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[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]

 

The Third Marriage, Rehabilitation

There are several versions of the tale, which merge into something along the following lines. Orville was walking Lydia’s dogs1 in the spring of 1917, along Seventh Avenue, near Columbus Circle and their apartment on Central Park West. Downtrodden and oversized, he pondered the significance of a laundry ticket in-hand when he recognized ahead, from eight years previously, a lady’s profile in the back of a chauffeured car pulling onto Seventh. Impulsively wadding the laundry ticket into a ball, he tossed it through the open car window and into the surprised lady’s lap. Her startled look of indignation was greeted by a farm boy’s grin2. Blanche Malli, the chorus girl from Naughty Marietta then opened the car door and Orville stepped in. The tale leaves uncertain what they did with the dogs, or if they burst into song.

Absent horn accompaniment, some chance meeting around Central Park united the couple from years past, who yet shared affections from years past. Still attractive, Blanche was also well attired, well transported, and single. She not only accepted Orville as he was that day, she had the desire, plan, and resources for his resurrection. As Orville’s second marriage was dissolved during 1917, he moved across Central Park to join Blanche at her address on Madison Avenue.

Blanche Malevinsky3 was from the middle of ten children born to Isador Malevinsky, from Poland, and his wife, Dora, from France, a Jewish family who had settled in Austin, Texas sometime around 1870. Isador was a dry goods merchant who probably struggled through the depression of the “Gay 90’s”, so that in the late 1890’s he moved family and business to Galveston, where 19-year-old Blanche worked in the shop. Beautifully situated along the gulf coast, low lying Galveston was among the fastest growing cities in America, and was squarely in the path of a category 4 hurricane that struck on September 8, 1900. While most hurricanes migrate west through the Caribbean and then turn north along the Atlantic coast, a few cross the Gulf of Mexico to points as far west as Texas and as far south as the Yucatan. This one turned north through Oklahoma, wandered up across the Great Lakes, and back east over Nova Scotia, thrashing a fishing fleet before disappearing into the North Atlantic. Galveston’s estimated 8000 fatalities rank this as the deadliest natural disaster ever to occur in the United States.

It is unknown how the Malevinsky family fared in this storm, but they certainly suffered tremendous losses as virtually all of Galveston was flooded and destroyed. Remaining casualty lists include no Malevinsky’s, but the event took its toll. The parents had previously changed countries and continents, moved among different Texas cities, and started several business. After the hurricane, they and at least three of their daughters remained permanently in Houston. There had been enough adventure. Three other of the children eventually found their way to New York. After appearing in Canadian theatre and traveling abroad in theatre business under the name of Malli, Blanche was working on Broadway by 1908. The youngest sister, Noama, later came to New York and worked in music and stage under her married name of Nona Croft.

The oldest sibling was attorney Moses L. Malevinsky, eight years older than Blanche, who had been living with his wife and daughter in the same Galveston home as the rest of the family. Having later lost an important case before Houston Judge, John Lovejoy, Moses became a partner in the Lovejoy firm. They successfully built a large Houston legal office, Moses making $20,000 per year in Texas by the early part of the new century. Having won a major case against a railroad, they were informed that company hirelings waited outside to attack them. The pair reportedly descended the courthouse steps together, cocked pistols in hand, and walked away4. Moses seemingly arrived in New York at about the same time as Blanche, becoming friends with an attorney named Dennis F. O’Brien. The latter had moved uptown as lawyer for George M. Cohan, another Irishman and boyhood friend from a small Massachusetts factory town. O’Brien and Malevinsky were partners by 1910, and by 1913 had brought in O’Brien’s nephew, Arthur Driscoll, in a law partnership known affectionately on Broadway as “the Kosher sandwich5”. They represented many theatre performers, as well as film, theatre, and production companies. Moses specialized in copyright and intellectual property law, becoming an important figure in theatre and literature plagiarism litigation.

 

The emerging picture is that the Malevinsky’s became established and successful in New York, and that Blanche became a knowledgeable investor. The primary investment area appears to have been oil industry, through Moses’s years of connections in Houston. Blanche was stated to be independently wealthy when she motored back into Orville’s life6. Her sister, Nona Croft, had moved to San Francisco around 1913, mingling among society there. Blanche had gone to England in 1914, and then sailed through the newly opened Panama Canal in early 1915 to visit Nona in San Francisco. They reported that the bridle trails in Golden Gate Park were at least as good as any in New York’s Central Park or London’s Hyde Park6.5. Blanche was then off to another cruise in late 1915, to Brazil, Cuba, and Argentina. In a fascinating episode, Nona was supposedly divorced in San Francisco during 1914 from Kenneth Croft, an English promoter and Army Lieutenant, who then became entangled in an international controversy for recruiting Americans to join the English army, which jeopardized America’s neutrality during early years of WWI. His wife was reportedly with him during some of this, and they seemingly had a daughter in 1916.

