[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
Met Years, Two Careers 1920 - 1924
Arriving
at the Met did not guarantee performing at the Met, especially
in leading roles, because New York’s top opera had a deep
bench. It was stated at the start of the 1921-22 season that
Met general manager, Giulio Gatti-Casazza, had thirty one
sopranos, fourteen contraltos, fifteen baritones, nine bassos,
and fifteen tenors1. While all were notable singers,
young new arrivals received minor parts except for a few exceptional
talents who were well received by audiences. Contrastingly,
Orville was an old new arrival, having proven experience,
and was a principal tenor. Even so, Frances Alda reported
that Orville was not granted frequent leading roles until
proving that he could carry big parts and was an audience
pleaser2. Since he also pleased critics, Orville’s
Met reviews consistently noted his energetic vocal mastery,
linguistics, and acting.
Met
pay was structured in a parallel manner. Young new arrivals
received a one-season contract paying as little as $75 per
week3, with lesser supporting roles and a number
of weekly performances. Recalling Orville’s Broadway start
fifteen years previously, at pre-war wages of $50 per week,
the Met could constitute a pay cut from theatre or vaudeville.
With increasing experience and popularity, wages rose into
the hundreds of dollars per week, still above two weekly appearances.
A more accomplished performer, Rosa Ponselle began at $150
per week, fresh out of vaudeville, and rising through the
1920’s as a premier soprano. Principal performers in starring
roles were receiving hundreds of dollars per performance,
averaging between one and two performances per week. Florence
Easton, who had sung with Orville at Ravinia, SOAS, and Scotti
tours, early on received $50 per performance. Premier soprano,
Frances Alda, was paid $800 for each performance, while Geraldine
Farrar reportedly commanded $1500.
The
Met’s principal tenors were as an exotic and well-compensated
lot as the sopranos, led by Enrico Caruso, the only performer
paid more than Geraldine Farrar. With Americans Paul Althouse
and Riccardo Martin both gone, Met tenors were predominantly
foreign-born singers who were carefully courted by Gatti-Casazza,
leaving Orville something of a mundane addition unless he
performed exceptionally. Among Orville’s main competitors
were Italians, Giovanni Martinelli, Beniamino Gigli, and Giulio Crimi. Representative
weekly wages among principal tenors during this period were:
Crimi $700, Johannes Sembach $750, and Martinelli $1000.
Orville
started at the Met with a contract for $200 per week for a
twenty-four week season, requiring as many as four performances
per week4, although his typical Met season really
ran about thirty-six performances (ca. $130/performance his
first year). This was a lower weekly wage than he had enjoyed
with Hammerstein nearly a decade earlier. After proving his
capability (and income producing potential), he received a
contract for $12,000 per season5 ($545/week, $333/performance).
Gatti-Casazza finally raised Orville to $18,000 per season,
requiring only three performances per week5. (still
actually thirty-six per season for: $820/week, $500/performance)
While less per week than he had received for Hip Hip Hooray!,
this was much more per performance compared to grinding out
ten weekly performances at the Hippodrome. Orville spanned
mid-to-upper pay range for a principal Met tenor, in a day
when the average industrial wage was around $1500 per year.
(Farrar and Caruso received about a year’s average income
for each performance.) In addition to outright performing
capability, Orville soon demonstrated versatility and ability
to learn quickly, essential talents when the show must go
on. It had been said of Florence Easton, at the Royal Opera
of Berlin, that they could give her an opera score at 8:00
AM, and the opera stage at 8:00 PM6. She and Orville
provided similar value (and often sang together) at the Met,
Orville having performed three new operas in one week prior
to the 1919 holidays. In fact, combining the Society of American
Singers, Ravinia, Scotti Grand Opera, and the Met, Orville
had learned and presented eight new operas in 1919.
Performers
would appear in operas, in satisfying their Met contract,
but also in Sunday night concerts, special performances (galas,
fund raisers, etc.), and at any of four Met venues. Primary
was the Metropolitan Opera House at 39th Street
and Broadway, but most performers also appeared several times
each season at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and the Philadelphia
Opera House (formerly Hammerstein’s), while many also traveled
to Atlanta, Georgia for a week of opera during late April.
Brooklyn and Philadelphia offered opportunities to try new
performances or artists in new roles. These locations saw
regular Met presentations, but not always with the same cast
as might appear in Manhattan. Orville’s two Met performances
of Lucia were at Atlanta and Philadelphia, the latter
also witnessing his only known appearance in Tosca.
More
Americans were also arriving at the Met. Tenor, Charles Hackett,
had debuted in the spring of 1919, just prior to Orville.
Tenor, George Meader, made his first appearance at the beginning
of the 1921-22 season, on the stage with Orville. In between
had come soprano, Cora Chase, whose brief career may have
been shortened more by her marriage than by her singing, when
she wed her childhood sweetheart from Haverhill, Massachusetts.
Both being world travelers, she had followed a similar course
to that of Felice Lyne, going abroad with her mother while
still in her teens for study in Italy, to be discovered there
by Gatti-Casazza and signed to a three-year Met contract.
Her future husband, John Williamson, had meanwhile become
a foreign war correspondent for the New York Times, and was
Times Washington correspondent when they married. They thereafter
lived on Long Island and elsewhere.
After
his fall 1919 debut, January 1920 began gradually for Orville,
with repetitions of La Juive and La Boheme.
On January 19 Orville presented his Cavalleria Rusticana
for the first time at the Met. A pleased New York Times reported
that Orville was the “chief distinction of the performance”,
continuing, “Not only his singing was remarkably fine in
its power and pathos, in the beauty of its tone and the dramatic
expression he gave it, but his acting filled the part with
more of the significance of the character than has for a considerable
time been observed in performances of Mascagni’s well-worn
opera at the Metropolitan. The esteem in which Mr. Harrold
is held by the audience has been steadily and deservedly increased
since he appeared here first at the beginning of the present
season.” Orville followed this with a demonstration of
stamina and intelligence.
The
new year had Met casts scrambling for stand-ins to cover a
rash of influenza and cold victims, which continued to plague
them on January 24 as they prepared to present Carmen
to a special group of French dignitaries and their Ambassador,
at a benefit for New York’s French Hospital. Gatti-Casazza
turned to Orville, who was healthy if nothing else, after
two of the Italian tenors had been found to be incapacitated.
Orville had already spent the day working on another new role
to be debuted the following weekend, and had seemingly not
sung Carmen since 1914 at the Century Opera. With no
time for rehearsal, Gatti-Casazza rolled the dice on Orville
and came up with7 “an extraordinary first appearance
for the Metropolitan and will doubtless be repeated in the
regular series.” The New York Herald described it as8,
“one of the best heroes of that opera the Metropolitan
stage has presented in recent years. He was dramatically strong
and vocally in the best form Metropolitan audiences have heard
him yet.” The French entourage complimented the Met on
Orville’s fine pronunciation of the French libretto. Such
was the stuff of Orville’s renegotiated contract. A fringe
benefit for Geraldine Farrar, as Carmen, was that she had
a Don Jose whom she could enjoy really pushing around and
getting physical with, for Caruso had been avoiding her increasingly
realistic physicality.
With
a decade and a half of stage experience, Orville continued
responding well to new opportunities and challenges in the
Met’s hectic world, and to an extent, his first season was
a rush to get fully up to Met speed and repertoire. The new
role he had been rehearsing was tenor lead for the January
31 world premiere of Cleopatra’s Night, starring Frances
Alda. The tenth American opera presented by the Met, this
was composed by Henry Kimball Hadley, the Bostonian who had
premiered Bianca at the Society of American Singers
in 1918. Cleopatra’s Night ran for six performances
during the spring of 1920, the last conducted by Hadley, plus
three performances the following season. (Hadley went on to
a career as an orchestra conductor, primarily with the New
York Philharmonic Orchestra.) The pace continued, as Orville
sang La Boheme on February 13, after seven hours rehearsing
during the day for yet another new role, but still netting
hearty applause and complementary critical review for a robust
performance9.
During
his 1918 rebuilding, Orville had placed himself for management
with New York’s Walter Anderson agency, who distributed brochures
and had published such items as his “comeback” articles in
music-related magazines. With advancement to the Met, he shifted
to management by the Wolfsohn Musical Bureau, which years
earlier had brought Madame Schumann-Heink to America. Wolfsohn
began publishing full page broadsides in Musical America
and Musical Courier magazines proclaiming Orville’s
achievements. These quoted glowing critical reviews of his
continuing new Met roles and generally endeavored to increase
his reputation and public recognition to build Orville’s audiences
and commercial value. Wolfsohn had extensive contract associations
with American and foreign promoters who could offer concert
and other engagements outside of the Met. The earliest of
these broadsides appeared in the January 24, 1920 Musical
America, focused on Orville’s Met triumph in La Boheme
during late December, 1919.
With
a Met career launched, Orville began recording during February
of 1920 for the Victor Talking Machine Company at their studios
in Camden, New Jersey. He continued with them for his five
Met seasons, often recording during summer off-time, but also
occasionally during opera season. These are mostly one-sided
78 RPM recordings, numbering over two dozen titles, and with
their large production are the most common of his records.
