Schoolhouse

Schoolhouse

June 30 – July 25. Previews: June 30, July 1
Opening Night: Thursday, July 2 Tuesday to Saturday at 6 pm
With an added Monday performance on July 20th
4th Line Theatre

Schoolhouse arrives with the dust of rural Ontario still on its boots and a sharp eye for the fragile order of small-town life. Written by Leanna Brodie, directed and choreographed by Monica Dottor, with musical direction and original compositions by Justin Hiscox, this period piece unfolds like a memory from a country that’s half vanished and half still haunting us.

Set in 1938 inside S.S. #1 Jericho, a one-room schoolhouse just outside the fictional village of Baker’s Creek, the play follows Melita Linton, an 18-year-old first-time teacher fresh out of Normal School and stepping into the kind of job that demanded equal parts nerve, patience, and backbone. What she finds is a spirited class of students, a close-knit farming community bound by habit and hardship, and the uneasy arrival of Ewart, a troubled young man newly released from reform school and sent to work on a nearby farm.

As Miss Linton tries to reach him, Schoolhouse begins to reveal the deeper currents running beneath the village calm — the loyalties, the silences, the unspoken fears, and the social codes of a world where everyone knows everyone, and nobody escapes notice. The result is a work rich in humour, heart, and quiet tension, evoking a distinctly Canadian past without embalming it in nostalgia.

With costume design by Chelsea Day and set design by Michelle Chesser, the production runs June 30 to July 25, with previews on June 30 and July 1, and opening night Thursday, July 2. Performances run Tuesday through Saturday at 6 p.m., with an added Monday performance on July 20.

A story of youth, duty, belonging, and the uneasy edges of grace, Schoolhouse opens the door to a vanished rural world — and lets all its beauty and bruises walk back in.

“Schoolhouse,” 2007. Photo by Wayne Eardley, Brookside Studio.