Combining finances with Blanche, Orville could easily afford unemployment to focus on rebuilding career. Physical rehabilitation consisted primarily of weight loss, abstinence from alcohol, athletic improvement at the YMCA, and remedial voice coaching. A sound body had always been there, and in interviews during the early 1920’s, Orville described daily handball workouts in athletic shorts, year-round at local outdoor courts7. He claimed that he had never smoked and rarely drank coffee, although in interviews a few years previously he had admitted to smoking as much as he wished. His exercise regimen was aimed at endurance and lung capacity, obvious benefits in opera.

Rebuilding Orville’s voice was entrusted to Frederick Haywood, who had coached Lydia during 1915. Although Orville might have consulted with Oscar Saenger, who knew Haywood, Saenger may have been diverted at this point. With widespread emergence of phonographs as an entirely new communication medium, Saenger had just produced twenty voice lessons, packaged on ten Victor records and available at $25 for the set (among the first predecessors to self-help tapes and pod-casts). Several of Saenger’s students, such as Paul Althouse and Mabel Garrison, recorded lessons that included instruction for sopranos, mezzo-sopranos, tenors, baritones and bassos. In any event, Orville worked in Frederick Haywood’s studio for a year to repair his damaged voice and learn additional vocal techniques. Despite his obvious talent with gifted soloists, Frederick Haywood’s passion was national development of choral music from the ground up, through high school training. He was active in high school educational organizations, and in 1922 joined with Oscar Saenger and fifteen others as a charter member of the American Academy of Teachers of Singing, which still exists.

Orville likely began working with Haywood during late summer of 1917. Results would have been readily apparent to assess, so that they could directly determine progress and prognosis. From a larger perspective, it was as important that Orville reshape his emotional state and confidence. He had previously proven to be a tenacious student, and results must have been satisfactory, for Blanche married him on December 11, 1917. Orville had passed his most important audition, for the new bride was quite unlike the last one. The new groom was quite unlike the last one, and the couple remained together for the remainder of Orville’s life.

Rehabilitation was one part of Orville’s career restart. Another was for him to become engaged with worthy opera companies that would net him favorable critical review. Orville’s professional nemesis had been that successes occurred in new opera companies that soon failed, but the series of new companies constituted a colossal run of luck that launched his fame, and the run continued. There were a few seasonal organizations that toured cities where major opera stars were seldom heard, and some cities had summer theatres that attracted top talent. Orville was already participating in summer opera, and his improved circumstances and year of study presented new freedom and impetus to consider fresh options. Sometime around the beginning of 1918, Orville sang before a group that included Caruso and Gatti-Casazza of the Met, along with a variety of conductors and singers7.5. It is unknown just what this event and group were, but it was reported that they were favorably impressed with Orville’s performance, and that he might be headed toward the Met.

By February of 1918 Orville was out on a mid-west tour for the benefit of local Red Cross chapters, managed through his old friend and tour arranger, Harry E. Paris. Starting in Muncie on Washington’s Birthday, they traveled on to Fort Wayne and other cities, accompanied by a violinist and pianist from New York8. It was also stated that Orville had been invited for a guest appearance with Galli-Curci at the Chicago Opera, but had been previously engaged elsewhere9. The tour provided good publicity in support of war efforts, and tested Orville’s new stamina. Staying busy, Harry Paris also had Irish tenor, John McCormack, in Muncie two weeks after Orville’s engagement. After being discovered by Hammerstein, McCormack had spent some time in grand opera, including at the Met, but had become immensely popular as a touring artist, filling concert halls around America, including New York’s Hippodrome.

With a break in April, Orville was again touring during May around New York State and the east9.5. Beginning with a sensational ovation at the Newark Festival on May 3, 1918, he went on through the Metropolitan Opera House in Philadelphia (with Secretary of War Baker as a guest), and then Elmira, Schenectady, and Brooklyn, New York (the last with the governor present). These generated enough requests for appearances that there were discussions of a fall tour through the west.

Orville and Blanche then headed to his third Ravinia season for July and August of 1918, among familiar artists and conductors. He appeared for the first time with French-born Met basso, Leon Rothier, and coloratura soprano, Lucy Gates, who was a granddaughter of Brigham Young and wife of Albert Bowen, one of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles of the Church of Latter Day Saints. He again sang mainly from his repertoire, but was perhaps performing Lakme and The Barber of Seville for the first time. More importantly, these New York top tier opera personalities were hearing the newly rebuilt Orville, who was met with hearty approval, so that his days of irony were hopefully ending. The Chicago Evening Post described of Orville, “Apparently, since last summer, he has changed his whole vocal method, and it has transformed him from top to bottom. He always had a good voice, but now…he has a chance to show how good it is.”

