'The Wake Up Call' Documentary Explores A West Virginian's Fight After War

“The Wake Up Call” will be shown at 7 p.m. on Thursday, June 23 at the Culture Center Theater at the Capitol Complex in Charleston. A pre-screening reception begins at 6 p.m. For more information, including ticket prices, visit festivallcharleston.com.

West Virginia native Dave Evans enlisted in the Marine Corps when he was only 17. A year later, his unit was ambushed in Vietnam. Most of the men were killed. Evans survived but lost both legs.

He returned to the United States, where he was fitted with prosthetics.

Evans went to school, joined the national anti-war effort and became a peace activist. He later divided his time between West Virginia and a long list of war-torn countries, where he traveled to help fit prosthetic limbs to civilian survivors, many of them children.

Evans died in 2020 at the age of 68. Filmmakers Alison Gilkey and Eric Neudel gathered footage of Evans and interviewed the activist and others about the personal devastation of war to make the film, “The Wake Up Call.”

Inside Appalachia Producer Bill Lynch spoke with Gilkey and Neudel about the film.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Lynch: First off, tell me about this film that you’ve made. 

Neudel: We had this idea to do a film about war. It started out in Laos when we were there on a trip for the state department as part of the American Film Showcase. They were showing a film that we had made. That film was traveling around the world. We went up to northern Laos to the border with Vietnam and China, in this area called the Plain of Jars. It’s actually a bigger area than that. What we discovered there was that it was highly bombed. There were lots of unexploded bombs there. We filmed. We had our equipment. We filmed a lot of the kids and people.

Anyhow, we got great material, beautiful material about these people have been damaged by this American bombing. That area is the most bombed area on the planet. A million tons of ordinance was dropped in Laos. It was a neutral country, but it was a good dumping zone.

Gilkey: Well, and that’s kind of the point of how awful this bombing was, because it was the American warplanes that couldn’t land at the airbase with ordinance. So, they just indiscriminately dumped whatever munitions they had left over the mountains of Northern Laos.

Neudel: And in the farmlands, too. So a lot of the people who were injured were farmers and their children.

Gilkey: Well, we got back home with it. Hours and hours and hours of footage. And we were super excited to explore this idea further. And as we were going through the footage, of course, the light bulb went on, oh my goodness, we’re essentially looking at a foreign language film here.

We couldn’t afford a translator. We had many, many hours of footage. So we then started thinking about, ‘okay, this is a really important subject area, but how are we going to tell something about war? And who can we find to be the main character?’

Well, turns out that decades ago, Eric had worked with this man, Dave Evans, who is the main character in the film, shooting Dave, as he was working in prosthetics clinics. Nothing came of that project.

But we were able to contact Dave at his home in Antigua, Guatemala, and he graciously agreed to allow us to come and stay with him for a couple of weeks.

Lynch: Can you tell me a little about Dave — his personality and what he was like?

Neudel: Well, he was an amazing character, irascible, sometimes really difficult, sometimes a super great buddy. It was wonderful to go out to a restaurant with him or a bar and talk with him. He had this vast amount of experience in the world. And his story was amazing.

You got the feeling with him that he was a person possessed. He himself needed repair. And I think the way he thought he could repair himself was repairing other people. So, he was really passionate about that, and really obsessed with doing his best.

Gilkey: He saw himself in the amputees that he was trying to assist.

Lynch: Dave passed away in 2020. Did that have any effect on the making of the documentary? Did it change any directions or thoughts that were planned?

Gilkey: No. In fact, the film was finished — its structure — everything was in place. By the time Dave passed, we were going through the process of hiring a composer and doing the post-production work.

Neudel: When he died on July 3, Allison called me and said, “You know, I have some really, really bad news for you, and I know you’re going to be really upset.”

And when she told me that, the first thought I had is, “He never got to see this. He never had…”

This film had finally, totally gelled and was resonating.

I was so anxious. We were both so anxious for him to see it that it kind of, like, broke my heart that he didn’t. He didn’t. This is his legacy, I think.

Gilkey: It’s part of it.

