territory. It was a popular spot on the “Honeymoon Trail.” Travelers on their way to get married in the Temple in St. George would water their horses at Pipe Spring - a piece of history that may have inspired Zane Grey’s iconic opening scene when Lassiter stops to water his horse and interrupts Elder Tull preparing the whip Venters.

Completed in 1872, the fort was built directly over its water source so pioneers could lock themselves inside and persevere through Navajo raids, or outlast troops sent by the Federal government looking to arrest polygamists. Those attacks never came and the settlers peacefully grazed cattle and made butter and cheese that supplied Mormon families in the region until the 1890s.

Picture
"The home of Jane Withersteen...was a flat, long, red-stone structure with a covered court in the center through which flowed a lively stream of amber-colored water."
                                     - Zane Grey, 'Riders of the Purple Sage'

Along with the pioneering history of the Arizona Strip, we discovered Zane Grey's creative process. Grey would visit remote places that were still mysterious and exotic, hear the stories from the people who lived there, and learn the hardships of fashioning a life on the bleeding edge of the frontier. He would then sit down with pencil and paper and voraciously write his experiences of the landscape and its characters with a fictional mix of romance and action. Zane Grey's Western novels defined a new American genre and left a legacy that would inform other novels, movies, TV shows, and the way we think about the mythic territory of the West, for years to come.
0 Comments

    Authors

    Our guest authors will explore the artistic process and the mythic territory known as the West.

    Archives

    October 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    May 2020
    November 2017

    RSS Feed

    Categories

    All

    View my profile on LinkedIn
  • Home
  • Film
  • Opera
  • Partners
  • Blog
  • Contact