Consistent with Orville’s lucky streak, a new opera company arose in New York during his year of reconstitution (1917-18). Not born merely of eternal operatic hope, it arrived on a carefully orchestrated patriotic wave, as the country gradually escalated into WWI. The national attitude toward the looming foreign war promoted patriotism infused with suspicion and xenophobia, much like that which precipitated Nisei camps of WWII. Following an October, 1916 experiment performing two Mozart comic operas in English, rather than in the now dreaded German, an organization called the Society of American Singers (SOAS) incorporated in March of 1917. Founded by German born Albert Reiss, a long-standing tenor at the Met, SOAS officers, shareholders, and singers were all required to be “professional singers of standing and American citizenship10”. Most were from the Met, and SOAS was something of a Met offspring.

The war effort grew ruthlessly pro-American, so that German language began disappearing from the vast American population of German farm towns, such as Muncie, Indiana, and certainly disappeared from opera. Albert Reiss stepped down as SOAS president after a year, amid innuendo regarding nationality11. Boston-born Geraldine Farrar apparently experienced some backlash because of her years singing with the Berlin Opera, and perhaps consorting with Crown Prince Wilhelm. Otto Kahn, who did not have to sing, became an SOAS shareholder, despite having come from Austria. Such issues became quicksand in one of the world’s most cosmopolitan cities (19th century watchmakers of the New York Horological Society held their meetings in German), and the highly international opera community struggled to maintain fairness and equilibrium in a profession dedicated literally to harmony through the common goal of music.

The brief 1917 first season of SOAS had been a fortnight of English opera at the Lyceum Theatre in May, following the normal winter opera season, which also included a repeat of their Mozart pair from 1916. Amid the early 1918 reorganization, the new SOAS president, former Met baritone William W. Hinshaw, was planning a two to four week fall season of classic English and French style opera comique at the Park Theatre in Columbus Circle, near the old Century Theatre11.5. Far from being Broadway musical comedy or burlesque, opera comique was full opera, frequently infused with spoken script, of more lighthearted and less ponderous theme, not normally presented in America. Some operas would be sung in native tongues, but also with a performance in English, while others would be all in English. They were even exploring some audience participation. The season would run during September and October, prior to the Met’s November opening.

SOAS assistant business manager, and performing tenor, was George J. Hamlin, whom Orville had encountered while touring around Indiana during 1905. Hamlin had later debuted at the Chicago Opera Company with Mary Garden in Victor Herbert’s Natoma, which Garden had first sung with Hammerstein, who had commissioned the work. Hamlin had been making occasional trips to New York, becoming a popular and well-reviewed concert tenor at Aeolian Hall and Carnegie Hall, and eventually settled there. His daughter, Anna, was briefly a soprano with the Chicago Opera Company, and their family papers now reside in the archives of the New York Public Library.

One Hinshaw gambit was a $1000 prize and SOAS production in a competition for a one-act opera written by an American composer, which went to Henry Hadley for Bianca11.8. (SOAS premiered Bianca under Hadley’s direction, on October 19, 1918, with Maggie Teyte as soprano.) Hinshaw was described as striving with the determination of a “war drive” in a “work of idealism for American Artists”, adding that, “We are 100 percent American singers, all of us – wherever we were born.” (The chorus was referred to as the “allied chorus”.) He assembled a strong organization, intending to extend the SOAS season. He brought in (American born) Jacques Coini as artistic director, who had been at Orville’s old Manhattan, London, and Century operas, and Met conductor, Richard Hageman12. Hinshaw planned revivals of Gilbert & Sullivan productions, plus other light French and English opera comique as a general theme. Orville was not mentioned in articles describing SOAS fall plans, even as late as September twenty-ninth.

As a brief aside, there are striking parallels between the lives of Orville and William Wade Hinshaw, president of SOAS. Ten years older than Orville, Hinshaw had been born in Union, Iowa to old Quaker stock. Hinshaws had arrived at North Carolina from Ireland by 1768, and were part of the Quaker migration to the Northwest Territory, reaching Henry County, Indiana around the same time as Harrolds and Beesons reached Delaware County. Clearly, Hinshaws had also migrated to Iowa, just as Harrolds likely scattered to other states. William Hinshaw had married in Iowa, and being gifted with voice and ambition, went to Chicago to pursue singing. His wife died of pneumonia in 1905, leaving four children, after which William trained in Germany as an operatic baritone, having some capability to reach basso range. By 1911 he had sung in German roles at the Met, perhaps as a guest, and became betrothed to Mabel Clyde, whose father owned Clyde Steamship Lines. He thus arrived at SOAS with money and resources to assemble a fertile organization. He later became interested in Quaker history, and after being enthused by a Mrs. Edna Joseph in 1923, immersed himself in a major effort that created a Quaker genealogical encyclopedia from various monthly meeting records. Its six volumes have become the definitive record of Quaker ancestry.