Orville
next debuted as Parsifal on February 19, his first known performance
of Wagner. A number of things were new, since the Met had
not presented Parsifal in three years because of the
war. Scenery was completely fresh, nearly the entire cast
was singing Parsifal for the first time, and the libretto
was a recent English translation, since the Met was not yet
returning to German opera. The performance and its text were
well received, lines streaming more like English literature
than an awkward translation, although it was noted that future
presentations would flow more smoothly as the newly initiated
cast became more practiced. While the character, Parsifal,
is an innocent young adventurer, whom Orville could only match
on the third count, he achieved a convincing portrayal with
a combination of acting and firm yet sensitive singing with
crystal diction. A Wolfsohn broadside highlighting a repeat
of the role the following December recounted six laudatory
reviews in six different New York papers, indicating the popularity
of both Orville and opera during the period9.5.
The interesting observation on the February performance regarded
pronunciation, as Richard Aldrich noted in the New York
Times that10, “the total number of comprehended
lines was disappointingly small.” It was not expected
that American audiences would need to read text from the program.
Orville’s diction was excellent, as was that of baritone,
Clarence Whitehall, who sang very clearly in several languages.
Beyond them, “Words, phrases, were often to be caught;
a whole line or a whole sentence, unfortunately, rather seldom.”
When the tables turned, European performers were no better
than Americans at being understood in foreign opera, and numerous
singers were often incomprehensible in their own tongues.
Another
Orville “comeback” story appeared during March 1920, this
time in a tabloid newspaper supplement called The World
Magazine, describing how Orville and Blanche had met and
parted years earlier, after which Orville became a literal
“has-been” 11. It then recounted their reunion
and rebuilding, to where Orville had returned as the Met’s
Don Jose. The continued appearance of such articles is sufficiently
consistent as to likely constitute a deliberate campaign directly
from Blanche and Orville, since the articles contain personal
details and photos and span several different of Orville’s
management firms. While the articles note a downturn of fortunes,
they are positive narratives presenting nearly a Horatio Alger
story built on the force of Blanche’s and Orville’s personal
union. Orville must have felt some such power of relationship,
having previously had contrastingly supportive and destructive
marriages.
As
spring progressed, Orville was in a Sunday night Met concert
of popular Italian arias, a special concert at Carnegie Hall
several weeks later, and an Oscar Hammerstein memorial concert
at his old Manhattan Opera House on March thirtieth. His final
debuting Met role of the season was Faust during late
April, in an “All-American” presentation with Geraldine Farrar
as Marguerite. (He had earlier sung Faust with the
Met over in Brooklyn, but not at Broadway and 39th
Street.) The progressing state of opera, combined with lingering
wartime patriotism, completely filled the house to hear all
principal parts sung by Americans, who had previously sung
them either at the Met or elsewhere. Reviews assured that
the rush was completely artistically justified, prolonging
each scene with curtain calls. It was noted that12,
“the tenor contributed no less than the prima donna and
basso”, and that, “Marguerite’s garden sealed the triumph.”
Finally, “Urban’s garden (architect and Met set designer,
Joseph Urban) blossomed from fiction to reality, when the
house rained bouquets from the boxes and front rows, as it
has not done with so free hand since the recent “No Flowers”
rule. The two men picked up a dozen great bunches and piled
them in Miss Farrar’s arms until she ran off the stage. Then
(Clarence) Whitehall tossed the last bouquet to Harrold, who
deftly sidestepped, grinning, behind the curtain and left
the audience roaring with amusement and applause.”
Days
later Orville concluded his inaugural Met season with Parsifal.
He had succeeded because of talent, depth of stage experience
and an easygoing personality that worked will with management,
cast, and audiences. With no time for enjoying the glow, he
was in Atlanta, Georgia the following week, as the Met set
up for summer opera there. He just had time for his usual
roles in Lucia and Madame Butterfly, and then
was away again.
Orville
immediately set out traveling with the second Scotti Grand
Opera spring tour, which had grown considerably. Starting
the first week of May, they were to visit twelve cities throughout
the South and Southwest, then turn north to end in Indianapolis
a month later. There were new sets, with a cast of nearly
all Met singers, and nearly all Americans, accompanied by
additional Met chorus and orchestra, summing to over a hundred
members on their special train. Additionally, their repertoire
had expanded to eight operas, and was well attended despite
charging nearly Broadway rates16. Among their adventures,
they loaned sets to the Met summer opera setting up in Atlanta,
crossed the Mississippi on “floats” by moonlight to face flooded
streams and rivers throughout Texas, collected only gold and
silver (there were virtually no bills) in the “wild west”
environment of the Tulsa oil fields, and packed up by candlelight
in flooded Springfield, Missouri to then wade to the train.
Scotti was invariably hissed by appreciative audiences as
the villain in L’Oracolo, while bravos and applause
for Orville’s aria in La Boheme were reported to virtually
“stop the show” in New Orleans17.
Orville
had relaxed some while in Houston on the Scotti tour, accompanying
Blanche’s younger sister, Rachel Malevinsky, to a luncheon
meeting of the Business Women’s Club18 (she apparently
dealt in real estate). He enjoyed the cooking, as both sisters
apparently made excellent lemon pie, and announced that he
was looking forward to summer at his Connecticut home. Rachel
lived with the oldest of the Malevinsky sisters, Helene, plus
a younger sister, Anna, with their parents nearby. Similar
to Blanche, Helene went by the last name of Malley, suggesting
a family connection to the name. They may have legally changed
their names, as Blanche used Malli on passports she received
prior to marrying Orville.
Orville
had worked continuously since completing his overhaul in the
spring of 1918, and was perhaps feeling sufficiently secure
as to take a break. He did not return to Ravinia for the summer
of 1920. On the other hand, Wolfsohn Musical Bureau announced
at the beginning of June, just as the Scotti tour returned
to New York, that Orville was among a number of opera performers
for which it had summer engagements in London19.
It is not clear that Orville took that trip, however, as he
apparently lingered nearby New York for the summer.
Such
lingering occurred at his new country retreat in Connecticut,
which Orville had alluded to in Houston. During the previous
October, just prior to his Met debut, Blanche had purchased
from New York widow, Clara Rhatigan, a house and several parcels
of land she had accumulated in West Norwalk Connecticut13
between 1914 and 1916. This was located near the Darien town
line, and not far from the Silvermine District between Norwalk
and Wilton, where numerous arts and entertainment personalities
had country homes. Blanche and Orville had more like a small
farm, which it literally became as Orville built a duck pond
by damming the creek, a chicken run, pig pens, and eventually
plowed fields on foot behind two white horses14.
It was later reported that they had found the area when visiting
an adjacent farm belonging to one of Blanche’s nieces, who
could only have been Dorothy, daughter of brother Moses. They
soon purchased their own, with outbuildings and a farmhouse
on twenty three acres. The estate was called BoLe, where the
first syllable was for Blanche and Orville, and the second
was for two relatives named Larry and Edward15,
unidentified and assumed related to Blanche, since no candidates
appear in the Harrold line. The bottom portion of the house
was finished in attractive stonework, as were a garage and
springhouse, and Orville added a barn of substantial proportions.
As the opera season closed in April 1920, they began extensive
improvements on the farmhouse that continued into the fall.
Orville appears to have spent the summer of 1920 enjoying
his family and surroundings, and taking in a Broadway musical.
Patti
Harrold had spent the 1919-20 season at the Park Theatre,
still going by Adelina, in the chorus and as an understudy
with the Society of American Singers. While she undoubtedly
gained voice and stage experience, singing regularly in their
Gilbert and Sullivan productions, the casts apparently remained
sufficiently healthy that she got discouragingly little front
stage exposure20. As opera ended, she was consequently
attracted to spring’s main Broadway event. Author and actor,
James Montgomery, had written between 1908 and 1917 a half-dozen
books and scripts that found modest success as New York plays.
By 1917 he had improved his commercial success by converting
several of these to musical comedies, but continued pursuing
a play based on his “Cinderella story” called Irene O’Dare.
After being turned down by several producers, he teamed with
a new pair of songwriters, Harry Tierney and lyricist Joseph
McCarthy (no relation to the senator) to switch this into
another musical comedy, Irene.
Montgomery joined with producer, Carle Carleton, and Joseph Moran, part owner
of the new Vanderbilt Theatre, to finance production. Irene,
the musical, opened at the Vanderbilt in mid-November, 1919,
staring Edith Day as Irene, for whom the part was seemingly
created. Between charm and music, Irene succeeded hugely,
one of the first musicals of its type, and was often copied
afterward. Edith Day married Carle Carleton, producer and
her manager, who then sold his part of the Broadway production
to Montgomery, taking Edith to England in April 1920, where
they opened Irene in London. The musical proved equally
successful there, expanding eventually to the Continent. Edith
Day Carleton soon divorced, remarrying to her stage “prince”,
and continued on to a successful career in London west end
theatre.
Irene was positioned to benefit from several period trends. Entertainment
was embracing both women and America’s frontier image. Puccini’s
opera La Fanciulla del West had enjoyed a highly publicized
1910 world premiere at the Met, with Caruso and Emmy Distinn,
based on the David Belasco play Girl of the Golden West.
(New York producer Belasco had also written the play behind
Madame Butterfly, based on an English novel, and built
the Belasco Theatre, where his ghost reportedly still resides.)
