“It’s almost unbelievable that anyone could be hardened to the point of doing the brutal things they did. …”
A young man from Nebraska is sent to war, carrying with him the hopes of the free world. What Staff Sergeant Clarence Williams encounters there challenges and changes humanity forever. History touches the present when a new generation takes a journey through time to experience World War II alongside Clarence himself. Centered around his personal letters home, we learn that sometimes what seems so far away is much closer than we think. Filled with hope and heart, Not Too Far Distant honors the experience of the American soldier and reminds us that we all have the power — and the responsibility — to help create a brighter future.
Not Too Far Distant performs Saturday, February 22, 2025 at 7:00pm at the Alliance High School Performing Arts Center, presented by Alliance Arts Council.
In the fall of 2022, Not Too Far Distant, commissioned by History Nebraska, premiered at the Jewish Community Center in Omaha, Nebraska, followed by subsequent performances at History Nebraska and special Veterans’ Day performances for students and the public at The Golden Husk in Ord, Nebraska. In June 2023, BLIXT received a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Forces grant to support Not Too Far Distant and collaborative engagement activities for veterans, their families, and communities. The revised and updated production features a cast of five actors and premiered at the Lied Center for Performing Arts in November 2023. Not Too Far Distant by Becky Boesen will perform in 10 Nebraska communities in 2024-25, including Lincoln, Albion, Gothenburg, Omaha, Red Cloud, Fremont, Valentine, Nebraska City, Sidney, and Alliance.
Not Too Far Distant is inspired by the real letters of Nebraskan Staff Sergeant Clarence Williams, a member of the 42nd Infantry during WWII who helped liberate the Dachau concentration camp. Sgt. Williams wrote a letter almost daily to his wife Gretchen, and through the extraordinary work of Dr. Beth Dotan in collaboration with History Nebraska, the Center for Digital Research in the Humanities and the Harris Center for Judaic Studies at University of Nebraska – Lincoln, those letters and other assets have been preserved and are available through an online educational portal: Nebraska Stories of Humanity: Holocaust Survivors & WWII Veterans, Network Portal & Educational Website.