New Church Life September/October 2015 | Page 106

new church life: september/october 2015 He related the entire show to me from memory. Chris is a very earnest and animated guy, and he has a way of drawing you into his dreams. “By the time I had finished my cheeseburger and fries I was absolutely convinced that such a musical should be made. However, inwardly I was skeptical that such a production could ever reach Broadway. I left thinking, ‘Blessed are the dreamers and the risk takers.’ I’ve never been happier to be wrong. “As the Associated Press recently observed, ‘A serious musical with epic themes doesn’t come to Broadway that often.’ I recommend this musical to anyone who believes in the reality of personal spiritual redemption – and everyone who loves a really good show!” Ed has maintained contact with Chris Smith, who submitted this account of his experience: “For years I served the Bryn Athyn community as a police officer and then later as a producer of documentaries about historic buildings and the people who made them. All the while I was working on a crazy dream, a vision of bringing something completely new to Broadway. I wanted to have the central plot of a major musical revolve around the spiritual and moral redemption of an actual historical person. “That person is John Newton,  the 18th century slave trader turned abolitionist, hymnist and preacher. His journey from the docks and back alleys of Chatham, England, to Sierra Leone and Barbados turns this story of personal character development into an epic saga, complete with storms, sinkings and battles on land and sea.   “His journey back to the simple faith his mother bequeathed him, and that of Mary Catlett, his childhood sweetheart and the girl he would eventually marry, provide a very satisfying love story as well. “I wrote the music, lyrics and book of the show. My mentor and co-author Arthur Giron helped guide the story process and my development as a writer, something for which I had no training and no professional experience. “My dream became a reality on July 16th and I hope (people from Bryn Athyn) will get to experience it for themselves at New York’s Nederlander Theatre.” Bret Bostock, Assistant Director of Glencairn Museum, traveled to New York for the first matinee of Amazing Grace with his wife, Jessica, who teaches dance at Bryn Athyn College and works as a choreographer throughout the region. He offers these memories: “We got to attend the show through interesting circumstances. Jess has been working with Dr. Joseph Ohrt on shows at both Bucks County Playhouse and Central Bucks West High School for the past year. Through this collaboration she learned that he has been working with Chris Smith on Amazing Grace for 538