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The First Lady is a new opera concerning two weeks in the life of Eleanor Roosevelt from the death of FDR to VE Day. Music by Kenneth B. Wells. Libretto by Kenneth B. Wells, Gayle Patterson, Rickard Roudebush and Matt B. Wells.

The First Lady made it’s world premiere on Friday, February 19, 2010 and followed with five more performances as well as a symposium on Resiliency and Recovery and six speaker sessions featuring women leaders of today: Elyn Saks, Grethen Berland, Bonnie Lowenthal, Loretta Jones, Deborah Butterfield, Bonnie Zima, and Elizabeth Bromley.

The opera was sponsored by the UCLA Semel Institute Health Services and Research Center and needtheater. All performances and speaker sessions were free and open to the public.

Watch The First Lady Opera

About The First Lady


The work uses text and music in the public domain: the first verse and tune of “Yankee Doodle Boy” by George M. Cohan; portions of Truman’s radio speech on VE day (Truman Presidential library); portions of the tune from “America”, based on “God Save the Queen”; a variation on a theme by Antonin Dvorak from the New World Symphony; verses 1-3 and the tune of “Faith of our Fathers”, words by Frederick W. Faber, refrain by James G. Walton; music, St. Catherine, arr. by James G. Walton; sections of the Book of Common Prayer from the Order of the Burial for the Dead; and verses 1, 3, and 5 and the tune for “Onward Christian Soldiers”, words by Sabine Baring-Gould and music by Arthur S. Sullivan.  Facts and themes were obtained from a variety of sources and materials in the FDR and Truman Presidential Library, including two letters from Lucy Mercer Rutherford located in the FDR Library and reproduced in other published sources.  This is a work of historical fiction, and while based on historical events, takes liberties in depicting characters, names, situations, timing of events, and circumstances and alters or paraphrases these sources to convey the work’s artistic themes.  The libretto was copyrighted in 1992, and revised in 2006.  The music was written between 1996 and 2006, and the complete, revised work was copyrighted in 2007 – 2010.

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