Neudel: I mean, he’s got a lot of people. He trained a lot of people he’s helped. So that’s, of course, a bigger legacy than what we did. But in terms of expressing his spirit. I think this is a good vehicle for getting across who he is and was, and what he meant. You know, I was… when he died… it was painful.

Lynch: What do you hope people will take away from the film? 

Gilkey: I hope it makes people think. As Dave himself says in the film, I wish people would just think, think a little. These young kids that we send off to war… I mean, the film is not anti-military, but it is anti-war because we send these young kids off and they are kids. Dave was only 17. He wasn’t even old enough to sign his own enlistment papers, you have to ask his mum to do it.

What do we think is going to happen to these tender young hearts and minds, when they see, inevitably, what they’re going to see in war? We bring them home. They’re not the same people.

So, think, just listen to the wisdom in the film. This wisdom comes from people who have lived that experience.

Neudel: The other side for me, the second part for me is that Dave, as I said earlier, he was repairing himself by repairing other people. In my mind, I think one of the lessons is that if you really want to do something, if you want to be happy, if you want to repair yourself, do something for other people. Try to focus on helping other people and it will yield a kind of redemption for you.

It may not be as in Dave’s case. Vietnam always haunted him, but it filled him, and it made him a better person. He was not someone who just gave like five bucks to a cause and that’s it. You’re done.

He went actively, existentially into that world, and he made it better for real human beings in very tangible ways.

Lynch: Eric… Allison… thank you very much.

Neudel and Gilkey: Thanks so much. Thank you. Appreciate it.

“The Wake Up Call” will be shown at 7 p.m. on Thursday, June 23 at the Culture Center Theater at the Capitol Complex in Charleston. A pre-screening reception begins at 6 p.m. For more information, including ticket prices, visit festivallcharleston.com.

WATCH LIVE: The Wood Brothers, Dave Alvin & Jimmie Dale Gilmore and more on Mountain Stage

THIS SUNDAY’s Mountain Stage welcomes The Wood Brothers, Dave Alvin & Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Todd Snider, Kat Wright, and special guest-host Peter Mulvey! 

We’ll be helping to celebrate the final day of FestivALL Charleston in our favorite kind of way. Tickets for the show are SOLD OUT but you can still join us from anywhere thanks to VuHaus and the WVPB Video Production department.

The Wood Brothers, who released “One Drop of Truth” in February, will return for their third appearance on Mountain Stage this Sunday. If you’d like a little preview, have a listen to their last visit.

Our special guest-host, Peter Mulvey has a recurring gig at the National Youth Science Camp, located in West Virginia, which led to a spoken word piece, “Vlad the Astrophysicist”, which became a TEDx talk, and then an illustrated book. Mulvey performed “Vlad” when he made his most recent appearance on Mountain Stage last September in Morgantown, WV.

It’s going to be a great show and we hope you’ll tune in! Just head on over to MountainStage.org or VuHaus.com at 7pm EST on Sunday evening to watch along.

Schedule:

7:05 – Kat Wright

7:35 – Dave Alvin & Jimmie Dale Gilmore

8:00 – Todd Snider

8:30 – The Wood Brothers

You can follow along in real time via our Twitter and Instagram feeds 

Bridget Lancaster of America's Test Kitchen Returns to West Virginia

Meet culinary expert and West Virginia native Bridget Lancaster during public events in Beckley and Charleston.

She’s one of our hometown public broadcasting stars that fans of West Virginia Public Broadcasting will recognize from America’s Test Kitchen and Cook’s Country on television, as well as the America’s Test Kitchen radio program. 

You can meet Bridget at Tamarack’s David L. Dickirson Fine Arts Gallery, Saturday, June 20, 5 – 6 p.m. She’ll also be at the West Virginia Public Broadcasting booth during Taste-of-ALL, Sunday, June 21, 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. Stop by to say hello, enter our drawings, giveaways, and more!

Bridget Lancaster is the executive food editor for New Media, Television, and Radio at America’s Test Kitchen. She is an original cast member of both America’s Test Kitchen and Cook’s Country from America’s Test Kitchen television shows, and is also a co-host for the America’s Test Kitchen radio program. Bridget currently serves as the lead instructor for the America’s Test Kitchen Cooking School, developing and producing courses for the school.