SOAS became an ideal New York venue for the Harrold’s and Frederick Haywood to demonstrate their Orville-reclamation project; its Met associations made it a half-sibling to Ravinia. Ravinia-related personalities at SOAS included Henri Scott, Morton Adkins, Mabel Garrison, Lucy Gates, Edith Mason, Florence Macbeth, and conductor Richard Hageman, plus, Jacques Coini , who had been with every permanent opera where Orville had appeared. They had already heard the new Orville sing, being favorably impressed, as well as being pleased with Orville’s performing capability. SOAS fall productions opened on September 23 of 1918, with initial plans for an eight-week season. On October 10, they presented Tales of Hoffman, with Orville as Hoffman 13, filling in for an ailing Riccardo Martin.

New York Tribune, October 11, 1918

but last night his voice of eight years ago returned to him and his tones were rich and powerful. Mr. Harrold has style, a beautiful voice, great clarity of diction, and fine character sense. He is today an artist of the very first rank, far and away the finest American tenor.

New York Herald, October 11, 1918

But the feature of the evening was the fine singing of Mr. Harrold. He electrified the audience singing with beautiful quality of tone and passionate fervor.

New York American, October 11, 1918

And he invested his characterization with splendid vocalism, wide range of dramatic expression, and remarkable intelligence. A special word of praise is due Mr. Harrold for his faultless presentation of the English text.

New York Globe, October 11, 1918

Mr. Harrold’s exceptional voice was in good condition, and his high notes stirred the audience to shouts of approval. One can always be sure with Mr. Harrold that his performance will be thoroughly studied musically, sound and skillful as to phrasing, diction, and expression.

New York Evening World, October 11, 1918

Chief among the stars was Orville Harrold; his splendid voice a delight to hear, his romantic presence and his easy, graceful bearing an object lesson to tenors, not only of American, but of foreign birth.

New York Evening Post, October 11, 1918

It was here that Orville Harrold won the loudest tribute of the evening.

In marketing Orville’s recovery, Blanche and he did not gloss over his circumstances. They described Orville’s journey of running downhill and climbing back up again, a classic comeback story that audiences and critics could love. A late 1918 Musical America edition credited Blanche as responsible for the resurrection, describing Orville’s daily YMCA workouts, diet, ninety-six voice lessons with Haywood, and picturing him bicycle riding (in hat and tie) and posing with Heywood13.5. His voice was described as “even richer, more vigorous, and smoother than before.” The article expressed delight that Orville had made this effort, rather than remaining content in the fact that “his second best is still far superior to many tenors’ best.”

A promotional box notice in the Musical Currier of October, 1918 showed head shots of Orville, Blanche, and Frederick Haywood, with the heading, THE TENOR WHO CAME BACK, HIS WIFE, AND TEACHER, with a description of the recovery:

“Orville Harrold sprang into fame as an operatic tenor almost overnight in London eight years ago; but he found, as so many other singers have, that being an American operatic tenor is more productive of fame than of fortune. So he went over to light opera and to the Hippodrome, where, singing two performances a day through two seasons, he spoiled the voice that had brought him fame. Realizing this, he and Mrs. Harrold determined that he should stop all work, rest, and attempt to restore his voice to its previous condition. He followed a very strict regime of life and study, working in the studio with Frederick Haywood for over a year, and the astonishing result was evident when he appeared in The Tales of Hoffman with the Society of American Singers at the Park Theatre, New York. He was given an ovation by the audience, and the press praised him extravagantly, the New York Tribune declaring him to be “far and away the finest American tenor. The pictures show Mr. Harrold, Mrs. Harrold, and Frederick Haywood, the New York teacher who rebuilt Harrold’s voice.”

Orville debuted his Pinkerton with SOAS on October, 24, in Madame Butterfly14. Perhaps buoyed by patriotic fervor, in addition to Hinshaw’s marketing, SOAS ran a six-month continuous season into the beginning of April, 1919, requiring additional singers not tied to other opera contracts. Seeking English opera, it was natural to present Gilbert and Sullivan, which grew so popular that it ran for continuous weeks at a time. Orville headed the cast of Robin Hood15, opening February 3, 1919, and appeared as Thaddeus in The Bohemian Girl during mid-March16, sang Irish ballads between acts on St. Patrick’s Day, and finishing in The Mikado at the end of March. While the last offered little for a tenor, the New York Times noted that, “Nanki-Poo’s opening ballad was sufficient excuse for Mr. Harrold’s entering the Gilbert and Sullivan series17.” Orville also rotated through spring productions of Martha, Cavalleria Rusticana, and I Pagliacci, with tenors Ricardo Martin and Craig Campbell. Campbell had starred opposite Emma Trentini in The Firefly, while Ricardo Martin (from Kentucky) was among the rare American trained American performers who had appeared with the Met. Orville attended the SOAS gala banquet in March, and the season ended with the two hundredth SOAS presentation.

