In Tune (11 Dec) and Weill's Street Song

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  • Stanley Stewart
    Late Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 1071

    In Tune (11 Dec) and Weill's Street Song

    Pleased to note that In Tune, today, (11 Dec) will be presented from the set of Kurt Weill's American opera at the Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester, although I reserve my counsel on the presenter and one of the guests!

    I'm curious, as I've just spent several days compiling a Weill triple bill from off-air video recordings to DVD. Some weeks ago, I came across a video recording, 1st Jan 1993, a revival of David Pountney's highly acclaimed ENO production - I first saw it, circa 1989, - and have always rated it as one of two 'Powerhouse' presentations which linger in the memory. T'other was a later production of DSCH's Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk.

    Had to juggle my memory to recall the cast changes in the revival schedules; Richard van Allan and Kristine Cieskinski as Frank and Anna Maurrant in roles later taken by Mark Richardson and Janice Cairns with Lesley Garrett, heart-rending as their daughter, Rose. My notes reminded me that Rodney Milnes -bless his memory - was a staunch supporter of this work 'a work of fierce social protest and of music theatre that knows precisely what it wants to do and does it; the target is hit dead centre with a positively Puccinian certainty of aim, and content, form and achievement indissoluble'.

    The design and choreography top notch and the ensemble had clearly been rehearsed to express their individuality rather than mouthing stock responses. The jitterbug dance due stopped the show. However, I'm aware that In Tune is due to be broadcast in an hour's time! Must close, gan schnell!

    I've completed the triple bill with a rare Weill one act opera, Royal Palace, televised on Knowledge (precursor of BBC 4?) in the 2 Aug 2001 PROMS and a transfer of the American Film Theatre production of Lost in the Stars, (1974) - fine locations, too, with Brock Peters registering as a black priest in search of his son in Johannesburg. Rich pickings, indeed.
  • makropulos
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 1678

    #2
    Originally posted by Stanley Stewart View Post
    Pleased to note that In Tune, today, (11 Dec) will be presented from the set of Kurt Weill's American opera at the Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester, although I reserve my counsel on the presenter and one of the guests!

    I'm curious, as I've just spent several days compiling a Weill triple bill from off-air video recordings to DVD. Some weeks ago, I came across a video recording, 1st Jan 1993, a revival of David Pountney's highly acclaimed ENO production - I first saw it, circa 1989, - and have always rated it as one of two 'Powerhouse' presentations which linger in the memory. T'other was a later production of DSCH's Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk.

    Had to juggle my memory to recall the cast changes in the revival schedules; Richard van Allan and Kristine Cieskinski as Frank and Anna Maurrant in roles later taken by Mark Richardson and Janice Cairns with Lesley Garrett, heart-rending as their daughter, Rose. My notes reminded me that Rodney Milnes -bless his memory - was a staunch supporter of this work 'a work of fierce social protest and of music theatre that knows precisely what it wants to do and does it; the target is hit dead centre with a positively Puccinian certainty of aim, and content, form and achievement indissoluble'.

    The design and choreography top notch and the ensemble had clearly been rehearsed to express their individuality rather than mouthing stock responses. The jitterbug dance due stopped the show. However, I'm aware that In Tune is due to be broadcast in an hour's time! Must close, gan schnell!

    I've completed the triple bill with a rare Weill one act opera, Royal Palace, televised on Knowledge (precursor of BBC 4?) in the 2 Aug 2001 PROMS and a transfer of the American Film Theatre production of Lost in the Stars, (1974) - fine locations, too, with Brock Peters registering as a black priest in search of his son in Johannesburg. Rich pickings, indeed.
    I saw - and loved - the old ENO production of Street Scene several times, and more recently saw a different production at Buxton. It's my favourite Weill opera so I'm very much looking forward to hearing the RNCM production tomorrow (Saturday) night.