Belasco’s play was somewhat inspired by the first female action
superstar, Annie Oakley (a Greenville, Ohio Quaker), much
publicized in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, and at
sixty-one still giving shooting exhibitions when Irene
opened. (She met her husband while defeating him in a high
stakes shooting match.) The All-American young woman was transforming
from damsel to heroine, epitomized by clean-cut Midwestern
girls, of which genuine articles were a rising Broadway commodity.
The image blended with suffragists and the recent 19th
Amendment to celebrate action at home and on a local scale.
Women had helped win the war, flapper girls were wearing skirts
above the knee, and even wearing pants, and women were joining
the workforce in large numbers. The image of the independent
frontier woman continued into mid-20th century,
peaking with Oklahoma, among the first musicals to
surpass Irene’s long Broadway run.
Another
trend was adult themes. Art entertains, evokes, and provokes.
Sexuality aside, a single 1907 Met performance of Strauss’s
Salomé was sufficiently repelling that it was banned
from the Met over the next twenty-seven years. Salomé sang
shockingly to St. John the Baptist’s severed head, embracing
it and kissing it on the lips, after which she was ordered
killed by her father. (The stunned audience exited in silence.)
Seductress Salomé was sometimes portrayed onstage in her Dance
of the Seven Veils wearing only a body stocking, which
could be exciting, while elsewhere, one of Geraldine Farrar’s
opera costumes consisted solely of a skirt, assisted by several
strategic jewels. New York dancer and singer, Valeska Suratt,
who appeared with Orville at the Palace Theatre, had a show
closed for indecency. Paris dancer, Gaby Deslys, who had once
shared the Hippodrome stage with Orville, sometimes danced
semi-clad, segueing naturally (so to speak) into Josephine
Baker’s performances just a few years later. The early 20th
century was leaping so rapidly into modern openness that New
York Mayor, Jimmy Walker, signed the 1926 padlock law. Theaters
would be padlocked and casts imprisoned for portraying sex
outside of marriage, prostitution, homosexuality, or outward
sexuality. Mae West was jailed for three days in 1927 for
writing and starring in her play, SEX.
Irene was not at all sexually graphic. While it may have lost a few patrons,
it was sufficiently inoffensive to enjoy the longest Broadway
run for eighteen years to come, along with at least four simultaneous
road tours appearing throughout America. And yet, it would
perhaps have been padlocked for juxtaposing an interesting
woman with an interesting man. At the least, it moved into
openly gender-bending roles.
Remaining
modest throughout, Irene O’Dare is the enterprising daughter
of a Manhattan widow struggling to maintain the family music
store. After investing in the modern convenience of a telephone,
she answers it one day to receive a piano tuning job from
a wealthy Long Island bachelor. Smitten by Irene, but separated
by their social stations, he contrives to keep Irene in his
life by engaging her in a scheme with his wacky cousin and
the cousin’s gentleman friend, who is a flamboyant cross-dressing
fashion designer known as Madame Lucy. (Busby Berkley reportedly
played Madame Lucy in one of the road shows.) Irene takes
over marketing, posing with several of her friends as high
society women wearing Madame Lucy’s creations and arranging
fashion shows for the clothing line. Overcoming tribulations
(Irene is troubled by continuing the ruse) and misunderstandings
promoted by meddling mothers, Irene and her true love finally
tumble completely for each other and warble away to happiness.
Patti
Harrold, a genuine Midwestern girl, wandered into the Vanderbilt
Theatre during late April 1920, just as Edith Day departed.
(Adelina was dropped, since Orville had recently made the
Harrold surname amply marketable in New York.) She approached
James Montgomery for a part in his production, who offered
her (again) a chorus position, but soon made her understudy
to the starring role. Patti was exactly the same age as Irene,
and had both voice training and some experience on a serious
stage, attractive features among a generally young cast. Montgomery
had just formed the Vanderbilt Production Company to mount
Irene road shows, so that Patti rehearsed the role
with them for several weeks, then rejoined the Broadway chorus21.
Now
two-thirds owner of Irene, springtime found James Montgomery
becoming wealthy, while changes rapidly followed the exit
of Edith Day. In just weeks, seventeen year old Jeanette MacDonald
was brought from the chorus into a speaking part, while Patti
emerged from the chorus when Adele Rowland (Irene the 2nd)
suffered voice problems one Friday in late May. (History equivocates
on whether Adele’s troubles were real or feigned). Montgomery
teed up Patti for the following night, who practiced for much
of the next twenty-four hours. She debuted22 as
Irene on Saturday, May 29, about a quarter of the way into
Irene’s 675 performances. Layering Cinderella reality
over the musical plot, Patti completed the show’s long run,
becoming the most popular and durable Irene.
New
York suddenly had two Harrold Cinderella’s, and Patti had steady employment
at one location for the next year and a half. The role had
its challenges. Irene must act, sing, and dance. She has the
bulk of the musical numbers, many of which are typical operetta
material, but some of which are in the new idiom of jazz.
Irene is a babbling nineteen year old lass who rattles on
constantly about herself and all else, so that the part accelerates
rapidly from opening curtain, and must flow continuously and
smoothly to seem in character. The actress has little time
to think, so must recover naturally from errors or lapses,
as Irene might have behaved. The role called for a bouncy
vivacious Irene, and Patti fit quickly into the role, stating
that it came naturally to her so that she was essentially
playing herself23. Publicity photos soon followed,
taken at both White Studios and at the studio of Edward Thayer
Monroe.
In
its “Plans of Musicians” section, during the first week of
June, 1920, the New York Times reported simultaneously that
Patti Harrold had made her debut as Irene’s prima donna,
and that Beth Martin, daughter of former Met and SOAS tenor,
Riccardo Martin, was appearing in a New York play24.
By sheer coincidence, the article also reported that a New
York psychic, who claimed that the spirit of Adelina Patti
had promised to teach her to sing, had held a séance to retrieve
the departed soprano. Unfortunately, the temperamental singer
had failed to appear, to which a disappointed participant
had declared, “same old Patti in a different world.”
As
a starlet might, our living Patti went on a weight loss campaign
when her new role became permanent, as she had drifted up
to 148 pounds25. While the theatre work constituted
considerable exercise, she danced and played tennis and golf
as much as possible, while claiming to have subsisting for
a month on nothing but fruit. She admitted that this compromised
her health, but reduced her to a satisfying 122 lbs., for
which she was complimented by audiences and interviewers.
Patti
debuted while Orville was traveling the South with the spring
Scotti opera tour. They were likely aware, as there must have
been regular contact with Met New York offices. Orville certainly
knew by the time of their last stop in Indianapolis, almost
his hometown. The Indianapolis Star had reported on May 23rd
that Patti was in the Irene chorus, and she would have
immediately wired home news of her promotion, or even used
the modern convenience of a telephone, as Irene had done.
Orville would certainly have visited parents and family in
Muncie, at which time his son, Paul, was just completing high
school junior year. With new country estates and new careers
blossoming in the East, Paul began a two year sabbatical from
high school and lived with Orville for at least part of the
time. While Paul may not have spontaneously boarded the train
that day with his father, again, he probably headed to Connecticut
after school was out. Orville finally had stability, so that
he remained in Connecticut for the summer of 1920, enjoying
success and his children.
Irene continued to fill the Vanderbilt Theatre through summer heat, while
the cast and creators made occasional benefit appearances.
The Irene starlet’s rise, on her own merit, was a charming
success story that received notice in the October Munsey’s
Magazine and elsewhere. With rotogravure printing and
the flood of WWI photographs, the New York Times had begun
a tabloid newspaper publication called Mid-Week Pictorial
in 1914, several decades before Life Magazine, which continued
until 1937. The New York Tribune began a similar section,
as did the New York Sunday Times, which became the ubiquitous
Sunday supplement. A standard Mid-Week Pictorial motif after
the war was a full page collage of bust portraits and brief
descriptions around various entertainment themes. Patti became
the first Harrold in one of these, during 1920, with a “white
coat” publicity pictures from Irene on a page of Broadway
theatre personalities.
The
younger Harrold worked steadily through the year, while the
older one seemingly relaxed until the Scotti Grand Opera Co.
launched a major fall junket. Scotti’s 1920 fall event was
a seven-week coast-to-coast field trip beginning in mid-September26,
on which Paul apparently accompanied his father. They stopped
in seventeen American cities in fourteen states, plus Vancouver
and ended in Montreal at the extremes of Canada. After a first
performance in South Bend, Indiana, they spent two weeks reaching
Vancouver, divided a week between Seattle and Portland, a
week each at San Francisco and the Los Angeles Convention
Center, then a fortnight heading through Salt Lake and middle-America
to finally pass through Toledo and onto Montreal on October
30. Their train carried a number of added Met soloists, plus
a complete chorus and orchestra of virtually all Met performers,
led part of the time by the Met’s conductor Gennaro Papi.
They again presented eight operas, Faust in French and the
remainder in Italian.
Met
rehearsals for the 1920-21 season must already have begun
as the Scotti tour returned to New York. As he had for all
of his Met seasons except one, Caruso sang opening night,
Monday November 15, in La Juive, with Orville again
singing the role of Leopold. The next night Orville performed
Faust in Brooklyn with Geraldine Farrar, and the season
was rolling. His Met career became more routine, having previously
built repertoire and a position of standing in lead roles.
His friend from Scotti opera tours, Mario Chamlee, was now
on a similar course, debuting as one of several new Met tenors
on November 20, as Cavaradossi in Puccini’s Tosca.