The closing SOAS spring performance was Gilbert and Sullivan’s fairy opera, Iolanthe, suffering from of insufficient rehearsing. Orville was not in this show, but in a minor part among leaders of the ferries was Adelina Harrold, going by her first name18. After high school, Patti had entertained on the Redpath Chautauqua Circuit18.5 during 1919. There exists from this period a romantically posed and slightly risqué photo of Patti, marked on the back, “Hixon Newman Studios, Lobby Hotel Biltmore, Kansas City, Mo.” (This would be from the early studio of Orval Hixon, who compiled an extensive portfolio of vaudevillian portraits. Patti’s photo might have been taken during her Chautauqua tours, or when traveling with Irene in 1922. Hixon extensively photographed Indiana-born Valeska Suratt, the dancer who shared a bill with Orville at the Palace Theatre in 1915, and he became an official photographer for Shubert and Orpheum Theatre circuits.) Patti then took up a New York City apartment with her Chautauqua roommate, Miriam Voellnagel, and was taking voice training, with an eye toward opera. There must have been mixed feelings for her mother, Effie, as Patti followed her father’s path, but she could not resist embarking on the same adventure, and she had the talent to get results. Orville had obtained for Patti a spot in the SOAS chorus, from where she earned other minor rolls, presenting the possibility that they might have been together in a production, and they certainly would have spent time together with SOAS at the Park Theatre. She was also visited by several boys from Muncie, who were still pursuing her.

The extended SOAS season had just ended when Orville joined a new enterprise called the Commonwealth Opera Company, where the president was (Lieutenant) John Philip Sousa19. In the patriotic war climate, Sousa, an icon of all-American music, had assembled shows at the Hippodrome during 1915 and 1916, featuring operatic presentations that included Orville and Maggie Teyte (of SOAS)20. He formed the Commonwealth Opera during mid-1918, on donations from the American musical industry, to produce American-style comic opera and generally light entertainment. Much like SOAS, Commonwealth presented four Gilbert and Sullivan programs at the Brooklyn Academy of Music21, over four weeks of April, 1919. With its generally pro-American flavor, ten of the thirty cast members were from SOAS. The new Orville was attracting ample opportunities for staying before the public, in New York and beyond.

As the Commonwealth Opera packed its trunks in Brooklyn, Orville packed his bags to set out during the last week of April, 1919 on the first tour of yet another new opera company. Just days after Orville’s SOAS debut back in October, twenty-year Met baritone, Antonio Scotti, had announced plans to head a touring opera troupe, under the name Scotti Grand Opera Company. Part of the impetus was his desire to showcase his favorite roles, and he appeared in a majority of his presentations. He had a sweetheart deal with the Met, in which the tour was managed by the Metropolitan Musical Bureau22, stage sets and costumes were from the Met, and later new sets were designed and painted by Met designer James Fox23. Scotti had associations with SOAS president, William Hinshaw, perhaps gaining inspiration there for a company owned by shareholder performers. A number of performers were from the Met, plus SOAS sopranos Florence Easton (Maclennan) and Ruth Miller (who had also sung with the Met), and SOAS tenors Francis Maclennan and Orville Harrold. (Orville was the only Scotti member from Brooklyn’s Commonwealth Opera.)

This first Scotti tour was modest effort, functioning by attaching its special car to regular railroad trains, to present Leoni’s L’Oracolo, Mascagni’s Cavalleria Rusticana, and Puccini’s Madame Butterfly24. The plan was to mount spring and fall tours, and later events grew to as large as 150 people on their own train, traveling 3000 miles across country, into Canada, and down the west coast, including members of the Met chorus and orchestra25. In the spring of 1919, Orville’s primary objective was that he was once again attracting notice and performing well in the top layer of opera.

This Scotti tour swung down through Louisiana, Texas, St. Louis, Memphis, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, ending in May of 1919. After a brief time in New York, Scotti relaxing out at Far Rockaway, Orville and Antonio Scotti were off to Ravinia, where their road show of L’Oracolo was added to the program. Florence Easton was with them there, Thomas Chalmers arrived from the Met, and Orville appeared with Alice Gentle, from their old Hammerstein days. Hageman and Papi were again conducting, so that Ravinia was becoming something of a seasonal Met. Orville sang in eleven operas that summer26, which by then they were all in his expanding standard repertoire. He was growing increasingly versatile, popular, and in-demand, as his reconstituted voice continued to reconstitute his career.

Old chapters were ending, and new ones beginning, as Oscar Hammerstein died during August, while Orville was at Ravinia. After summer opera, the SOAS opened its fall 1919 season on October 13, presenting Suppe’s light opera (as opposed to his Light Brigade) Boccaccio. The part of Fillippa was played by Adelina Harrold27. For the fall, Patti had advanced to minor rolls, and was an SOAS understudy, remaining with them through the full winter season28. Orville was no longer associated with SOAS at this point.

