[Preface]
[Orville's
Worlds] [Family] [Young
Orville ] [To New York] [To
London, and back] [The Second Marriage,
1913 – 1917] [The Third Marriage,
Rehabilitation] [The Met Years, Two
careers 1920-1924] [Photogallery]
Orville’s
Worlds
Orville’s
life evolved from mid-west small-town culture to world-capital
grand opera. While these are seemingly polar opposites, his
hometown was not so isolated or primitive as might be imagined.
First is to clarify what is meant by mid-west. Where the old
National Road leaves Wheeling, WV and crosses the Ohio River,
it leaves behind Pennsylvania’s mountains and enters a broad
expanse of flat lands extending to the Rockies. For purposes
here, the mid-west starts at the Ohio River, where begins a
vast farming region that cultivated a host of small towns. With
the land primarily for farming, towns were spaced according
to how far farmers could conveniently travel, and were only
large enough for commerce to support their limited region.
Bountiful
agriculture assured that these towns were generally prosperous,
with active economies and attractive residences built by both
townspeople and retired farmers. While many in America’s westward
migration preferred river routes, at least to the Mississippi,
the National Road (essentially 20th century Route
40, paralleled later by I-70) was the primary northern land
route, starting at Cumberland, MD and connecting state capitals
of Columbus, Ohio and Indianapolis, Indiana on its way to Vandalia,
Illinois. A primary conduit for westbound caravans of Conestoga
wagons, the road was a source of commerce, cultural exchange,
and new residents. Adjacent towns filled with a spectrum of
cultures, and over the 19th century accumulated a
variety of industries, such as producer gas plants for street
illumination and a myriad of manufactured products ranging from
apple peelers to windmills. The growing railroad network provided
additional industry, exchange, growth, and communication.
The
1840’s saw a rush of Irish immigrants fleeing the potato famine
of 1843, and after 1850 came Germans fleeing restrictive regional
monarchies and military conscription in armies-for-hire. Midwest
farming towns thus had significant German populations, where
schools were conducted in German in the morning and English
in the afternoon, which stopped only at WWI (Lawrence Welk had
an accent because he was born in Strasburg, North Dakota, speaking
only German until age 21). In addition to the modern image of
Santa Claus, Germans brought machine trades and a variety of
traditional clubs and societies. Not limited to farm towns,
many large mid-west cities were highly German, boasting industry,
sausage and meat packing plants, and breweries. Cincinnati was
known as “Porkopolis” and had five breweries into mid-20th
century: Bavarian, Burger, Hudepol, Schoenling, and Wiedemann.
Similar to cattle drives, Indiana farmers gathered for annual
hog drives down to Cincinnati. Some Hoosiers went there for
opera.
Rural
19th century life followed ancient rhythms that nudged
people toward adult roles at a young age. With a life expectancy
below 50 years, independent youth were often earning their way
before they might have graduated from high school, which many
never did. They could have considerable freedom by mid-adolescence,
choosing their own direction with income from agriculture or
urban factories. Major upheavals from significant depressions
in the 1890’s and 1930’s, plus two world wars, carried these
social patterns into mid-20th century, and carried
many young Americans across the country and around the globe
(just as they brought may refugees and immigrants to America).
Orville was a wandering offspring of these cultures and attitudes,
which is reflected in how he approached his life, family, and
children.
Located
just northeast of Indianapolis, Muncie, Indiana was typical
of mid-west towns. Adjacent to the National Road, it benefited
from a cultural mix and ample exposure to social influences
flowing through the region. In addition to being near the state
capitol, its agriculture and industry supported an active economy.
Among its principle manufacturers was the Ball Jar Company,
maker of fruit canning jars, and source of the family fortune
associated with Ball State University. Victorian America was
becoming modernly mobile for the adventurous and the talented.
Orville was both, and even in small-town Indiana was exposed
to other like spirits who clearly emboldened him.
Orville’s
youth had available only printed media, and predated ready availability
of recorded music. But, many communities had a theater, frequently
called an opera house, visited by the adventurous and the talented.