After the 1917-18 season as a Met soprano, Ruth Miller Chamlee
had been giving voice lessons and performing with Scotti tours
and at Ravinia. The couple now had its second Met career.
Gatti Casazza had also brought in a new Italian tenor, Beniamino
Gigli, at the start of the season. He quickly began appearing
in new roles, of which La Boheme and Cavalleria
Rusticana overlapped with Orville, so that they somewhat
alternated in these operas.
Another
Met career was on a downward trajectory with a series of December
incidents. During Sampson and Delilah, on December
3, Enrico Caruso was hit in the back by an accidently falling
pillar in the scenery, which perhaps had little to do with
ensuing events, as his wife felt that his health had been
declining since a lengthy summer tour. (He had long indulged
generously in food, wine, and tobacco, so that his health
may not have been the most robust.) Within days he developed
a chill and a cough, with dull pain in his side. During a
presentation of D’elisir d’amore at the Brooklyn Academy
of Music, on December 11, Caruso suffered a throat hemorrhage
and the performance was cancelled after one act. He remained
unwell, but made three more December appearances, concluding
with La Juive on Christmas Eve. Orville again sang
Leopold, while Caruso suffered through his last Met performance.
His discomfort grew intense over the holidays, when he was
diagnosed with pleurisy and empyema. There began a series
of surgeries to drain fluid from his chest and lungs, after
which he returned to Italy, where he died in August of 1921
at age forty-eight.
Following
Caruso’s stunning holiday exit, Orville sang in a Met Sunday
night concert on January 9th, but did not appear
in an opera until January 15th, when the Met presented
its long awaited first performance of Louise, a French
opera by Carpentier that had launched the career of Mary Garden.
Louise had been premiered in New York by Hammerstein’s
Manhattan Opera in 1908, but had been staged only occasionally
since then by the visiting Chicago Opera Company, likely using
Hammerstein’s old sets. There were fresh sets at the Met,
along with special effort with the chorus and orchestra to
create Paris street music, since, to a considerable extent
the city of Paris was a character in the opera. (Humble dressmaker,
Louise, leaves her family to join her artist lover in Paris.)
Geraldine Farrar and Orville were again paired in the lead
roles, although with less passionate interaction than in Carmen,
while the male lead offered much less substance to embrace
than did the female lead, who interacts more with the character
of her father.
With
about one performance per week, Orville continued appearing
in Sunday night concerts (which fulfilled his contract, just
as opera performances did) and Louise throughout January
and February, with Madame Butterfly added at the Philadelphia
Opera House the day after Valentine’s Day. He had just sung
on February 20, 1921, at the funeral of Sylvester Rawling,
music editor of the New York Evening World, when his mother,
Emma Chalfant Harrold, died in Indiana on the evening of February
24, as he was appearing in the fifth performance of Louise.
Patti almost certainly accompanied him home for the funeral
and for his mother’s burial at Beech Grove Cemetery in Muncie.
After
returning from Indiana, Orville debuted in his second Wagner
role as lead tenor in Lohengrin, opposite Florence
Easton as Elsa. This was also sung in English, and Orville,
again, filled the role on short notice. It is not apparent
that he had ever before sung this opera, so had to absorb
it in little time. This proved to be a popular performance
that was repeated a half-dozen times, along with Faust,
Carmen, and La Boheme, to fill Orville’s 1921
spring season. Also, Orville’s granddaughter had notes from
an article in the New York Telegraph that Patti and the Irene
cast presented a benefit concert at the Met on the afternoon
of March 31, while Orville sang Rigoletto that evening27.
Met records have the Duke in Rigoletto sung by Charles
Hackett that evening, so that one of the reports seems incorrect,
although Orville might have stepped in at the last minute.
It was apparently rare for two members of the same family
to have appeared on the Met stage in one day.
Met
performers were again in Atlanta during late April, where
Orville’s La Boheme was a sensation, opposite Lucrezia
Bori (who had rejoined the Met after a six-year hiatus, because
of throat surgery) as Mimi, and before an audience of five-thousand28.
While they sweated in the heat, performing in the role of
poets and artists freezing their hands in a frigid Bohemian
garret apartment, Atlanta was convinced that it had witnessed
the finest opera ever presented there. The Atlanta Georgian
(“A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes”) declared, “Frankly,
many of us were amazed at Mr. Harrold’s singing……with the
first bars of that greatest of all tenor arias, the “narrative”
of Rodolfo, he held his great audience spellbound……That, of
course, was Harrold’s great moment. Nothing in the opera,
however beautiful, quite approaches the “narrative”. But whenever
Harrold’s voice was heard again, in the duets with Scotti
and with Bori, it was just as strong and impassioned and beautiful29.”
Among several opera-related articles in the paper, one critic
opened with a digression bemoaning, “that the present prohibition
law is the most outrageous infringement that was ever perpetrated
upon the rights of man!!!” Returning to opera, he praised
Miss Bori as an exquisite and adorable moonbeam, who moved
the critic, as well as the entire audience, to open weeping
with her death in the last act. It was no wonder, he praised,
that Mr. Harrold acted his grief so well, and sang it so gloriously30.
Orville
sang in a late New York performance of Madame Butterfly
on May 7, which completed his second Met season. He was soon
joined in Connecticut by his father, who had closed his Indiana
affairs following his wife’s death, and was moving to Orville’s
farm for an indefinite period31. Blanche was then
perhaps hosting three generations of Harrold fellows, as Orville’s
son may have yet been around and there are photos of the three
together, the group undoubtedly catching a performance of
Irene. As a consequence, Orville was again absent from
Ravinia for the summer of 1921. It is probable that daughter,
Marjorie, was also in Connecticut for at least part of the
summer, as she was just out of high school. Patti had been
trying to coax Marjorie to New York to begin seriously studying
stage and singing, for according to family lore she was at
least as talented as Patti. (Paul also had an excellent voice,
but was more inclined toward performing in athletics.) However,
the night before Marjorie was to leave for New York, she disappeared
to marry a Muncie boy named Floyd Foster32. Although
this did not permanently derail New York plans, the marriage
never sat well in the family, and was destined to become tragically
unpopular. But, for the summer, Orville was as completely
immersed in his family as he would ever be again, and the
Scotti Grand Opera tour of that fall was the only one in which
Orville did not participate. He apparently enjoyed a summer
of contentment, at the high point of his life.
Within
the family, Orville’s Connecticut farm was always discussed
as being in Darien, which raises some confusion, because he
died in Darien. The farm was in West Norwalk, and was sold
years before Orville died. It is likely that visitors arrived
there via the Darien train station, as that was the most convenient
stop, which may have given rise to the misperception. Once
they arrived, they found a country gentleman’s farm having
a large house with decorative stonework. There were gardens
around it, a country casual interior, and sunny porches across
the south side of the house. A number of rooms were furnished
in wicker tables, chairs, and couches, and some areas were
decorated by Blanche with a collection of lucky elephants
gathered from her various travels.
Fall
of 1921 brought another opera season, with new Met debuts
for Orville. He also caught up with Patti by being pictured
in a Mid-Week Pictorial magazine spread entitled Opera
Singers of International Fame. He was shown in costume
as Rodolfo, while Mario Chamlee was also pictured, in addition
to Antonio Scotti and Met tenors, Beniamino Gigli and Giovanni
Martinelli.
Fall
of 1921 also brought changes for Patti. Irene closed
on Broadway during October, after which the “original” cast
joined other road crews touring across America for much of
the next nine months. They started in the east and moved westward,
accompanied by publicity and local interviews. Amid this,
there began circulating a fable that 19th century
soprano, Adelina Patti, was the godmother of Irene
star, (Adeline) Patti Harrold33. The general storyline
was that Orville had sought voice training in London, had
a daughter while there (1899), and that the famed soprano
had participated in the christening and presented a gold ring
(or gold cup, or christening dress) to the family. In reality,
Orville never left the American Midwest before 1906, and was
never outside the country until Hammerstein sent him to London
in 1911, when Patti was age twelve. It is believed that Lydia
Locke and Orville, the reigning London tenor of 1911-12, did
meet Adelina Patti, who would certainly have heard that Orville’s
daughter was named after her. Lydia, in her motivational talks
during their Midwest tours of 1912-13, stated that she had
received in London similar “hard work” advice from Adelina
Patti34. Patti Harrold might have had or carried
some object that the soprano had passed to her through meeting
Orville. While that is speculation, the rest is fabrication.
The
fifth performance in the opening week of the 1921-22 Metropolitan
season was the U.S. premiere of Die Tote Stadt on November
19. The best-known opera by young Erich Korngold, fifteen
years before he went to Hollywood, it was the also first Met
airing of German language since 1917. The opera had premiered
in Germany about a year before, and the Met production served
as a vehicle for the American debut of Viennese soprano, Maria
Jeritza, opposite Orville in the lead role. The opera itself
is an unusual work of dissonant style and strange protracted
dream sequences that are difficult to follow, based on a Belgian
novel that possibly flows down to Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo.
The protagonist, Paul, mourns endlessly for his deceased wife,
Marie, in the dead and dark medieval-seeming city of Bruges,
an allegory for post imperial Vienna after WWI, when the opera
was written. Paul finally concludes from his dreams that life
is for the living, so that he must leave Bruges and begin
anew. Amid all this, the audience was, “..cordial, even
in moments of perplexity…more friendly than enthusiastic35.”
