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‘Abigail and John: the First Couple of the United States’ puts the second president in the spotlight

Two people in historical clothing sit at a table with a candle, books, a quill and a mug.
Reading Time: 4 minutes

As people across the state mark the 250th anniversary of the country’s independence with parades and fireworks, one Wisconsin community is celebrating a key figure in early American history with a new work of theater. 

Adams, Wisconsin, a small city north of Wisconsin Dells, celebrated America’s 250th birthday with an original play about the city and county namesake — founding father John Adams. 

“In many ways, he’s kind of the forgotten founder,” said Adams County Historical Society President Michael Goc, who wrote the play. “We think of Washington and Franklin and Jefferson, but Adams was there all the time.” 

“Abigail and John: The First Couple of the United States” made its debut at the refurbished movie theater along the town’s main drag in late June, produced by the historical society and Adams Community Theatre.

A stone-front theater with a vertical sign reading "ADAMS THEATRE" displays a marquee listing films including "Citizen Kane," "The Parent Trap" and "All the President's Men."
The Adams Community Theatre in Adams, Wis., on June 24, 2026. (Angela Major / WPR)

John Adams was the driving force behind the Declaration of Independence. According to Goc, his influence went far beyond 1776. 

“John was everywhere,” Goc said. “He was involved in every important political event in the revolutionary era from before 1776 and all the way up until he left the presidency in 1801.” 

So, Goc said, it “just made sense” to mount a play about Adams this year as America celebrates its 250th birthday. He started research and writing over the winter. 

As Goc researched Adams, he also learned more about first lady Abigail Adams. In the play, John and Abigail sit at a table, reading letters they wrote to each other over the years. Most of the dialogue was pulled directly from real historical letters from the many years the two spent apart while John worked to establish a new country. 

For Goc, the couple personifies the best parts of American history. 

“They cared about the country, they worked hard, they worked with each other,” he said. 

It’s also a love story, Goc said. 

“They stayed together for 54 years, and as John said, they were ‘like steel to magnet.’” 

John and Abigail played by local married couple 

As the lights came on, actor Aaron Bonnett took the stage in a tricorn hat, greeting the audience. 

“Good day, my fellow patriots, I am John Adams,” he proclaimed. “You know me as the second president of the United States. I am also the namesake of your county, this city, and this theater.” 

A person in historical clothing and a tricorn hat speaks behind a table with an open book, a candle and a metal mug.
Aaron Bonnett plays John Adams on June 24, 2026, during a dress rehearsal of “Abigail and John: The First Couple of the United States” at Adams Community Theatre in Adams, Wis. (Angela Major / WPR)

Sitting at a table downstage, he began to read. The play includes the story of Adams’ role in the Continental Congress, his time as a diplomat in Europe and his term as president — and how Abigail was there through it all. 

Bonnett said that, along with worrying about founding a new country, John and Abigail’s letters show they dealt with the same problems many married couples face today. 

“250 years later, couples are still dealing with the same thing with family,” Bonnett said. “How much time do you dedicate to your profession, how much time do you dedicate to your family?” 

The comparison is made all the more real for Bonnett by the fact that his real-life wife Tania Bonnett played first lady Abigail Adams. Coincidentally, Aaron, a sixth-generation farmer, played John, a lawyer. Meanwhile Tania, a lawyer and circuit court judge, played Abigail, who ran the family farm for the many years John was away.

A person in historical clothing with a white bonnet and pearl necklace is seen with an open book, a candle and a quill in the foreground.
Tania Bonnett plays Abigail Adams on June 24, 2026, during a dress rehearsal of “Abigail and John: The First Couple of the United States” at Adams Community Theatre in Adams, Wis. (Angela Major / WPR)

She said learning more about the former first lady has been a rewarding experience that she’s been grateful to share with her family. 

“Everyone’s heard of John Adams, and everybody knows what he did for our country, but here there was this really strong woman next to his side advising him, and he really had a high amount of respect for her and turned to her a lot, and I think that’s something that history just hasn’t told us about,” Tania Bonnett said. 

‘The hot hits of the 1770s’

The play’s dialogue took place over four short acts, with songs from a local choir in between. It’s a setlist music director Sandra Swisher-Pheiffer called the “the hot hits of the 1770s.” 

Accompanied by a banjo, the choir sang several verses of “Yankee Doodle.” But the words are slightly different than the audience may know, Swisher-Pheiffer said, because they chose the American version of the song over the British version “that was intended to make fun of the colonials.” 

The choir also performed a period hymn that may have been sung at John and Abigail’s wedding and a campaign song called “Adams and Liberty.”

People hold open black folders while singing together on a stage, wearing coordinated white tops and dark bottoms.
A chorus rehearses historical songs June 24, 2026, during a dress rehearsal of “Abigail and John: The First Couple of the United States” at Adams Community Theatre in Adams, Wis. (Angela Major / WPR)

For Swisher-Pheiffer, the play was a profound experience, especially during tumultuous political times. 

“It can be easy for me to feel a little bit discouraged now, but this gets back to the the importance of honor and of liberty and freedom, and how no one individual should have total power in any sense within the government, and it’s reminded me of where we started, and that’s made me feel good,” she said. 