Following the Ravinia summer season, Orville was back on the road during October with Scotti’s fall, 1919 tour. They presented the same three operas as during the spring, while swinging through the north rather than the south29. With several new members, they began on October 6 in Montreal, with some romantic intrigue. There was a new tenor, Mario Chamlee, reportedly found by Scotti singing in a New York silent movie theatre. If so, Scotti was likely pointed in that direction by one of the tour sopranos, Ruth Miller, whom Chamlee had secretly married just before the tour began30. Mario Chamlee had grown up in Los Angeles as Archer Cholmondeley, a minister’s son who graduated from USC as a science major, having studied violin and sung with the glee club. After serious voice training in Los Angeles he obtained a position with the Lombardi Opera Company of San Francisco in 1916, but was soon dropped by that organization. He next appeared with the Aborn Opera Company, where he sang with Ruth Miller31. The couple then sang together with the Cosmopolitan Opera Company at the Garden Theatre, New York, and also with that troupe in Detroit, before Mario was drafted into WWI32. He served for several years with the Argonne Players, a group of army soldiers who sang and entertained troops on the front lines. Returning from Europe to his waiting song-mate in 1919, he picked up a one-week gig with Hugo Riesenfeld at the Rialto Motion Picture Theatre, which stretched into fourteen weeks32.5. Over the next decade, the Chamlees were among Orville’s and Blanche’s closest friends.

From Montreal, Scotti’s fall tour moved for four weeks through Utica, Syracuse, and upper New York State, to Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Canton, Toledo, then on into Orville’s Indiana, and finally through lower Michigan. They were back in New York in November, where Orville had a new job. During Ravinia, where the Met contingent had heard the new Orville singing for a second season, conductor Gennaro Papi had approached Orville to let him know that Paul Althouse may be leaving the Met, and that Orville had an audition with Met general manager, Giulio Gatti-Casazza33. Orville had finally gotten his chance at the big show.

The 1919-20 Metropolitan season opened with Tosca on November 17. Gatti-Casazza had his wife, Frances Alda, and Orville present La Boheme the following evening at a charity benefit in Brooklyn, Orville’s first appearance in this opera, and starring as Rodolfo. Alda later reported that she was chagrinned that evening, as she was missing a simultaneous special event being given at the Met for the visiting Prince of Wales34. However,

“At least, I felt so, until I actually heard Orville Harrold sing his first Rodolfo. The beauty of his pure tenor voice so enthralled me I forgot about the Prince and the glitter across the Brooklyn Bridge….I could only realize that here was a marvelous voice and a marvelous singer. Brooklyn realized it too that night. The audience gave Harrold a tremendous ovation after his aria in the first act, before I began to sing. It was sincere and genuine and touching. Best of all, it was deserved.”

Alda reported to Gatti-Casazza and Otto Kahn, later that evening back at the Met, that. “Harrold had the biggest ovation any tenor ever had, Even Caruso.”

Orville had his Met debut in Manhattan the following Saturday, next to Caruso in his last new Met role. While Caruso starred as Lazaro in La Juive, Orville sang Leopoldo (another new role for him), along with Rosa Ponselle and three Ravinia partners, Rothier, Chalmers, and D’Angelo35. Antonio Scotti reportedly stated that he never heard finer singing than in the trio of Caruso, Ponselle, and Harrold36. Two nights later, Orville sang another new role as Grigori in Boris Godunov, in which the New York Times reported that he sang very well37. Having performed three new roles in a one-week span, Orville convincingly demonstrated versatility, stamina, and talent. Two evenings later, he and Scotti appeared in their now familiar L’ Oracolo from the road tour. He was off to a flying start, as critics and audiences appreciated both his singing and acting.

Interestingly, Boris Godunov was sung in Italian, except for the title role, sung in Russian by Feodor Chaliapin. Russian opera had arrived in the west only recently, having blossomed under Mikhail Glinka after mid-19th century. There were thus few opera singers capable of Russian, leaving the question of what language to use. Meanwhile, the Met abounded in foreign speaking performers, especially in male roles, and since Italian was fundamental to opera, it was the language of choice for this situation.

December settled into a more even pace, with no new roles, first with repetitions of La Juive during the early weeks. Orville then received a Christmas day ovation for his Pinkerton38, the first time at the Met, with Geraldine Farrar in Madame Butterfly. Completing his rehabilitation and return to top tier opera, he capped off 1919 with a defining December 29th performance of La Boheme, for which the New York Times declared, ORVILLE HARROLD TRIUMPHS. Continuing39:

“His singing of the hero in “La Boheme” wins instant success. Orville Harrold of Indiana, who has sung in almost every sort of stage entertainment in New York, and most successfully with Hammerstein’s opera in London, made up for ten lost years last night with a performance as hero in Puccini’s “La Boheme” that won success by acclamation from the most influential Monday audience at the Metropolitan Opera House. A crush of attendees, Italians all, started the spontaneous demonstration after Rodolfo’s aria in the first act, in which Mr. Harrold displayed a wealth of manly tenor voice, good diction, and grace as an actor, which perhaps he never showed in like measure before. He evidently had “arrived,” his hour of triumph was deserved, and when with Mme. Alda he finished the scene with a sustained, full, round high-note, the house responded with a roar of enthusiasm not often heard in a theatre.”

