Captain Isaac Van Deusen, who gave his name to
the village where the church is located (Van Deusenville) was instrumental
in founding the church.
Despite rumors to the contrary, Trinity Church
never burned to the ground. It simply outgrew the small stone church that
had been built on the site in 1830 and it was torn down to make room for
a larger wooden church.
The church has two corner stones. One from the
old stone church and another for the new wooden structure.
The current building was modeled after the old
St. Paul's Church in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. (Not the current version
of St. Paul's) It was designed by Richard Upjohn who was more famous for
designing Trinity Church on Wall Street.
In the 1930s the church was brown.
The church originally had a steeple. It was taken
down in 1955 because it was rotting.
The last full-time minister of Trinity was named
Howard Murray Dumbell II
The first offer to buy the former Trinity Church
came from a farmer who wanted to use it as a hog barn. Reverend Dr. Pierce
Middleton, who was the rector of St. James Church in Great Barrington and
in charge of the property turned him down.
Alice Brock's family used to stop at the church
on vacations when she was a girl.
Alice's mother bought the church for Alice and
her husband Ray for $2,000. At the time it had little electricity, no plumbing
and no bedrooms.
Reverend Cannon S. S. Whitman has only performed
one deconsecration ceremony in his life- that of the Trinity Church. The
text of the ceremony that is spoken in the movie Alice's Restaurant is
accurate. It is prescribed by the Book of Offices, but Reverend Pierce
Middleton appears in the film.
St. James, Trinity's parent church, made plans
to remove two memorial tablets in the sanctuary but they apparently forgot.
The tablets are still there. They honor John Coffing, who donated most
of the money to build the church and Eveline Burgert who was a beloved
and highly active member of the congregation.
Alice's Restaurant was called The Back Room Rest.
"Officer Obie" of the song Alice's Restaurant
was William Obanhein. He was known as "Bill" to his friends, but before
Arlo Guthrie's song no one called him "Obie." He twice posed for the famous
Stockbridge artist Norman Rockwell. He appeared in advertisements for the
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company and for Goodwill Industries.
There really was a blind judge. Judge James E.
Hannon and his seeing eye dog Susie both played themselves in the movie.
The historical room of the Stockbridge Library
has the littering photos. They are not in color.
The $25 fine for littering was relatively hefty.
Average moving violations commanded fines of about $10.
Alice's Restaurant, the movie, was director Arthur
Penn's first film after the highly successful Bonnie and Clyde. His next
film after Alice was Little Big Man with Dustin Hoffman.
The real Alice and Ray Brock appear as extras
in the film. How to spot the real Alice. In the scene where "Ray" is putting
up insulation she is wearing a brown turtle neck and her hair in a pony
tail. In the Thanksgiving scene she wears a bright pink satin blouse. In
the party scene she is wearing a western style dress.
Arlo's costume in the party scene is meant to
be the King of Cups from a pack of tarot cards.
Tina Chen, who played Arlo's on-screen girlfriend,
wore an authentic Chinese dress that had belonged to her grandmother. When
they wrapped up the shoot, the film crew put the dress in storage. She
never got it back.
In case you didn't know, Arlo Guthrie's real-life
wife, the former Jackie Hyde, is not Asian.
Shelly Plimpton, who played the 15 year old groupie
in the movie, was actually 20 years old at the time.
Notes for nitpickers: During the deconsecration
scene in the movie, take a close look at the ceiling of the sanctuary.
Stage lights are clearly visible. Also, keep an eye on the leaves. The
movie was filmed over a 10 week period beginning in October. The scenes
in the church were some of the earliest. If the Thanksgiving scene had
really been shot around Thanksgiving, there would be few leaves left on
the trees. Instead they are at their peak colors. Because the scenes were
shot out of sequence, you can watch the leaves fall and re-appear if you
pay attention.
The couple who eventually sold the church to Arlo
had never heard the song Alice's Restaurant when they decided to buy the
property. They went to look at it on Thanksgiving day because that was
when they had vacation. They had no idea there was any significance to
that until later.
Ma's Hanuman Ghar, the new name of the sanctuary,
translates to Ma's House of Hanuman. Hanuman is a Hindu monkey god of service
also known as the Son of the Wind.
The Guthrie Center now has more members than the
building ever had as a church. Many of the members, however, hail from
remote states and countries and have never stepped foot in the building.
[Return to the Arlo, Alice and Anglican's page][The Guthrie Center Web page]