Die
Tote Stadt was a lengthy opera
that presented extended and difficult scores for its main
characters, especially Paul. Tall and graceful Jeritza made
a dramatic debut, in which it was noted that she was required
to perform, “..shrieking, such strenuous shrieking as to
arouse pity and concern for her beautiful voice36…”
Meanwhile, Orville sang, “a part more brutally treated
by the composer than that of the heroine37.”
The Met had originally planned Johannes Sembach for the role,
a German tenor who approached baritone range at his lower
end. However, like William Tell, this opera required
dwelling amid high C’s and D’s, where few tenors are at ease.
One critic noted, “Orville Harrold has done
nothing more to his credit since his debut at the Metropolitan
than his delineation of Paul, a fanatic person who finds a
little calm only at the very end of the opera. The music is
of a frightful tessitura, there are successive pages of the
score when a majority of the notes are above the staff. He
did not come through unscathed as to quality, but he did sing
many phrases of charm and appeal, and he succeeded in making
a thankless rôle a fairly convincing one
38.”
The Times described
the role of Paul as, “
much uninterrupted singing, much outpouring of high
tones in full voice,….difficult and ungrateful in its dramatic
outline
38.5.”
It was a musical workout that
considerably stressed the voice, and was doubly difficult
since Orville had to stretch his linguistic talent to become
proficient in German. An exciting new opportunity for Orville,
he performed Die Tote Stadt seven times at the Met
over a nine week period, plus once at Philadelphia in the
spring, and with his rising popularity sang forty times overall
for the season. Although not the twice-a-day forced march
of the Hippodrome, it was a strenuous season that took a toll
on Orville’s voice, already highly taxed over his career.
In
planning life without Caruso, Gatti-Casazza had brought over
noted Italian tenor, Aureliano Pertile, with a special contract
for fifteen performances through the current season, at $800
per performance. Pertile debuted on December 1 as Cavaradossi
in Tosca, opposite Maria Jeritza, who somewhat obscured
his performance, but Pertile became amply popular as the season
continued. Gatti-Casazza also deflected some attention away
from tenors by hiring famed baritone, Titta Ruffo, who then
sang with the Met throughout the 1920’s. Deflections aside,
there was scrambling over who would fill both old and new
tenor roles with Caruso gone.
Throughout
the fall and holidays, and into January, Orville appeared
in Die Tote Stadt, Sunday night concerts, and several
operas he had previously performed, such as Boris Godunov
and Lohengrin, the latter again with Maria Jeritza.
Then, in the third week of January, he performed as the Czar
in the U.S. premiere of Snegurochka, by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.
This was a fairytale opera, also known as The Snow Maiden,
in which Lucrezia Bori again sang beautifully in a “petite
flower” sort of role. French language was substituted for
the Russian, the event proving sufficiently popular that it
was repeated three more times during the spring of 1922, and
again the following spring.
In
quick succession during the last week of January, 1922, Orville
sang the seventh presentation of Die Tote Stadt on
the 28th, a Sunday night concert on the 29th
in which he performed Act III, Scene 3 of Lucia, virtually
an extended dramatic solo, followed by Il Barbiere di Siviglia
in Brooklyn on the thirty-first, the first time he had sung
that opera since 1919 in Ravinia. He sang the last opposite
Amelita Galli-Curci, who had finally been lured from Chicago,
in a performance repeated at the Met several times through
the spring. The day after Brooklyn, February 1, Orville sang
at Carnegie Hall in a special memorial concert of Gustav Mahler’s
Lied von der Erde (Song of Earth), for its United
States premiere. He had been improving his German with Die
Tote Stadt, and had to make another of his quick studies
for the single presentation of this difficult symphonic poetic
oratorio, under Met conductor Arthur Bodanzky.
Winter
and spring continued with a number of Orville’s relatively
recent roles, such as Louise, La Boheme, Carmen,
and Parsifal. Besides Die Tote Stadt at Philadelphia
in late March, Orville had also appeared there in late February
as Cavaradossi, in his only known performance of Tosca,
which was either simply a fill-in, or was deemed an unsuccessful
role for him. During the final weeks of April, 1922, Orville
completed his third Met season with the seventh performance
of Snegurochka and his final fling with Geraldine Farrar
in Carmen, in her second to last Met performance. Four
years younger than Orville, Miss Farrar had enjoyed twenty
years in the top tier of grand opera. Her voice was falling
off its peak after 672 Met performances, so that on April
22 she sang her Met farewell in the opera Zaza. Performers
who had ushered in opera’s golden age at the turn of the century
were making their exits, seemingly with Orville holding the
door. Their disciples, such as Rosa Ponselle, would extend
the era to the end of the 1920’s, after which the Depression
would reduce opera’s social presence. Opera would begin losing
the generous space it had received from numerous critics in
numerous newspapers, and recede to a smaller place in the
public consciousness.
Orville
was again with the Met in Atlanta during the last week of
April, pleasing crowds in Carmen (referred to as “the
greatest individual triumph of the Atlanta operatic season40”),
opposite Florence Easton, and in Faust four days later.
He was making a splash around town, giving a performance at
the nearby federal prison, with young Met soprano Frances
Peralta, and riding to a minor league baseball game in a motorcycle
sidecar driven by fellow adventurer, Cliff Wheatley, sports
editor for the Atlanta Constitution. Wheatley, a WWI aviator,
had five times referred to the University of Georgia football
team as “bulldogs” in a 1920 article, for which the name and
mascot have remained, after which he died in 1925 (at age
twenty-eight) of lung complications from a WWI poison gas
attack. Orville’s baseball companions that day spoofed him
by discussing the game in mock-operatic-French, to which he
retorted, “Say, who the hell do you fellows think I am?
I was born right here in the United States, and speak English,
not Chinese41.”
Within
a week, Orville was off on another spring Scotti Grand Opera
tour of the South, pretty much a mini-Met road show. Performing
thirty-six times in twenty-seven days, they followed primarily
their standard route, through Birmingham, New Orleans, Texas,
up through Nashville, and then through Ohio to a completion
in Buffalo. Orville likely saw his sisters-in-law along the
way, and Texas was again suffering spring floods, as it had
on every tour. As they arrived back in New York City during
the first week of June, Orville’s La Boheme was noted
as one of several personal triumphs of the trip42.
Following a trend for both opera and Orville, this was the
final Scotti Grand Opera tour, as it was just not possible
for the large entourage to cover their train and accommodation
expenses. But, for the moment, Orville had a little relaxation
time at his Connecticut farm, after a strenuous season.
Blanche
Harrold’s sister, Nona Croft, was living back in New York
at this time, operating a mid-Manhattan interior decorating
business. She made news during the spring by becoming the
victim of a stock swindle, regarding the Page Motor Corporation.
Major Victor W. Page, of Farmingdale Long Island, was a legitimate
automotive engineer, author, and entrepreneur who had previously
produced some cars, and reportedly raised one and half million
dollars in 1922 by issuing beautiful stock certificates showing
an early convertible automobile. Unfortunately, only about
128 cars were manufactured, with some uncertainty as to whether
even those were all genuine functioning vehicles. His promoters
falsely stated that this new enterprise had produced thousands
of cars that were sold in Mexico, so that stockholders ultimately
sued for fraud. When Nona Croft had a New York policeman assist
her in serving a summons on the Page sales manager, the policeman
“turned white and exclaimed: “I’ve got $100 invested in that
stock myself.”
Elsewhere,
other family members were moving about the country during
spring, 1922. Marjorie Harrold Foster and her husband had
arrived in New York during winter, where she began training
for musical comedy43. They briefly visited home,
in Muncie, during early spring, and then returned east in
preparation for a new show opening. Meanwhile, Patti was spending
the spring seeing America on a grander scale than did any
Scotti opera tour. From Boston in January, the Irene
cast had been through Kansas City in February, Salt Lake City
in March, Helena in April, and Bismarck in May44.
In various interviews, she had made clear the continuous hard
work required for such a show business life (which she later
sometimes referred to as “this lousy business”, because of
its constant demands when a show was playing45).
She had been doing Irene for over a year and a half,
including a sixty-two week run of seven and eight performances
per week46. She still harbored plans for opera
training, although she had a somewhat light voice (she referred
to it as “small”), which she hoped to strengthen with coaching
and maturity. But, for the near term, she had a five-year
contract with the Vanderbilt Production Company that would
keep her in other work.
Cross-country
interviews continued highlighting Patti’s rapid rise, her
opera singing father, her diet, and other such details, with
Patti always presenting herself as merely a simple and fortunate
(albeit hard-working) young woman. Like her father, she was
plain-spoken and without the affectations of many high-profile
personalities. An item that never arose in the interviews
was that she had gotten married along the way. As if stricken
by some Midwestern virus running through the family, Patti
found herself married to Jack McElroy, a dancer in Irene,
as the tour left Waukegan. It is unclear just when the family
became aware of the event, although it was probably no later
than when the tour returned to New York at the end of spring.
Whatever his feelings, Orville could not have been too stridently
critical of her impulsiveness, being as Patti had been conceived
out of wedlock, and both of his subsequent marriages had stemmed
from stage affairs. To a considerable extent, his daughters
and even his grandchildren, were adventurers and risk takers
from the same tree as their father.
There
are no indications that Patti ever took the McElroy name,
certainly not on the stage, and also not on a passport obtained
a year later. The couple appeared to have remained together
during the summer of 1922, and perhaps longer, but the relationship
did not extend much past the mid-year end of Irene.
