Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Hammerstein History in Photos

Little ink has been spared when it comes to cataloging the achievements of the lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II, who, with the composer Richard Rodgers, wrote some of the most iconic shows in the American musical theater canon, including “South Pacific,” “The Sound of Music” and “Oklahoma!”

The new book “The Hammersteins: A Musical Theater Family” (Black Dog & Leventhal, 2010) takes a slightly different biographical approach: it was written by Oscar Andrew Hammerstein, the grandson of Oscar Hammerstein II. The book explores the Hammerstein family tree from an insider’s perspective, beginning in 1864, when Oscar Hammerstein I emigrated to the United States and built a career as an opera impresario and theater developer, to the death of Oscar Hammerstein II in 1960, a year after “The Sound of Music” opened on Broadway.

“I saw a single, creative continuity in the same family, with three generations pushing the musical theater of their day forward,” Mr. Hammerstein said in a telephone interview. “They were all furthering the sung story.”

ArtsBeat asked Mr. Hammerstein, an adjunct professor at Columbia University, to choose some of his favorite photos from the book — many of which have never before been made public — and to explain how they tell the Hammerstein story. Below are his selections and excerpts from his commentary.

When Opera Met the Musical

Oscar Hammerstein, seated, with, from left, Jerome Kern, Louis A. Hirsch, A. Baldwin Sloane, Rudolph Friml, Alfred Robyn, Gustave Kerker, Hugo Felix, John Philip Sousa, Leslie Stuart, Raymond Hubbell, John Golden, Sylvio Hein and Irving Berlin.Oscar Hammerstein, seated, with, from left, Jerome Kern, Louis A. Hirsch, A. Baldwin Sloane, Rudolph Friml, Alfred Robyn, Gustave Kerker, Hugo Felix, John Philip Sousa, Leslie Stuart, Raymond Hubbell, John Golden, Sylvio Hein and Irving Berlin.

“These are the greater and lesser lights of the Viennese-slash-American operetta movement. This was the way station between opera and musicals as we know them. With opera it’s exclusive, and classicist and rich. These are the guys who were trying to make musical theater a commercial go.

“I grew up with this photo. It was in my room from the time I was three. It confused me. At an early age I had this curiosity for who the old man at the piano was. It was Oscar Hammerstein, the first.”

The ‘Show Boat’ Trio

“Oscar Hammerstein, Florenz Ziegfeld and Jerome Kern — this was the union that produced ‘Show Boat.’ It’s interesting to me because when Oscar got into the business in about 1919 he worked for his uncle, Arthur, who bankrolled every show that Oscar did. Most of them were flops but some were hits.

“Yet Oscar’s biggest hit was when he peeled away from his uncle to with work with Ziegfeld. It’s a sad picture, in the sense that Arthur’s not in the picture.

“Oscar was used to writing two to three shows a year. He had written 42 shows before he met Richard Rodgers. The idea of having a year to work on the show is why ‘Show Boat’ was of such high quality.”

Hammerstein in Hollywood

“Just as the ’20s were a career trajectory upward, the ’30s were Oscar’s trajectory downward. This was when composers jumped between New York and Hollywood. This is a picture of him around 1936, working for hire. It paid the bills, but he wasn’t good at it. In the ’30s, Rodgers and Hart, Gershwin, Porter, really swung the decade. He was not a guy who swung.

“After the Depression, during the rise of the motion picture industry, were not good years for Oscar. His operatic skill sets were archaic, and he was losing his stature with every show. This is a picture of him in decline.”

On the Farm

“Dorothy was Oscar’s second wife, at their home in Bucks County, in Pennsylvania. They met across a crowded room. He was smitten. He was living in a loveless marriage at the time. He fell in love and they stayed married until his death in 1959.

“In shows like ‘Allegro’ and ‘State Fair’ there’s an undercurrent of country good, city bad. Things get complicated when they get busy and bright and urban. This quality ran through the majority of his shows. The farm for him was a place of solitude, and a place where he got to write the kind of characters he liked to write for. He never wrote for a guy who’s in therapy.”

A Boy Named Stephen

“Stephen Sondheim climbed over the fence, metaphorically, and into Oscar’s life. Sondheim was my father’s playmate, basically. Oscar became his father and for Oscar Sondheim became his student and his creative son. This was taken around 1945.

“That may have caused a lot of emotional damage in my family. I think Oscar preferred Sondheim to his own children. I don’t blame Sondheim. He was the catalyst, not the cause of disaffection between Oscar and his children. Sondheim said that if Oscar had been an electrician, he would have been an electrician.”

Julie Andrews

“This was about 1958 or 1959. I have always felt that Julie Andrews could have played every woman in the Rodgers and Hammerstein catalog: Julie Jordan, Laurie, Anna. They wrote shows a decade too early for the perfect woman for all their shows.

“There was something strong, straightforward and goodhearted about Julie Andrews. It just shines through.

“Oscar never knew she was in ‘The Sound of Music.’ He died way before the movie was even put together. He would have loved to see her in it.”

(All photos courtesy of Black Dog & Leventhal.)

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Google and the Victorians: The History Goes Way Back

December 3, 2010, 5:49 pm

Most computer database searches — where you use key words to retrieve documents — are based on something called Boolean logic. What you may not know is that the term refers to a 19th century mathematician named George Boole, who developed his now indispensable theory in the 1854 book “The Laws of Thought.”

Boole is one of the Victorians who inspired Dan Cohen, a historian at George Mason University, whose work I discuss in an article today, the second part of a series on how technology is transforming humanities scholarship.

Mr. Cohen and a fellow historian have been relying on Boolean logic a lot these days, as they mine Google’s vast database of English books published in the 19th century to search for new insights into the Victorian mind.

In a keynote address at the Victorians Institute conference held at the University of Virginia in October, Mr. Cohen presented preliminary findings of that research. He also shared anecdotes about Boole, mathematical logic, and the sectarian conflict of his day.

” ‘The Laws of Thought,’ ” Mr. Cohen said, “is as much a work of literary criticism as it is of mathematics.”

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Wednesday, December 1, 2010

In the Footsteps of the Natural History Museum's Gorillas

November 21, 2010, 2:11 pm

On the City Room blog, Shane Dixon Kavanaugh writes about a curator at the American Museum of Natural History who will travel to Africa for a three-week journey to try to find the exact site used to create one of the museum’s most well-known dioramas.

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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Arts & leisure Preview: Pee - wee Herman, Al Pacino, Garry history and more

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