Dallas History Comes Alive on The Second Saturday of The Month at The Aldredge House

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Aldredge House
Lindsey Humphreys as Willie Newbury Lewis and Tom McWhorter as Will Lewis

If you’ve lived in Dallas for a while, you’ve heard of Aldredge House, the magnificent mansion at 5500 Swiss Avenue designed by Hal Thomson and Marion Fooshee. It’s the jewel in the neighborhood’s crown and Dallas’ only historic house museum.

To our knowledge, it’s also the only home in America to host a living play.

Aldredge House
In 1921, prominent banker George E. Aldredge and his wife Rena (Munger) purchased the house. They were active civic leaders and major contributors to the arts. In 1974, Mrs. Aldredge and her family gave the House to the Dallas County Medical Society Alliance Foundation to be used as its headquarters. 

What’s a living play, you ask?

You’ve probably been to a stately home with docents in each room telling you about its history, but The Friends of Aldredge House have taken the concept further.

In 2018 three Friends of Aldredge House board members began to brainstorm ideas for bringing Dallas’ history to life. Marianne Howells, Rene Schmidt, and Evelyn Montgomery decided the best way to write a story about the original homeowners, who, by the way, were not the Aldredge family.

Aldredge House

In 1915, West Texas rancher William Lewis was keen to make his social mark in Dallas and knew that began with a grand house. His young bride, Willie, was not enthused, to say the least. Lewis forged ahead, and for two years Thomson and Fooshee pulled out all the proverbial stops, creating a home that would not only stand out but also stand the test of time.

Completed in 1917, what you see today is almost exactly what William and Willie saw during the four short years they lived here.

Aldredge House

The Rebel of The Aldredge House

As I mentioned, Willie was not an enthusiastic participant in the process. Even though she was a debutante, she was more comfortable in a cottage than as the lady of a grand house. Alone in an enormous mansion while Will was off ranching in West Texas, she was not a happy camper.

She was also a bit of a rebel. Ladies of her set did not do much but manage homes, entertain, and raise children. That was not enough for Willie, so she wrote a book about her life, Willie, A Girl From a Town Called Dallas, which is an excellent read and available on Amazon. It’s from this book that the board members took the storyline for the living play, The Writer and The Rancher.

“I wanted to give the history of this house some sparkle,” Howells said. “I thought if we kept it to a tight time frame and portrayed when the Lewis family was residing here, visitors would walk away with a real feeling of how people lived then.”

Aldredge House
Carol Hensley portrays Mrs. Rena Aldredge, who leads visitors through the living play.

Building on Their Success

Although the first iteration was successful, Howells felt they could create something even more enjoyable.

Aldredge House
Mel McDonald plays one of the few fictional characters Jesse, the chauffeur.

“We received a $10,000 grant from the Communities Foundation in January 2020, right before the pandemic,” Howells said. “It allowed us to hire a local playwright, Isabella Russell-Ides, and a director, Susan Sargeant. Karla Peterson upgraded our costumes. We worked on it through March, stopped for a while due to the pandemic, and rehearsed on Zoom. We returned in the summer and held the performance outside in the summer of 2021 for two months.”

Rikki Sushaun portrays Maudy, the maid who joins suffragette Nona Mahony, played by Gina Kidd.

Russell-Ides recreated the play with actual interaction between the characters. They enlarged the suffragette movement part of the play to highlight the historic 1920 ratification of the 19th Amendment giving most women the right to vote. Pay attention to that word most when you see the play.

Nona Mahoney discusses women’s rights with Willie as Jesse looks on, probably bemused by the thought of women voting.

A cast of 10 professional and potentially professional actors brings a fantastic amount of talent to this production. The audience moves with them as they move inside and outside the home, learning about Willie’s life in the early 1920s.

Aldredge House
Nona Mahoney convinced Willie and her mother, portrayed by Elizabeth Gunby, to sign the petition for women’s voting rights.

“I think the programming and events we have at Aldredge House open people’s eyes,” Melanie Vanlandingham, president of the board of Friends of Aldredge, said. “It’s perfectly situated to tell the stories of the blossoming of Dallas. Aldredge House is at the heart of Dallas’ history.”  

Aldredge House
Martha Heimburg portrays the cook and serves up brownies to the guests during the play. Here she is discussing household issues with Rikki Sushaun.

By all accounts, the living play has been immensely successful and is at capacity every month. Candy, her granddaughter Hattie, and I all attended last Saturday.

“My 8-year-old granddaughter was mesmerized,” Candy said. “This is a wonderfully creative way to tell the story of Dallas when it was just a budding city.”

The Writer and The Rancher is presented on the second Saturday of every month except for July and August.

Reserve your place for the next event at friendsofaldredgehouse.org

Karen is a senior columnist at Candy’s Media and has been writing stories since she could hold a crayon. She is a globe-trotting, history-loving eternal optimist who would find it impossible to live well without dogs, Tex-Mex, and dark chocolate. She covers luxury properties and historic preservation for Candys Dirt.

2 Comments

  1. Joan M Ridley on January 19, 2023 at 1:37 pm

    I’m so glad you covered this story. I have attended the re-enactment at least three times and every time I have learned something about Old East Dallas, and I have lived here for 32 years!

  2. Betsie on April 14, 2023 at 1:50 pm

    Love-LoVe-LOVE this!!!

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