Irene was considerably more durable, having a brief
1923 revival at Jolson’s 59th Street Theatre, a
1940 film version with Ray Milland, and a 1973 Broadway revival
staring Debbie Reynolds. Meanwhile, circumstances had the
Harrold sisters and their husbands all together in New York
for the remainder of 1922, working on a new project with the
Vanderbilt Production Company.
With
several seasons of solid Met experience, Orville’s American-boy
success story continued to provide popular copy. A biographical
interview appeared in Etude magazine46.5
during June, recounting some of his youthful adventures and
vaudeville years, as well as opera in London and New York.
He also penned a brief biography that appeared in Details
Magazine sometime during the year. Such interviews and
articles began to lose their “comeback” nature, and settle
into “hard work” narratives describing the long trek from
Midwest choruses, through vaudeville, to grand opera.
Orville
was not in New York (or Connecticut) with his daughters over
the summer, having returned to Ravinia, accompanied by Mario
Chamlee and probably their wives. Besides opera, they played
golf and seemed to have a summer of fun. Again among Met artists,
Orville performed over twenty times and in a number of his
lead roles, including La Boheme, Pagliacci,
Tales of Hoffman, Rigoletto, and Martha.
He frequently appeared opposite
young new soprano, Queena Mario, who was debuting with the
Met in the fall. Several operas, such as Lakme
and L'Elisir d'Amore, were
unique Ravinia roles that he had performed nowhere else, as
was L’Amico Fritz. With the Scotti Grand Opera gone,
Ravinia was among dwindling opportunities for traveling adventures
that he always enjoyed. Orville was basking in ample stage
time, accompanied by familiar and enjoyable personalities,
in roles that had come to mark his career. He may also have
sensed that he, personally, had dwindling opportunities for
traveling opera adventures, singing under the stars, and appearing
in roles that had come to mark his career. The summer of 1922
was, indeed, the last time that Orville performed in serious
opera outside of the Met.
Following
Ravinia’s August closing, and a tremendous amount of singing
over most of the previous year, Orville enjoyed several months
of relaxation before beginning fall opera. Meanwhile, his
daughters rehearsed through the fall on a new Broadway musical,
and son, Paul, returned for his high school senior year in
Muncie. A little older and more settled than the other boys,
he focused on a three-letter year of athletics.
Grand
opera for 1922-23 got underway with Orville appearing in Boris
Godunov on November 15, for the second Manhattan performance
of the season. Two nights later he performed in a new production
of Der Rosenkavalier, another opera in which he appeared
with Maria Jeritza. In this case he was in an untitled supporting
role, known simply as the “Italian Singer”, which nonetheless
was a difficult part sung in high tessitura, which he sang
“extremely well47”, “Orville Harrold
sang the superfluous but very difficult tenor air, "Di
Rigori," with opulence of voice and the necessary touch
of affectation47.5.” The semi-comical Der
Rosenkavalier became popular, so was repeated a number
of times over the season, although not always with Orville.
L’Amore dei Tre Re was presented on the day between
Orville’s first two performances, debuting a new tenor, Edward
Johnson, who went on to a fifteen year Met career. As with
Beniamino Gigli, Johnson overlapped with Orville, sometimes
singing the part of Grigory in Boris Godunov. The Met
made sure that there were multiple performers capable of singing
each part. Orville had commonly stepped in on short notice
to replace others; others would replace him.
Following
the first week of opera, Orville got ahead of Patti in making
the Mid-Week Pictorial magazine, among a grouping in the November
23rd edition entitled, American and Foreign
Singers in Opening Operatic Season. He was pictured in
another similar tabloid pictorial at about the same time,
called, World’s Greatest Male Operatic Singers. His
debuts and performances of the previous season had ranked
him among top opera artists, especially in New York. There
were similar pictorials of top female opera performers during
this period, highlighting women of the Met, most of whom Orville
had appeared with.
After
Der Rosenkavalier in Brooklyn and a Sunday night concert,
Orville and Maria Jeritza again sang Die Tote Stadt
in late November. One reviewer had predicted that this was
a novelty opera that would not last beyond two seasons, which
proved correct, but there were still more performances to
come. Perhaps suggesting a required rest, Orville did not
perform again for a week and a half, which was another presentation
of Die Tote Stadt. A substantial part of the break
time had been for rehearsing a new opera.
After
a three-year hiatus, the Met presented a new production of
Thais on December 14, which again brought together
Maria Jeritza and Orville, in his last new Met role. The story
revolves around a Greek courtesan who undergoes religious
conversion to become a nun, offering plot twists and sensuous
scenes. Jeritza was a statuesque blonde who could keep opera
glasses focused, but was afflicted with some quirkiness of
movement. Theater, of course, abounds with unexpected falls,
collisions, and makeshift recoveries. Florence Easton had
once made a tumble down stairs seem innocuously in-character.
Jeritza had previously had an exciting
tumble down steps in
Cavalleria
Rusticana
,
and ended up singing prone on the floor in
Tosca
. For the opening of
Thais
, the Met had the courtesan, after
rejecting the philosophical appeals of a departing gentleman,
“
spring after him with a leap that
rattled the boards of one of Urban's platforms; then, with
a hysterical laugh and gestures of frenzied helplessness,
she tottered and fell to the stage-level below, the crash
resounding through the opera house
48.” She completed the scene singing,
unseen, from her new location.
This
all must have appealed to Orville’s sense of humor. During
one rehearsal for Cleopatra’s Night, where his character
contrives a sneak meeting with Cleopatra by cleverly emerging
from her pool, Orville rose up over the pool’s edge clad only
in a towel, diaper-like around his waist. Jeritza had her
adherents and detractors, her fans responding generously to
her unexpected events with applause and curtain calls. For
Orville’s part, “Mr.
Harrold made more than a puppet of Nicias. He succeeded, in
fact, in creating a character where the librettist and the
composer failed to do so. Here was a Nicias who suggested
the banquet table, Bacchanalian orgies, luxurious and effeminizing
ease. He sang the music better than New York has heard it
sung since the Hammerstein days when Dalmores appeared with
Miss Garden and Renaud
49.
” Orville’s voice and acting continued
to please, and while some critics found
Thais
“musically vapid”, it remained
on the schedule.
Extending
on from Orville’s previous-season peak of forty appearances,
the 1922-23 season was off to an even stronger start, accumulating
a high water mark of thirteen appearances by new year’s eve.
Combining the previous Met spring, summer at Ravinia, and
the Met fall, Orville had debuted in five new operas during
the year, at the top of his career. The 1922 holiday occurred
amidst a sprint that began with Der Rosenkavalier on
December 23, and ended with Carmen on January 4, during
which he sang in seven operas and Sunday night concerts over
thirteen days, including another performance of Die Tote
Stadt. This was in contrast to some previous stretches
that had averaged below two performances per week. Orville
always stepped up when asked, and always projected energy
and full voice, so that a busy season of difficult tessitura
and high power was wearing thin. He may have known at Ravinia
that he was approaching the bottom of his vocal well, and
Gatti-Casazza may have cashed in on a similar hunch while
Orville’s voice lasted. By all indications, after a season-opening
rush of heavy vocal labor, the instrument was again broken
by the end of January.
Winter
and spring continued with presentations of Thais and
some of Orville’s popular roles such as La Boheme,
Lohengrin, and Carmen, but at a much slower
pace. There were only five appearances during February, including
Orville’s (and the Met’s) last staging of Die Tote Stadt.
March likewise saw only five appearances, including Carmen,
Parsifal, and spring presentations of fairytale Snegurochka,
with the sprite-like Lucrezia Bori. Orville’s voice was not
returning, even with resting time, so that there were only
four appearances during April, including a season-closing
La Boheme in Atlanta. Following a record-rapid start
through mid-January, Orville’s fourth Met season, and career,
had turned upside down to conclude at a new low of thirty-four
total performances. Overuse had once more damaged the voice
that been the source of his life’s story, so that Orville’s
Met career appeared headed for an early sunset.
As
1922-23 opera progressed, Paul’s senior year back in Muncie
progressed from fall football to winter basketball, which
was already Indiana’s athletic passion. Their season also
began at a hot pace, remaining there to second place in the
state final tournament. Orville reportedly received Muncie
basketball news clippings, which he showed to associates49.5,
many of whom would have met Paul. While Orville and daughters
built a musical family tradition, Paul began a legacy of basketball.
Almost a quarter century later, his son led Muncie to a state
championship, being declared Indiana’s “Mr. Basketball” (he
was also a good singer). From there, he took the University
of Colorado to third place in the 1955 NCAA finals, one of
Colorado’s few trips to the tournament. With a family trait
of wanderlust, Orville’s grandson next went through a career
as a Navy aircraft carrier pilot, and then settled in for
years of teaching and marriage in Japan, before coming back
to America with a hobby of flying and gliding. Meanwhile,
his sister followed a parallel career teaching at American
high schools in Europe and north Africa, before returning
to the United States. This branch of the family was not destined
to remain on the farm.
Back
in New York, the Harrold sisters had opened on Christmas day,
1922, at the Vanderbilt Theatre, in a new musical presentation
of the Vanderbilt Production Company called Glory.