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    • Stanfordian
      Full Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 9332

      #3
      Originally posted by makropulos View Post
      I saw - and loved - the old ENO production of Street Scene several times, and more recently saw a different production at Buxton. It's my favourite Weill opera so I'm very much looking forward to hearing the RNCM production tomorrow (Saturday) night.
      Hiya makropulos,

      I attended the RNCM staging of 'Street Scene' last Friday. As you will know there are 2 seperate casts the 'Kurt' Cast and the 'Weill' cast and I attended a performance by the 'Weill' cast which was excellent entertainment. The music has been in my head all week.

      Comment

      • Stanley Stewart
        Late Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 1071

        #4
        A pleasant In Tune interview last Friday and it was good to hear John Tomlinson talking about his career, although I would have preferred to hear a broadcast of the Saturday evening performance of Street Scene - did any forum members notice any OB vans?

        I've also been dilatory with Festive Season chores as I got totally involved in Speak Low (when you speak love) The Letters of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya(1996-Hamish Hamilton, London) and, in particular, The Days Grow Short, The Life & Music of Kurt Weill by Ronald Sanders, (1980-Weidenfeld & Nicolson) with a fascinating analysis of the Broadway production of Street Scene and examples of Weill's resourcefulness in understanding the American idiom in his composition, only a few years before Frank Loesser's Guys & Dolls in the late 40s.

        "...Weill and Langston Hughes (lyrics) had some interesting experiences working together. They had wanted a blues number, and Elmer Rice had created a Negro janitor for this purpose- apparently with the intention of replacing the Swedish janitor of the original entirely; but in the end the latter was retained as well, so that the humble apartment house of the opera enjoys the unlikely luxury of two full-time maintenance men! Hughes wrote a poem for the new janitor, "I got a marble and a star." and, in order to find the right musical idiom for it, he took Weill to various Harlem nightclubs. The resulting song Hughes observed, was "composed in a national American Negro idiom, but a German, or someone else, could sing it without sounding strange or out of place." Similarly, he and Weill roamed together through the streets of New York, often for hours at a time, to watch children at play; for they had decided to open Act 2 with a whole "Children's Game" sequence. For the active and verbal content of the game in the opera, Rice and Hughes put their American - born heads together and got lively results; then,according to Hughes, "Weill took the verses they wrote and shaped a piece of it so faithful to reality that many people assumed it was an authentic children's game." It was experiences like this that led Hughes to regard Weill as a truly universal artist, who could with equal justice be claimed by Germany as a German, by France as a Frenchman, by America as an American, "and by me as a Negro." When an interviewer later asked Weill how he was able to capture an American milieu so well in Street Scene, he replied: "First, I could see the country from the outside, so I had more respect for it. Second, my whole musical background is very closely related to American jazz. That's why the Nazi's attacked me so..."

        Weill was hospitalized in March 1950 but continued working on the piano score proofs for Lost in the Stars when he died suddenly, aged 50. Maxwell Anderson delivered the eulogy at his modest funeral on 5 April.

        "For a number of years," he said,"it has been my privilege to have a very great man as my friend and neighbor. I have loved him more than any other man I knew. And I think he had more to give to his age than any other man I knew. "I wish, of course, that he had been lucky enough to have a little more time for his work. I could wish the times he lived had been less troubled. But these things were as they were - and Kurt managed to make thousands of beautiful things during the short and troubled time he had. Hw made so many beautiful things that he will be remembered and loved by many not yet born...

        "I remember that Kurt and I once talked of trying to write a funeral service for unbelievers. It was never written, but if he had written it, it might have contained eight lines that are sung by the chorus in Lost in the Stars:

        "A bird of passage out of night
        Flies in at a lighted door.
        Flies through and on in its darkened flight,
        And then is seen no more.
        This is the life of men on earth:
        Out of darkness we come at birth
        Into a lamplit room, and then -
        Go forward into dark again."

        These lines, the last four of which, were to be inscribed with their accompanying music on Kurt's gravestone seemed just right for the modest creative man of whom Anderson spoke..."

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