She hopes audience members felt the same.

This story was originally published by WPR.

‘Abigail and John: the First Couple of the United States’ puts the second president in the spotlight is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.

African American History Academic Challenge encourages pride, learning among Madison students

People sit in wooden auditorium seats clapping while one person in the foreground raises a fist and holds a phone, with others seated in rows behind them
Reading Time: 3 minutes

Applause, laughter and cheering reverberated in a Madison auditorium on Thursday as students raced to answer questions during the African American History Academic Challenge. The annual event, a partnership between the Madison Metropolitan School District and the nonprofit 100 Black Men of Madison, Inc., seeks to enhance appreciation and knowledge of Black history and bolster pride and self-worth.

Student teams representing two high schools and a half-dozen middle schools demonstrated knowledge through challenges focused on key events, figures and themes in African American history. McFarland and Verona middle schools also hold the event, with winners advancing to a regional competition on March 14. That contest determines who represents Madison’s 100 Black Men chapter on a national stage in New York City. 

As the middle school competition unfolded in the Doyle Administration Building, Sennett Middle School teacher Johnny Kennedy pumped her fist as she cheered on the students she coached. 

“I’m so proud of them,” Kennedy said. 

Her group of seventh and eighth graders had practiced since November. Some had competed last year without advancing, but they immediately knew they wanted to try again this year. James C. Wright Middle School ultimately advanced. 

During the separate high school contest that Robert M. La Follette High School won, “Coach O” Anderson, a Madison West High School student engagement specialist, said she learned about the event when her son Micah advanced to the national finals in Las Vegas during his eighth grade year in 2018. 

High schoolers tend to lag behind middle schoolers in participation. Anderson aimed to ramp up the same level of excitement among high schoolers that younger students display. She aims to engage more than just the “usual kids who get the opportunities” — like those already earning A’s in history and taking AP courses. 

“I wanted the regular kids who don’t necessarily see themselves involved like this to have an opportunity,” she said. Her main motivation is watching her students put themselves in “transformational situations,” she added.

An audience sits facing a stage where several people sit behind desks with microphones while another person stands at a podium labeled "Madison Metropolitan School District"
Students from Sennett Middle School and Sherman Middle School compete in the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge in the McDaniels Auditorium on March 12, 2026, at the Doyle Administration Building in Madison, Wis.
Dr. Floyd Rose, president of 100 Black Men of Madison, prepares the stage for the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge in the McDaniels Auditorium, March 12, 2026, at the Doyle Administration Building in Madison, Wis.
Four people sit in wooden auditorium seats talking; one gestures while another reaches toward their hand, and a person in a yellow headwrap holds a book reading "HISTORY"
Madison West High School freshmen Carley Baker, from left, Jalena Johnson, and Connor Baker, alongside their coach, Madison West High School student engagement specialist Coach O Anderson, prepare to compete in the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge.
Four people sit in wooden auditorium seats; two raise their hands toward each other while another person in a yellow headwrap holds eyeglasses and a drink cup nearby
Madison West High School freshmen Carley Baker, clockwise from right, Jalena Johnson, and Connor Baker, alongside their coach, student engagement specialist “Coach O” Anderson, laugh while preparing to compete in the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge in the McDaniels Auditorium on March 12, 2026, at the Doyle Administration Building in Madison, Wis.
Two students sit next to each other behind a podium. A sign says "West" and a buzzer is shown.
Madison West High School freshmen Connor Baker, left, and Jalena Johnson listen as the rules are read aloud before competing in the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge.
Two people sit at a desk with microphones facing each other while a person at a podium stands nearby; a bottle of hand sanitizer sits on the desk beside the microphones
La Follette High School students Per August Svensson, a junior, left, and Lillyanne Medenwaldt, a senior, compete in the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge.
Two people shake hands in front of a dais with microphones while others stand nearby and a person at a podium holds papers against a backdrop of dark curtains
Students from Madison West High School and La Follette High School shake hands after competing in the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge.
A person sits in a wooden auditorium seat writing in a notebook while others sit in a row beside them holding papers and books
La Follette High School junior Ajiefatou Sagnia studies her textbook while preparing for the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge.
A person with white hair and glasses sits at a table with papers and folders, looking upward; a briefcase rests on the floor beside the chair
Dr. Floyd Rose, president of 100 Black Men of Madison, listens as students compete in the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge.
Three people stand and lean over a table in an auditorium; one holds a green folder while another rests a hand on the table near scattered papers
Floyd Rose, president of 100 Black Men of Madison, from left, Edward Murray, Jr., a founding member, and J.R. Sims, spokesperson, talk among themselves during the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge in the McDaniels Auditorium on March 12, 2026, at the Doyle Administration Building in Madison, Wis.
A person walks through a doorway labeled "McDANIELS AUDITORIUM" toward rows of seats and a stage with a podium and desks visible at the front
A spectator walks into the McDaniels Auditorium to watch the 2026 African American History Academic Challenge on March 12, 2026, at the Doyle Administration Building in Madison, Wis.

African American History Academic Challenge encourages pride, learning among Madison students is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.

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