From among reviews summarized in a box advertisement in the Musical Currier40:

New York Tribune

“His performance clinched his right to be considered among the very first tenors. No such singing has been heard at the Metropolitan from any tenor in recent years, with the single exception of Mr. Caruso. Hats off, gentlemen - a great tenor and an American!”

New York Sun

“The audience was aroused to a demonstration of pleasure such as the house rarely witnesses. The outbreak, vigorous, general and long continued, was caused by the singing of Orville Harrold.”

New York American

“Orville Harrold, the American tenor, won last night in the Metropolitan Opera House one of the most pronounced successes achieved by any singer of his kind in New York since the star of Enrico Caruso rose above the horizon. He had his listeners with him from the very start, stirring them to a pitch of enthusiasm in the first act that held up the performance for fully two minutes.”

Orville had finally arrived, indeed.

As had happened throughout Orville’s career, opera companies continued to come and go. With excellent casts and sets, the Scotti Opera was popular and artistically successful, but failed financially in 1922. Orville participated in five of the six Scotti junkets. The SOAS performed its 1919-20 season, and perhaps one other. William Hinshaw considered touring the United States with SOAS to benefit localities that had few opportunities to experience good quality opera, and it is not known how much of this happened. He considered touring Europe in 1922. In the larger picture, SOAS was born of war mentality, and time eventually overran its appropriateness and viability.

As another aside, SOAS was apparently the last time that Orville worked with Jacques Coini, with whom he had shared much of the previous decade. Felice Lyne had described in London how Coini had contributed so greatly to preparing her for her first major appearances singing and acting on an opera stage. Under the title of artistic director, or more simply stage manager, Hammerstein had entrusted much of his shows’ artistic character to Coini, as did subsequent production companies. By 1921, Coini was working at the Chicago Opera with his old Hammerstein companion, Mary Garden, who was director there. (She and Hammerstein’s conductor, Cleofonte Campanini, were managing the Chicago Opera, which included many old Hammerstein performers.) From their work on a modernly weird opera called The Love for Three Oranges came a delightful description by Garden’s friend Ben Hecht (the Shakespeare of Hollywood) of Coini’s work, and how he did what he did, simply quoted as Hecht so well phrased it41:

And there is M. Jacques Coini….He wears a business suit, spats of tan and a gray fedora.  M. Coini is the stage director.  He instructs the actors how to act.  He tells the choruses where to chorus and what to do with their hands, masks, feet, voices, eyes and noses.

Through this business of skyrockets and crescendos and hobgoblins M. Coini stands out like a lighthouse in a cubist storm.  However bewildering the plot, however humpty-dumpty the music, M. Coini is intelligible drama.  His brisk little figure in its pressed pants, spats and fedora, bounces around amid the apoplectic disturbances like some busybody Alice in an operatic Wonderland.

The Opus mounts.  The music mounts.  Singers attired as singers were never attired before crawl on, bounce on, tumble on.  And M. Coini, as undisturbed as a traffic cop or a Loop pigeon, commands his stage.  He tells the singers where to stand while they sing, and when they don't sing to suit him he sings himself.  He leads the chorus on and tells it where to dance, and when they don't dance to suit him he dances himself. He moves the scenery himself. He fights with Mr. Prokofiev while the music splashes and roars around him.  He fights with Boris.  He fights with electricians and wigmakers.

It is admirable. M. Coini, in his tan spats and gray fedora, is more fantastic than the entire cast of devils and Christmas trees and lollypops, who seem to be the leading actors in the play. Mr. Prokofiev and Miss Garden have made a mistake.  They should have let M. Coini play "The Love for Three Oranges" all by himself.  They should have let him be the dream towers and the weird chorus, the enchantress and the melancholy prince. M. Coini is the greatest opera I have ever seen.”

Orville was forty-two years old when he joined the Met, thirteen years after venturing to New York. There had been Americans at the Met since the 1890’s, but virtually all had trained in Europe. Paul Althouse had been the first American tenor without European experience to sing at the Met. Rosa Ponzelle, a year before Orville, was one of the few other domestically trained Americans there, along with Mable Garrison. Between Americans and foreign pupils, Oscar Saenger had thirty former students at the Met by the mid-1920’s. Having arrived, Orville got a roaring start. After debuting with Caruso in an entirely new Met production, he had appeared sequentially in Madame Butterfly and La Boheme, the first and second most frequently performed operas in America (and both by the melodic Puccini). Years earlier, his youth had been described in a 1911 newspaper article42, literally, as Bohemian. Orville later stated that he identified particularly with La Boheme, after years of wandering and being left stranded in the Midwest by vaudeville43. Having squandered love and career, the wandering Orville had recovered both as the decade of the Great War closed in 1919.

