A GOOD BOY


 

Based on years of death row workshops, conversations, and letters, A GOOD BOY brings centerstage the most hidden among us: men living on death row, the families who love them, and the officers who work alongside. The characters are fictional, but all the stories they tell are true.

 

 
All I have is the hope I’ll be around when my son walks out that prison door. That hope sets in my prayers. I just want to put my arms around him again. Sometimes, when we visit, I put my hands up against that glass, and I can feel heat. When I have my hands up there and he puts his hands up facing mine, you can feel the heat, even through the glass.
— Mother
 

 
  • Standing before us, applauding, whistling, weeping, was an audience of 450 students, community members, and families of men living on death row. They had just witnessed a performance of their loved ones’ stories. The families were in tears; they’d never imagined an audience caring. Nor had they ever met another family with a loved one sentenced to execution. As they left, one mother turned.

    “What I want to know is, when are you going to tell OUR story?”

    Stunned, we didn’t respond. But the air was electric with the “NOW” of an incarnating idea.“I don’t know,”we replied. “But I promise you, we will.”

  • The mothers’ emotions — the love for their children, the grief over the crimes or innocence — were so deep and transcendent, we knew immediately the piece required the powerful witness of the sung word.

    After one performance of COUNT, Kathryn Hunter Williams (Director) and Lynden (Playwright) finished notes with the actors and walked into the now — dark lobby. A tearful woman was waiting. She said, “You got it exactly right.” Her brother had been executed in April. When she learned we were meeting with family members, she asked to participate.

    Our collaborators on death row invited their own families. Over the next two years, Lynden met with family members in person, by phone call, text, and Zoom.

    It was through those conversations that the title of the piece took form, as mother after mother said, “He was a good boy.”

  • We knew these lived experiences would intimately shape the dialogue between story and music. At this point, Marc Callahan, opera singer and director, joined the creative team. Together we explored how the geographies, histories, and complexities of the families’ experiences called for various stylistic lenses — blues, worship and praise, country, hip hop. It became clear that the whole diasporic American sonic landscape was integral to telling these stories.

    We also knew women composers were underrepresented, and since mothers were the inspiration for this work, we wanted to work with a female composer. Once AJ Layague joined the project, the creative team was complete.

    Since 2018, the creative team has participated in four residencies exploring the stories, characters, soundscape, and music with professional performers and musicians. What has emerged is a full-length musical theatre piece that connects us to the families of those we execute and challenges us to reconsider our assumptions about exactly who is allowed to be “a good boy.”

    In 2022, the Orange County Community Remembrance Coalition (a collaboration with the Equal Justice Initiative) invited Hidden Voices to present as part of their annual gathering. It was the perfect opportunity for the first public presentation of some of the songs from A GOOD BOY, as well as story excerpts from the book Right Here, Right Now: Life Stories from America’s Death Row (Duke University Press, 2021).

    When we were considering what to call the presentation, the words “Of Liberation and Love” came to mind. Because that’s really what we’re doing: liberating each other through the power of love. Love welcomes each of us, as we are, and opens up a communal space to learn, to grow, to transform, and finally to act toward our own liberation.

    So, welcome to stories and songs of liberation and love.

 
 
 

VIEW TRAILER

 
 
 

Cast, CREATIVES, and Family members

 
 
 

The creative tEAM

 

LYNDEN HARRIS
Book & Lyrics

KATHRYN HUNTER WILLIAMS
Director

MARC CALLAHAN
Music

AJ LAYAGUE
Music

 
 

script EXCERPT

 
 

Welcome to Crossroads Correctional, where the prisoner count hasn’t cleared, families are stuck in the waiting room, and a ticking clock literally hangs on the wall.

As tensions mount, the captive visitors and lone guard struggle with their individual secrets, personal missions, and the previous night’s execution, but the situation is out of their control. 

Until, in the end, it isn't. 

Based on years of workshops on death row, conversations with family members, and trainings with correctional officers, A GOOD BOY brings centerstage the most hidden among us: men living on death row, the families who love them, and the officers who work alongside. The characters are fictional, but all the stories they tell are true.

 
 

featured songs

 

Click images to view score

 
 

 

Death Row is a microcosm of our over-incarcerated nation, but we rarely think of those we execute, much less their families. Even if the men are 'not guilty,' they’re perceived as 'not innocent enough,' and their families carry the same burden of shame and guilt by association. Yet, their stories—mothers, children, brothers, grandparents—are riveting and true, and challenge us to reconsider our assumptions about exactly who is allowed to be 'a good boy.'

 

Awards

Semifinalist for The O’Neill National Music Theatre Conference (2020 & 2021)

A Blade of Grass Fellowship (2020-2021)

Critical Issues Award from Humanities for the Public Good (2020 & 2021)

Cultural Arts Award, Triangle Community Foundation (2021)