By MICHELLE MILLER
Staff Writer
MILFORD — Thanks to a creative
partnership grant, Milford
Central School students have
been able to help promote ``Little
Eva,’’ a play based on a notorious
murderess of 1934.
MCS alumnus Isaac Rathbone,
now a playwright in New
York City, grew up
hearing about the legend
of Eva Coo and her
desperate struggle to
survive during the failing
economy of the
Great Depression. The
crime influenced him
to write a play, which
will premier Friday,
June 12 at 7 p.m. at
the Upper Susquehanna
Cultural Center in
Milford. The performance
is being produced
by Oracle Theatre, Inc. in
conjunction with The Greater
Milford Historical Association.
Other performances of ``Little
Eva,’’ will take place at the Upper
Susquehanna Culture Center
on June 13, 19 and 20 at 8 p.m.
and on June 14 and 21 at 2 p.m.
The closing weekend will be presented
in the actual courthouse
where Coo’s trial took place — at
the Otsego County Courthouse.
Performances will be held there
on June 26 and 27 at 8 p.m. and
on June 28 at 2 p.m. For advanced
tickets, contact ``Brown Paper
Tickets’’ at 1-800-838-3006 or
visit www.brownpapertickets.
com.
The play has provided
an opportunity for
students to combine
graphic arts, design, research,
history, advertising,
and marketing
in the creation of an
iconic image. Students
have been acting as creative
directors for the
campaign to promote
the theatre premier
based on the true story.
The MCS advertising class,
under the direction of high school
art teacher Jeanne Knowles, has
taken on the task of promoting
the production. The class of five
students has had the wonderful
opportunity to work with a professional, said Knowles.
Artist in residence Mark
Drnek, owner of the multimedia
company Sweet
Home Productions in
Oneonta, has been coming
to the class regularly to
teach the students about
marketing a product. The
students have been designing
logos and graphics for
posters, fliers and tickets.
They will soon be creating
public service announcements,
a playbill and experimenting
with other promotional
avenues.
``It’s an incredible learning
experience for these
kids,’’ said Knowles. ``They
are learning to work together
as a unit, learning teamwork,
and making connections.’’
Knowles said the experience
will benefit the students
in the future because
they will have samples of
their work that they can
put in a portfolio. They are
also learning how to meet
deadlines and work with a
client, said Knowles.
``They are getting a reallife
experience,’’ she added.
``It’s just so amazing.’’
The 1960s history class
at MCS has also been involved
in what has become
a collaborative effort of getting
the word out about the
production of ``Little Eva.’’
Junior Eden Ward, who
is in the history class and
advertising class, said about
20 students in the history
class helped research the
evil deeds of Coo. Ward said
students in the class read
Niles Eggleston’s novel `Eva
Coo, Murderess,’’ and did
much of their research at
the New York State Historical
Association and the Fennimore
Museum.
The research was used
to make a documentary,
which was filmed by the
video production class. The
documentary, entitled ``Eva
Coo, Murderess of Milford,’’
was edited by MCS student
Robert Meadows and won
first place honors at the regional
History Day competition.
The timing could not be
better because this month
marks the 75th anniversary
of the apparent `hit-andrun’
by the `mallet murderess’
of Milford. Coo was entrusted
with the care of one
of her employees, a slowwitted
handyman named
Henry Wright, after the
death of Wright’s mother.
She embezzled Wright’s inheritance
and burned down
his house for insurance
money.
The ambitious woman
then devised a scheme to
get Wright to take out a
number of life insurance
policies naming her as his
beneficiary — and then
killed him. Helping her carry
out the vile act was Martha
Clift, a young mother
from Oneonta.
On June 14, 1934, the
two women drove Wright to
an isolated location where
Coo allegedly hit him with a
mallet and Clift drove the
car over his unconscious
body. The two ladies then
dumped Wright’s body beside
a busy highway to
make it look like a hit-and run
accident. The police
were not convinced, and after
several hours of questioning,
Clift spilled the
beans and confessed.
Clift was convicted of
second-degree murder and
served jail time while Coo
was executed in the electric
chair at New York’s Sing
Sing Prison on June 27,
1935.
inactive
June 11, 2009
Students help promote twisted tale, 'Little Eva'
- inactive
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