Traveling performing troupes were common, and even traveling
marionette shows presented popular plays. Summer tent shows
and Chautauqua sites offered entertainment, music, and informative
speakers. Such events expanded along rail routes into the 1920’s,
aided during the 20th century by regional transportation
via electric inter-urban lines. In addition, many communities
were exposed to international culture through American melting
pot effect.
Beyond
that, lacking mass media and having limited in-home entertainment,
personal daily life was enriched through local clubs and organizations.
People have always gathered, socialized, and shared. There were
numerous political, social, service, business, and fraternal
organizations, plus clubs of all varieties and inclinations:
athletic, literary, horticultural, artistic, theatrical, and
certainly musical. Many would present for the entertainment,
edification, and amusement of the public. Orville experienced
music throughout his early life, in the home, in community choirs
and choruses, and beyond. He knew something of opera by early
adulthood.
Opera
is two hours of full-throttle high-volume vocal power, rising
over a full orchestra. It is essentially artistic shouting,
akin to cultivated hog calling and yodeling, but possessing
tonal quality, sustained perfect pitch, vocal agility and ornamentation,
sweetness, artistic modulation, and a host of other qualities.
Some scores are especially challenging, with runs, trills, octave
changes, and a wide range of pitch. Whilst shouting, there are
lyrics to be enunciated with clear diction, in one of several
languages, rarely English (typically Italian, French, or German).
The singer is also moving about and performing in a theatrical
production, while shouting artistically. It is dramatic physical
art. The opera singer’s week is something like yelling through
college football on Saturday, and pro ball on Sunday. Voices
can be damaged, they can be repaired, and they are prey to all
manner of irritation, faults and disturbances, sickness, and
fatigue.
Far
beyond merely singing, opera requires skills obtained only by
long hours of coaching and practicing. Lois Ewell, who sang
opposite Orville at the Century Opera, described her New York
voice teacher spending an entire year focused on perfecting
six important tones to be produced properly, rather than from
the throat. In four years of training with this coach, he had
her sing only one full song, and that solely for teaching a
specific point. This was four years of practice and drills in
preparation for international grand opera. Felice Lyne, with
Orville at the London Opera, described that she still felt unable
to produce sufficient vocal power after several years working
with one Paris instructor, so spent months seeking another coach
who brought her voice to greater stage presence. Like Orville,
these singers had unusual inherent talent and musical intelligence,
which still required tremendous practice and development to
reach a high level of operatic quality.
Opera
presents life in song, with characters continually conversing
and interacting through music. While this may seem corny and
contrived, most theater (live or recorded) is artificial and
corny drama, separated only by degrees. (Modern drama relies
heavily on the illusion that realistic presentation implies
realistic content.) Music is inherent in human emotion. Besides
singing in the shower, we sometimes literally “burst into song”
over events and occasionally “sing the blues”, while wailings
of anguish or ecstasy are operatic at face value. Opera extends
the metaphor, with people’s interactions literally harmonizing,
and expresses the range of human feeling through vocal musical
interpretations of passions and emotions. (Heavy leaning toward
the emotional pushes opera toward the sappy end of entertainment.)
At a lower level, classical cartoons employ classical music
for similar effect. Music can express joy and tears; music can
evoke joy and tears. The interaction is both metaphorical and
real, opera striving to combine the metaphorical and real for
evocative emotional impact.
There
are jobs, careers, and passions, and it can be both productive
and satisfying when these combine. Careers in the arts are frequently
pure passions, pursued and practiced passionately. Such a course
tends toward spontaneity, emotion, originality, sudden changes,
instability and unpredictability, tempestuous relationships,
and dependence on the passions of patrons and audiences. Opera
ebbs and surges through a world of emotional and dramatic expectations.
To support large theaters, orchestras, and casts, opera consumes
substantial money, managed and spent passionately, which can
be a risky combination. The art world lives the drama it endeavors
to convey.
