Part 6 (1/2)
”Come on now, Confederates!”
”No, you Union chaps hold back there in ambush. You're not to dash out until you get the signal. Wait!”
”Keep that horse out of the way. He isn't supposed to dash across, riderless, until after the first volley.”
”Put in a little more action! Fall off as though you were shot, not as though you were bending over to see if your horse had a stone under his shoe! Fall off hard!”
”And you fellows that do fall off--lie still after you fall! Don't twitch as though you wanted to scratch your noses!”
”If some of 'em don't stay quiet after they fall off they'll get stepped on!”
”All ready now! Come with a rush when the signal's given!”
Mr. Pertell and his men were stationed near a ”battery” of camera men, who were ready to grind away; and the director and his a.s.sistants were calling their instructions through big megaphones. To reach the soldiers in the more distant parts of the field recourse was had to telephones, the wires of which were laid along the ground in shallow trenches, covered with earth so that the trampling of the horses would not sever them.
”Get that battery farther back among the trees!” cried Mr. Pertell to one of his helpers. ”It's supposed to be a masked one, but it's in plain sight now. Even the audience would see it, let alone the men it's supposed to fire on. Get it back!”
”Yes, sir,” answered the man, and he telephoned the instructions to the a.s.sistant director in charge of a battery of field guns that had been thundering away--the sound which had brought Ruth and Alice to the scene.
”Do we have any part in the battle scenes?” asked Ruth.
”Yes, quite big parts,” Paul informed her. ”But you don't go on to-day.
This is only a rehearsal.”
”But they've been firing real powder,” remarked Alice, ”and it looks as though they were going to fire more,” and she pointed to where men of the masked battery were ramming charges down the iron throats of their guns.
”Yes, they're firing, and charging, and doing all manner of stunts, and the camera men are grinding away, but they aren't using any film,” went on Paul. ”It's just to get every one used to working under the excitement. They have to fire the guns so the horses will get so they don't mind them when the real time comes.”
Hundreds of extra players had been engaged to come to Oak Farm for these battle scenes in the drama, ”A Girl in Blue and A Girl in Gray,” and some of them were already on hand with their mounts. As has been said, special accommodations had been erected where they were to stay during the weeks they would be needed. There were more men than women among the extra people, though a number of women and girls were needed in the ”town” scenes.
Most of the men were former members of the militia, cowboys and adventurers, all of whom were used to hard, rough riding. This was necessary, for when battle scenes are shown there must be some ”killed,”
and when a man has a horse shot from under him, or is shot himself, riding at full speed, even though the cartridges are blank, the action calls for a heavy fall, sudden and abrupt, to make it look real. And this is not easy to do, nor is it altogether safe with a mob of riders thundering along behind one.
Yet the men who take part in these battle scenes do it with scarcely a thought of danger, though often many of them are hurt, as are the horses.
In brief the story of the play in which Ruth was to take the part of a girl in Blue, and Alice of a girl in Gray, was this. They were cousins, and Ruth was visiting Alice's home in the South when the war broke out.
Alice, of course, sided with her people, and loved the gray uniforms, while Ruth's sympathies were with the North.
Ruth determined to go back North and become a nurse, while Alice, longing for more active work, offered her services as a spy to help the Confederacy. Though on opposite sides, the girls' love for one another did not wane.
Then came the scenes of the war. Battles were to be shown, and there were plots and counter-plots, in some of which Ruth and Alice had no part. Mr. DeVere was cast for a Northern General, and the character became him well. Later on Alice and Ruth were to meet in a hospital among the wounded. Alice was supposed to get certain papers of value to her side from a wounded Union officer. As she was escaping with them Ruth was to intercept her, and the two were to have a ”strong” scene together.
Alice, ignoring the pleadings of her cousin and about to depart with the papers, learns that the officer from whom she took them was the same one that had saved her father's life on the battlefield. She decides to forego her mission as a spy, even though it may mean the betrayal of her own cause, when the news comes in of Lee's surrender, and her sacrifice is not demanded. Then ”all live happily for ever after.”
That is but a mere outline of the play, which was to be an elaborate production. And it was the rehearsal for the preliminary battles and skirmishes that the girls were now witnessing.
”Tell that battery to get ready to fire!” cried Mr. Pertell, and this word went over the telephone.
”Come on now with that Union charge!” was the next command.