Stephanie Martin, of the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design, chats with Brainstorm about her powerful opera about a Canadian hospital ship that was torpedoed in June 1918. This is how history comes to life.
Where does a composer look for inspiration? For 91亚色 Professor Stephanie Martin, an accomplished composer and conductor in the Department of Music, history provides fertile ground. Captivated by the true story of a Canadian hospital ship, the Llandovery Castle, torpedoed by a German U-boat in the Celtic Sea on June 27, 1918, she chose to write an opera, with librettist Paul Ciufo, to commemorate the nurses of the ill-fated ship.

Stephanie Martin
One hundred years after the June 1918 tragedy, and with funding from the Canada Council for the Arts, Martin鈥檚 opera premiered in two workshop performances in Toronto. It was met by enthusiastic audiences and critical praise. Clearly, Martin鈥檚 love of history shines through this production, making a forgotten event from the past all the more accessible, vivid and emotionally charged.
A composer and musician with recordings on the Naxos, Marquis and Dorian labels, Martin sits down with Brainstorm to discuss the opera.
Q: What was the genesis of The Llandovery Castle?
A: I visited France and Belgium in 2014 to help friends research family history from the First World War. We visited many Commonwealth cemeteries. Being in Europe, seeing those Canadian graves, and witnessing how those villages still remember us was an epiphany. I returned home with a new awareness of the impact of that terrible war.
In 2015, in Toronto鈥檚 Calvin Church, I noticed a plaque dedicated to the memory of a woman 鈥 Mary Agnes McKenzie 鈥 inscribed with a story of the Llandovery Castle hospital ship. I thought: This is an important Canadian story, one dramatic enough for an opera.

HMHS Llandovery Castle (image: Wikipedia)
Q: The story centres around three strong female characters 鈥 Margaret 鈥淧earl鈥 Fraser; the matron of the ship, Minnie 鈥淜ate鈥 Gallagher; and Rena 鈥淏ird鈥 McLean. Tell us about them.
A: As the daughter of the lieutenant-governor of Nova Scotia, Pearl was in charge. She drives the drama, since she must determine who鈥檚 mentally stable enough to return to the front. The hospital ship was a relatively easy assignment because the return trip to Europe had no wounded on board. The nurses could recuperate somewhat from the PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) they suffered.
Many of them had served together in Salonika 鈥 a horrible experience, treating the wounded without proper facilities, medicine or sufficient water. Many were assigned to hospital ships to recover from that constant trauma.
Q: You connected with these characters, and even visited their hometowns.
A: Yes. I visited New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, Pearl鈥檚 hometown, for a commemorative presentation to the mayor and the town council.
I also visited Prince Edward Island 鈥 Bird鈥檚 hometown of Souris. I joined a gathering of the McLean clan, visiting Bird鈥檚 memorials, her family home and the site of a former hospital named after her in Charlottetown. Bird鈥檚 relatives travelled from all corners of Canada, from the Yukon to the East Coast, to attend the opera and to pay tribute to her.

The nurses on the ill-fated ship. Left to right: 鈥淧earl鈥 Fraser, 鈥淜ate鈥 Gallagher and 鈥淏ird鈥 McLean (image: 漏 Imperial War Museums)
Q: Can you describe the process of writing this nine-character opera?
A: This project was not an ideal model for writing a major work. We had an impossible deadline. I met Paul Ciufo in July 2017, and the commemoration of the event was June 2018. That鈥檚 really not enough time to write an opera! Usually it鈥檚 more methodical 鈥 the research is undertaken and the libretto is developed, and only then one starts writing music. But we were so motivated, totally charged up and devoted to getting some kind of public airing on the very day of the 100th commemoration.
Paul would write a scene, and then I would grab it and set it to music. Some of the scenes were composed before the ending was written. But, though our method was unconventional, I think there was a freshness and vigour to our process that comes through in the final product.
Q: What鈥檚 next?
A: There will be performances of Llandovery Castle on Feb. 28, 29 and March 1, 2020, at Wilfrid Laurier University.
Paul and I have teamed up again to write a new piece for the 100-voice Pax Christi Chorale. It will premiere on Nov. 2 in Toronto. It鈥檚 based on Aesop鈥檚 fable The Sun, the Wind, and the Man with the Cloak.
Paul and I are also working on our third and fourth venture. It has turned out to be a very fruitful partnership. We aspire to become the Gilbert and Sullivan of Ontario!
Q: How has 91亚色 supported your work?
A: This opera wouldn鈥檛 exist if I hadn鈥檛 had a sabbatical year to compose, to travel, and meet the families and look at primary sources. I鈥檓 indebted to 91亚色 for supporting my creative work.
To be recognized at the research leaders event, hosted in April 2019 by the President鈥檚 Office and the Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, was wonderful. It鈥檚 a great privilege to know that 91亚色 acknowledges that what I鈥檓 doing is meaningful.
To learn more about the opera, visit the or the . To learn more about Martin, visit her .
To learn more about Research & Innovation at 91亚色, follow us at ; watch our new , profiling current research strengths and areas of opportunity such as artificial intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the , a glimpse of the year鈥檚 successes.
By Megan Mueller, senior manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, 91亚色, muellerm@yorku.ca