America’s Test Kitchen is the most-watched cooking show on public television–nearly 2 million viewers tune in each week. In January 2015, America’s Test Kitchen launched its 15th season.

For information about broadcast times for America’s Test Kitchen on West Virginia Public Broadcasting, take a look at our schedules.

Find out more about Taste-of-ALL and FestivALL.

 

   

How to Celebrate West Virginia's 151st Birthday

I crawled out of bed this morning at 4:30. 

I’m not bragging, I had to come in to host the morning newscasts and West Virginia Morning.

But I woke up feeling good. ‘It’s West Virginia Day, after all’ I thought to myself as I was getting ready, doing my best not to crawl back into bed and wind up late for work. 

I can’t lie, the first thought as I was waking up wasn’t how to solve the state’s problems, or how to get West Virginia out of dead last in many national rankings. 

Honestly, my first thought was how terribly I wished I could stop by Tudor’s Biscuit World and grab a Thundering Herd or a Ron on my way into work. Nothing would be more West Virginian of me while starting my day.

Sadly, though, the Tudor’s on the East End of Charleston opens at 5:30. I was in the newsroom prepping newscasts just after 5.

On days like today when I fill in for news director Beth Vorhees, I get the opportunity to watch the world wake up. It comes to life in a stream of social media posts as people start their days. It’s strange sometimes, but today it has been awfully fun and rather sentimental. 

Today, the beautiful state where I was born, raised, and where I still reside is 151 years old. And even though she has her issues, I think she still looks pretty good.

And since we still have a full day ahead of us, here are some ideas on how to celebrate our home,  West Virginia:

Swing by the Culture Center in Charleston

Check out some of the exhibits they’re launching. If you missed last year’s 3-D projection onto the Capitol, you’ll want to check it out in the theater downstairs of that building.

FestivALL

For the next 10 days, Charleston will become a melting pot of arts and culture with FestivALL. Everything from live music, to performance art, art workshops and fairs and more. Might as well get out and get started today.

Learn Some West Virginia History

You could celebrate by immersing yourself in the state’s rich history, through documentaries like last year’s radio special West Virginia 150: Commemorating Statehood or the Emmy-nominated television piece West Virginia: The Road to Statehood.

Drink a Locally Brewed Beer 

West Virginia’s craft brew industry has grown significantly in recent years. Festivals like Mountain State Brewing Company’s Brew Skies Festival, or Huntington’s Rales & Ales are still a few weeks away. But, there’s plenty of places all over the state to enjoy a great, locally brewed craft beer. Some of my favorites include:

  • Bridge Brew Works (Fayetteville) –  Long Point Lager
  • Charleston Brewing Company – Mountain Stage Ale
  • The North End Tavern (Parkersburg) – 5-Way IPA
  • Mountain State Brewing Co. (Thomas & Morgantown) – Seneca IPA

Get a West Virginia Tattoo

If you’re really hardcore about your love for West Virginia and want to show your pride like I do, you could get your body permanently etched with something related to the Mountain State. A cardinal or a rhododendron might work well. You could go with the state seal. Or you could keep it simple like I did with the state’s border. (Trust me, I didn’t have the idea first!) If you’re looking for a recommendation, Tat-Nice in Huntington and New Hope in Barboursville both do excellent work.

Now matter how you celebrate, though, make it a good one. 

As an added bonus, here’s some some outpouring of West Virginia pride I witnessed this morning as the state “woke up” on social media:  

[View the story “West Virginian’s 151st Birthday” on Storify]

Peter Marshall to Host 'West Virginia Squares'

  Longtime “Hollywood Squares” host Peter Marshall is returning to his home state for a West Virginia version of the TV game show.

The Huntington native will tape four episodes of “West Virginia Squares” at the Clay Center on Monday and Tuesday as part of Charleston’s FestivALL celebration.

The game show will feature questions about state music and history. West Virginia Public Broadcasting will film and distribute the shows to state schools.

The 88-year-old Marshall tells the Charleston Daily Mail the local game show “sounded like a fun thing to do.”

FestivALL’s website says among the celebrity squares are Wheeling native Joyce DeWitt, “America’s Got Talent” winner Landau Eugene Murphy Jr., and Charleston Mayor Danny Jones.

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