1. Phone conversation with the granddaughter of Orville Harrold

2. The Comeback of Don Jose, article in The World Magazine, March 21, 1920, pg. 12

3. obit for Orville Harrold, The Daily Northwestern, October 21, 1933, Oshkosh, Wisconsin, pg. 4

4. Law and Letters, The New Yorker, October 29, 1932, pg. 10

5. obit of Dennis F. Obrien, www.yonkershistory.org/obrien.html

6. The Comeback of Don Jose

6.5. The Oakland Tribune, May xx, 1915, pg. xx

7. From Plow-Boy to Parsifal, Orville Harrold (Etude Magazine, New York, July, 1922) pg. 443

7.5 Famous Tenor To Sing Here Soon, Muncie Morning Star, February 10, 1918

8. ibid. and Seat Reservations For Orville Harrold, The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, March 10, 1918

9. Orville Harrold to Sing In Fort Wayne, The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, March 19, 1918

9.5 Orville Harrold Winning Laurels in Concert Field, Musical America, May 25, 1918, pg. 49

10. For Opera in English, The New York Times, March 5, 1917

11. Albert Reiss Quits American Singers, The New York Times, March 19, 1917

11.5. Opera In English At the Park, The New York Times, September 22, 1918

11.8 To Produce An American Opera, The New York Times, October 13, 1918

12. Opera In English At The Park, The New York Times, September 22, 1918

13. A summary of critical reviews, from an unknown publication, published by agent Walter Anderson, from the scrapbook of Effie Kiger

13.5 Article from Musical America, no edition or page, from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook

14. Mme. Butterfly Sung, The New York Times, October 25, 1918

15. To Revive “Robin Hood”, The New York Times, February 2, 1919

16. “Patience At the Park, The New York Times, March 16, 1919

17. American Singers Revive “The Mikado”, The New York Times, March 26, 1919

18. Revive “Iolanthe” At Park, The New York Times, April 3, 1919

18.5 Letter from Miriam Voellnagel to Orville Harrold, July 20, 1933

19. Stars Pledge Aid For Comic Opera, The New York Times, July 19, 1918

20. Plans of the Musicians, The New York Times, November 21, 1915

21. “Mikado” for Brooklyn, The New York Times, April 20, 1919

22. Scotti Plans Opera Tour, The New York Times, October 13, 1918

23. Scotti as Opera Pioneer, The New York Times, April 18, 1920

24. Scotti Starts His Tour, The New York Times, April 27, 1919

25. See America With Scotti, The New York Times, September 5, 1920

26. High Points In the Career of Orville Harrold, Charles A. Hooey, www.musicweb-international.com/hooey/harrold-chron.htm

27. “Boccaccio” Sung With Spirit At The Park, The New York Times, October 14, 1919

28. Theatre Notes, Munsey’s Magazine, October, 1920, pg. 112

29. Scotti to Resume Tour, The New York Times, October 5, 1919

30. Ruth Miller Secretly Wed, The New York Times, November 4, 1919

31. Mario Chamlee, Wikipedia.com

32. Ruth Miller Secretly Wed, The New York Times, November 4, 1919

32.5 Americanizing Our Opera, The New York Times, November 5, 1922

33. From Plow-Boy To Parcifal, Orville Harrold (Etude Magazine, New York, July, 1922) pg. 443

34. Men, Women, and Tenors, Frances Alda (Houghton Miflin Co. 1937) pg. 237

35. New Singers To Be Heard, The New York Times, November 16, 1919

36. Syndicated column by music critic, Pierre Keyes, unattributed clipping of November, 1919, from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook

37. The Opera, The New York Times, November 25, 1919

38. Throngs At Holiday Opera, The New York Times, December 26, 1919

39. Orville Harrold Triumphs, The New York Times, December 30, 1919

40. full page advertisement for Wolfsohn Musical Bureau, The Musical Currier, January 22, 1920

41. Ben Hecht and Prokofiev’s Love For Three Oranges, benhechtbooks.net/hecht_at_the_opera_with_prokofiev

42. Hoosier Tenor, The Indianapolis Sunday Star Magazine, December 10, 1911, pg. 1

43. From Plow-Boy To Parsifal, Orville Harrold (Etude Magazine, New York, July, 1922) pg. 443

 


Next .....

See also three Orville Harrold articles by Charle A Hooey:
•  Chronology
•  Discography
•  An American Original



 

* Based on family accounts from later years, which might have been tainted by events more specific to that period.

[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]

 

 


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