Artists
are risk takers, presenting their work and themselves to be
critiqued by the knowledgeable and assessed by the masses. Few
of us would risk such exposure, performing artists risking the
most personal exposure of all. While public speaking is a universal
fear, performing artists seek the stage to present their voices,
expressions, movements, and bodies for public review. They endure
competitive and dismissive elders, failed auditions, publicly
humiliating reviews, or simply anonymity. Even with success,
they can rapidly pass from favor as a fleeting fad. Successful
artists combine passion and talent with durable boldness, in
which some combination of courage and spontaneity spurs them
to leap, risk, and change. As already said, the art world lives
the drama it endeavors to convey, and Orville was a performing
artist who spent much of his life striving, changing, and working
amid an art world rife with mercurial personalities.
Opera
is an import, of limited demand, but of limited supply. As a
European tradition, it arrived here with Europeans before the
Revolution, and while it was performed here, Americans were
a long time getting into the game. American composers and performers
had limited presence before mid-19th century. By
then, completely original American operas began appearing, primarily
in eastern centers, but also in Chicago and other mid-western
cities. Scott Joplin’s A Guest of Honor debuted in St.
Louis in 1903. Still, a respected opera playbill read like an
Italian menu. (Literally, in the case of chicken Tetrazzini,
named after an Italian operatic soprano, and apparently created
in San Francisco where she lived for many years.) Legitimate
opera required cultivated European talent, to be appreciated
by a cultivated audience.
With
the Victorian rise of industrial wealth, New York City nouvelle
riche lacked sufficient operatic venues, as the venerable
Academy of Music would not admit them to its circle of the socially
elite. The new elite families, including Roosevelt, Morgan,
Vanderbilt, and Astor, thus opened their Metropolitan Opera
House in 1883. By 1886, opera was discontinued at the old Academy
of Music, and in 1914 its theater on East 14th was
demolished to build a Con Edison plant. The Metropolitan Opera
quickly ascended to the lead of American opera, becoming known
simply as “the Met”. Enrico Caruso began his stellar career
with the Met in 1904, and soon the Met was presenting American
works under the 1908-1935 reign of general manager Giulio Gatti-Casazza,
previously general manager of La Scala in Milan, where Caruso
had previously sung. By his second season Gatti-Casazza had
debuted an opera in English, by a Boston composer, followed
by a string of other home-grown works. In 1920, Gatti-Casazza
debuted Cleopatra’s Night, with Orville Harrold
as lead tenor. The fifth opera by American composer, Henry Hadley,
this was possibly the source of the selection heard on radio
by the author’s sister.
Inflation
of the dollar is a final area in acclimating to Orville’s worlds.
In the early 20th century, as Orville grew into adulthood,
the average daily industrial wage grew from about $2 in 1900
to $3 at the beginning of WWI in 1914, which would be around
$800 income per year. With Orville making about $10 per week
in 1905, which was likely a six-day workweek, he was making
very close to average wages. There has been about 50X inflation
since that pre-war period, so that the $800 annual income is
equivalent to about $40,000 now. A sum of $10,000 was very substantial
then, approaching a half million dollars today. Average wages
doubled from $3 to $6 per day during the WWI years. Moving into
the “Roaring 20’s”, wages settled back a little from wartime
inflation to about $5-$6 per day, or $1500 per year, still equivalent
to today’s $40,000.
Orville could make higher than average
wages on the New York stage, if he could stay employed, but
New York was an expensive place to live and theater employment
was spotty. A prominent operatic tenor was more exotic, demanding
a very attractive income, but opera was of limited demand and
employment could again be spotty and undependable, which was
Orville’s situation during the war years. When he reached his
peak period as a prominent tenor, Orville was earning the equivalent
of today’s upper six-figure income.
Next...
[Preface]
[Orville's
Worlds] [Family] [Young
Orville ] [To New York] [To
London, and back] [The Second Marriage,
1913 – 1917] [The Third Marriage,
Rehabilitation] [The Met Years, Two
careers 1920-1924] [Photogallery]