Patti played the heroine, Glory Moore, while Marjorie sang
in the ensemble. A natural follow-on to Irene, Glory
was another musical comedy, scripted and scored by James Montgomery
and the same musical team, along a similar story line, and
with some of the same actors, including the main couple. Glory
is a country girl who eventually marries the boy who left
town and returned wealthy. The plot apparently developed in
a novel manner, and was more complex and subtle that was usual
for such theatre. In a review titled ‘Glory’ Makes Hit
With Pretty Tunes, Patti Harrold Charming, the reviewer
remarked, “Miss Harrold was always a charming heroine,
playing her scenes which bordered on pathos with a reticence,
and her comedy scenes with magnetic vivacity50.”
The music was noted as irresistible, and Patti’s songs as,
“especially well sung,” most importantly the closing
piece; “An audience which leaves the theatre humming is
a pleased audience51.” Despite good
press, the show closed in two months (February 24) after seventy-four
performances, from which it was clearly another forced march
averaging more than one performance per day. That was the
nature of Broadway theater business, which was, after all,
a business.
Glory earned Patti another portrait in Mid-Week Pictorial magazine, after
which the Vanderbilt Production Company was in Philadelphia
during April and March of 1923, where they were visited by
Patti’s mother, Effie. The theatrical company then sailed
from New York on St. Patrick’s Day for England and the Continent,
apparently for a summer tour that included a London show entitled
So This Is London52. This may have been
in conjunction with the English Irene company, and
it is unknown what other shows they presented where. Patti
and Marjorie continued receiving occasional American press,
with photos, discussing such matters as hairstyles and Midwestern
girls on Broadway. Marjorie and Floyd Foster probably lived
during Patti’s absence at her apartment on West 78th
street. He had obtained a salesman’s position with the Turner
Toy Company of New York52.5, and they resided at
Patti’s and with Patti for some time. By fall, Patti had filed
for divorce, touching off Midwestern press rumblings regarding
the “matrimonial jinx which seemingly has haunted the Harrold
family for years53.” Noting that Orville had
finally settled down with a wife of the “intellectual stimulus”
variety, enjoying life among chickens and cows, it was disclosed
that Patti had declared that “Jack is a peach54,”
but that it was time to end the first marriage attempt. They
were divorced55 on November 22nd, 1923.
During
mid-May, just as the opera season ended, Ruth Miller Chamlee
had purchased a sixteen acre home and grounds in Wilton, Connecticut56,
located about twenty minutes’ drive from Orville’s farm. (Top
tier opera being lucrative, the Chamlees paid this off in
two years). They may have found the property through Ruth’s
voice lessons. Two adjacent homes were owned by Middlebrook
family members, of which one was the father of Joseph W. MIddlebrook,
successful New York lawyer, whose second wife, Jeanette Shimans
Middlebrook (his office assistant during his first marriage),
aspired to grand opera. Jeanette had studied voice as a child
in Brooklyn, and spent a significant part of the WWI years
living in Naples, Italy to study voice and opera there57.
While no absolute proof has surfaced, there are enough opera
and real estate proximities to strongly suggest a Chamlee,
Middlebrook, Harrold, connection, leading to another suspected
intersection later in Orville’s life.
It
appears that Orville was not engaged anywhere over the summer
of 1923, and was likely devoted mostly to resting his voice
at his Connecticut farm. Patti had been leaving the country
as his Met season was deteriorating, so that Blanche was one
the few individuals in his personal life, beyond the Chamlees,
who had an idea of how is career was going. The American-boy
success image was still succeeding in publications. His tribute
article to Hammerstein had appeared in Theatre Magazine
during April58, providing interesting insights
into both their careers, and making clear the affection that
Orville had for the irascible impresario. The timing was perhaps
ironic.
During
the fall and into 1924, Patti apparently pursued her plan
of coaching for grand opera59, although it is unknown
with whom. Other opportunities would then arise for her as
the year progressed. Meanwhile, in November, 1923 the Chamlees
hosted at their new country “farm” a picnic and publicity
photo opportunity with their son, Mr. and Mrs. Theo Karle
(popular New York concert tenor), Orville and Blanche Harrold,
and Mr. and Mrs. Ottkar Bartik60 (Met ballet director).
Met fall rehearsals were getting under way, and Mario Chamlee
was hoping to commute from Connecticut for the season, or
at least spend weekends there.
Orville
had a Met contract as the 1923-24 opera season approached,
but did not have a career. Rather than the usual mid-November
opening, the season began on the 5th with Thais,
and without Orville. Not only did he not sing any new roles
during this season, he did not perform most of his standard
Met roles of previous years, such as La Boheme, Faust,
Parsifal, Thais, Madame Butterfly, and
Cavalleria Rusticana. Other tenors were stepping into
Orville’s parts. Armand Tokatyan, who had begun a twenty-five
year Met career the previous season, sang Nicias in Thais,
Tiriddu in Cavalleria Rusticana, and Pinkerton in Madame
Butterfly. Mario Chamlee performed Faust, Uin-San-Lui
in L’Oracolo, and Grigory in Boris Godunov.
Of the Italian tenors, Beniamino Gigli sang Pinkerton in Madame
Butterfly and Rodolfo in La Boheme, while Giovanni
Martinelli starred in Carmen and Faust. Martinelli
also sang Arnold in William Tell, one of the roles
that had launched Orville’s opera career, a number of times
during 1923 and 1924, although it is not known if these were
in the original key. Another event of the period was the debut
of an American basso from California, Lawrence Tibbett, who
would remain friends over the years with Orville and the Chamlees.
Orville first sang on November 17, in Der Rosencavalier,
which was particularly suited to his high tenor. He sang twice
in L’Oracolo (once in Brooklyn), repeated Der Rosencavalier,
and appeared in several Sunday night concerts near the holidays,
for a career low of only six performances in six weeks prior
to the new year. Orville no longer had a voice that could
keep him at the Met, and as the holidays passed he stepped
into the worst year of his life.
Orville
was performing only occasionally in the new year, and rarely
in entire operas on the Met stage. He appeared in two Sunday
night concerts during January, in which they presented complete
acts from Faust and Carmen. During the first
week in February, he sang his usual role as Edgardo in Lucia,
presented at the Philadelphia Opera House. The following week,
in mid-February, he was again in a special concert for the
benefit of the Met Emergency Fund, singing another act from
Carmen. Rather than performing on alternate days, as
he had during his busiest Met periods, Orville was averaging
one performance during alternate weeks, and after Carmen,
would not appear again for nearly a month. Most of the slowdown
was because of the condition of his voice, which likely required
added resting time between performances. There was another
reason for the extra time off during February.
About
a week after his latest concert, word arrived at the Met on
the morning of February 20th that Orville’s father
had died, back in Muncie61. Orville was on a train
that afternoon, for a funeral at his father’s home and a reunion
of his parents at Beech Grove Cemetery. In keeping with fairly
substantial family longevity, his father had lived to age
seventy-one. Orville may have lingered in Muncie to see his
son, Paul, and other family before returning to New York and
his last round of Met performances.
On
March eighth he sang his first complete opera on the Met stage
since December, as Win-San-Lui in L’Oracolo. Apparently
because of limited vocal endurance, he performed again only
after three weeks, in a repeat of L’Oracolo. Orville
sang his last Don Jose in Carmen on April fifth, into
the closing month of spring performances. His last opera was
Boris Godunov, followed by the season’s last Sunday
night concert, in which he sang Una furtiva lagrima from L'Elisir
d'Amore and participated in the sextet from Lucia.
He did not travel to Atlanta, and finished the 1923-24 Met
season with only fifteen appearances. That brought Orville
to a career total of 160 Met performances. He had made no
Victor recordings during this opera season, but caught up
somewhat by recording his last four pieces for them during
April. His recording contract ended simultaneously with his
Met contract and opera opportunities.
Orville’s
five-season Met career was relatively brief compared to some
Met tenors who endured for decades. He was always an unrestrained
singer, so that Oscar Saenger had had to perform voice repair
back in 1910. While Orville perhaps had confidence in his
vocal resources during nearly two decades in New York, they
were finally expended by 1923. It had been said of Emma Trentini,
Orville’s leading lady at the Manhattan Opera and Naughty
Marietta, “Smartest singer I ever
met. She never talked or sang out loud and when she did it
was always one octave lower. She saved her full voice for
a real audience62.” Her
falling out with Victor Herbert occurred because she had refused
an encore that he had requested of her during the final performance
of Naughty Marietta. She preferred to save her voice63.
Orville would have known her style, but conducted himself
differently. He certainly knew the risks, and lived his career
at a faster pace.
Lacking
spring Scotti opera, Orville and Patti filled the month of
May, 1924 with a series of concerts throughout Indiana to
benefit the Paul Dresser Memorial fund. Born in Terre Haute,
Indiana in 1859 as J. Paul Dreiser Jr., an older brother of
American novelist Theodore Dreiser, Paul Dresser had wandered
between priesthood studies and petty crime to an early career
as a vaudeville troubadour and minstrel show entertainer.
This was accompanied by a considerable and successful outpouring
of songwriting, so that he had migrated to New York by the
1880’s, where he formed the music publishing house of Howley,
Haviland, & Dresser. Through the 1880’s and 1890’s, Dresser
published a hundred tunes meriting the newly minted title
of “hits”, which earned both acclaim and fortune. The most
popular was “On the Banks of the Wabash”, which was the second
best seller of sheet music during the 19th century,
became the Indiana state song in 1913, and had just been recorded
by Orville for Victor during his last month at the Met. The
opening line, “Round my Indiana homestead wave the cornfields”,
described Orville’s brick farmhouse birthplace throughout
the 20th century.
Dresser’s
songs were largely romanticized remembrances of 19th
century life, which lost popularity with young audiences after
the turn of the century, in an increasingly urbanized and
mechanized age of ragtime. Reckless generosity and poor business
practice brought Dresser was penury and poor health, for which
he died in 1906. Adding insult, Back Home Again in Indiana
was written in 1917, plagiarizing lines, rhythm and music
from Dresser’s greatest legacy, which his brother, Theodore,
fought for some years. With his image fading, the Paul Dresser
Memorial fund had been established in 1923 to erect a monument
in his hometown of Terre Haute. Patti and Orville Harrold
paralleled Dresser as Hoosier musicians, constituting the
Indiana equivalent of Caruso and Adelina Patti. Their tour
began on May 4, at the recently built Cadle Tabernacle, a
unique Indianapolis landmark64.
Built
in 1921 by E. Howard Cadle, the tabernacle had a capacity
of 10,000, plus room for another 1400 in the choir loft. Its
façade was of an incongruous Spanish mission style, with an
entrance modeled after the Alamo. Cadle was an Indiana entrepreneur
who had made, lost, and remade several fortunes, acquiring
religion along the way to overcome a youth of drunkenness
and gambling. The operation was part business and part religion,
available to preachers, evangelists, speakers, and entertainers,
and hosting over the years Billy Sunday, Oral Roberts, and
Martin Luther King. The tabernacle was reportedly the largest
evangelistic meeting hall in America, proving as successful
as his previous enterprises, so that Cadle drove a Cadillac
and flew his own airplane. (The site is now occupied by Firehouse
Square Townhouses.)
The
concert tour was inherently popular for its all-Indiana theme.
The tour committee had stirred enthusiasm with endorsements
for both Dresser and the Harrolds from John Philip Sousa,
Victor Herbert, and others65. Harry E. Paris again
managed the tour, in which Orville opened with solos from
Martha, Patti enacted a part from Irene in costume,
and they were accompanied by Emil Polak, who had been pianist
with Orville and Lydia Locke during their 1916 concerts66.
Emil Polak soloed as well as participated in the scene from
Irene67. Finally, Patti sang the operatic
Caro Nome from Rigoletto, after which she and
Orville sang various duets. The first ostensible joint performance
for Patti and Orville, the tour was important to both, especially
Orville, in establishing family connection and companionship
in their artistic and professional passions.
Crowds
filling the Cadle Tabernacle became sufficiently large and
unruly around entrances and local streets that police were
called to restore order, providing some of the best publicity
for the rest of the tour68. Among various Indiana
cities, Patti and Orville gave three performances in a Harrold
homecoming at the auditorium of Muncie’s Central High School,
where Patti had graduated in 1917, and Paul had graduated
just the previous year69.
There
was no public discussion during the Indiana tour of Orville
leaving the Met or finishing opera, or that his career was
changing. If anything, it was suggested that his opera selections
were intended to explore preferences for the coming season,
which may have been true. As spring of 1924 passed, the summer
presented down time for both Patti and Orville, probably spent
at his Connecticut farm. Patti enjoyed gardening there, and
fall theatre work was falling onto place for Patti and Marjorie.
For the near term, Patti and Orville took the opportunity
for a joint appearance afforded by his vaudeville popularity.
They were booked for the Labor Day reopening week at the Hippodrome,
now managed by the Keith-Albee interests, to present a singing
variety act conveniently similar to that of their May Indiana
tour70.
Patti
and Marjorie were to begin fall rehearsals for a new musical
comedy, scheduled for a New York opening around the Christmas
holidays71. Marjorie and Floyd Foster were living
at Patti’s apartment, where there was a disagreement during
mid-August such that the Foster couple left for a fortnight’s
break at home in Muncie (family lore is that Patti threw them
out). Near the end of the month, vaudeville news columns announced
Patti and Orville were opening at the Hippodrome72,
when news arrived early on Friday, August 29th
that Marjorie had been killed in an Indiana automobile accident.
Hippodrome
management quickly arranged a private drawing room and berths
for Orville and Patti on that afternoon’s Southwestern Limited
to Indianapolis73. At Indianapolis, several return
reservations were made for Sunday and Monday on the Pennsylvania
Special. Meanwhile, the Hippodrome also arranged for a replacement
act, including Belle Storey, who had been Orville’s starring
partner in the 1916 Hippodrome spectacular, Hip Hip Hooray!.
As Orville and Patti headed west on Friday, news of their
presence spread through the train, reaching Ethel Lynch and
her mother, who were returning from visiting her mother’s
parents in Connecticut74. Ethel had been a schoolmate
of Orville’s son, Paul, at Muncie Central High School, and
the pair arranged to meet Orville in his drawing room car.
Patti was sufficiently overwrought that she was unwilling
to see visitors, but Orville sat with them for some time.
Whatever the overall events, the intimacy of the tragic moment
became part of courtship between Paul and Ethel, such that
she ultimately bore Orville’s only grandchildren.
Marjorie
had arrived in Muncie about ten days previous to the accident,
receiving something of a celebrity reception. Having been
gone nearly twenty years, Orville was not so freshly in mind,
while his Broadway daughters had enthused a new generation
of civic pride. On Thursday evening of the 28th,
Marjorie and Floyd had gone to a dance near Anderson, Indiana,
between Muncie and Indianapolis, in the Maxwell coupe of a
friend named Paul Karlen75 (whose father was Muncie
fire chief) and his date, Marie Rathel76. The Fosters
were both riding in the front passenger’s seat, Marjorie sitting
in Floyd’s lap, when the car left the road on a curve, the
right front side striking a telephone pole, while going about
fifty-five miles per hour (about the full speed of the automobile).
The telephone pole was broken into three pieces, and Marjorie
was thrown about twenty feet. While the other three were,
surprisingly, not seriously injured, Marjorie appears to have
been hit by part of the telephone pole, suffering severe crushing
damage to one side of her head77 and nearly severing
an arm78. She was alive, but never regained conscientiousness
before dying early Friday morning at the Anderson hospital.
Marjorie’s
mother, Effie, did not arrive at the hospital early enough
to see her alive, which would have been a disturbing sight
in any event. Her son, Paul, had the unfortunate and unforgettable
experience of identifying the body at the morgue, before it
was taken to Muncie. Friday’s Muncie headline read, MARJORIE
HARROLD MEETS DEATH, capitalized across the top of page one.
Paul Karlen originally claimed that he had been blinded by
oncoming headlights, but by Saturday it had been established
that he had been drinking, while a resident near the accident
scene stated that his car had been speeding and that there
had been no other automobile79. Karlen was charged
with involuntary manslaughter, while funeral arrangements
were finalized. Incredibly, a cousin of Marjorie’s in the
Kiger (maternal) family was killed in an automobile accident
in a nearby county, ten hours after she died80.
They might have met on Sunday at a Kiger family reunion, which
must have become a dismally subdued gathering.
Orville
and Patti would have arrived in Muncie on Saturday morning,
hardly rested, going to Effie’s residence on South Madison
Street. While Patti almost certainly remained at home with
her mother, Orville stayed at the Roberts Hotel, where he
received a number of consoling telegrams. There were messages
from Hippodrome manager, Mark Luescher, Edward F. Albee of
the Keith-Albee, Mrs. Enestinoff, the wife of his old Indianapolis
mentor, and Julie Witmark, vaudeville singer and producer,
as well as member of the Witmark family of music publishers.
There are family stories of Orville at the wake, sitting on
the porch with Effie, to no avail. Effie would not be consoled,
and would take no comfort in Orville. Burial was on Sunday,
beside Orville’s parents at Beech Grove Cemetery. Orville
was at the cemetery for the second time in a year that had
also seen his career end. He would return only once more.
Paul
Karlen remained in the Muncie area, and it is unclear if he
was prosecuted to completion for the accident. Five years
later, in October of 1929, he was involved as a student pilot
in an airplane crash near Muncie. He had gone up with his
instructor, an experienced WWI pilot, on a day of severe cross
winds when the plane crashed in a cornfield and burst into
flame. Having partially extricated himself, Karlen was helped
out by a passing mail carrier, but then returned to the burning
airplane to save his instructor. The instructor died at the
scene, while Karlen died of burns later that night81.
After
nearly forty recordings, a myriad of opera companies, and
all manner of other theatre, 1924 functionally ended Orville’s
musical outpouring. He did not totally leave music or stage,
but generally withdrew from entertainment. Some biographies
suggest that he returned to vaudeville, but little data (appearance
dates and venues) has surfaced to support this. He briefly
appeared with an opera road company, but, as with the Paul
Dresser tour and the August 1924 Hippodrome engagement (which
may never have occurred) his public appearances were thereafter
primarily with Patti, and mostly in New York. While relocating
several times, he no longer traveled as a lifestyle, and for
the most part remained geographically near Patti and a small
group of friends and in-laws. He was occasionally heard on
radio during the early 1930’s.
Gatti-Casazza
reportedly stated that Orville suffered a shortened career
for having entered opera too late in life82, but
that hardly seems the case. Orville perhaps entered the Met
too late in life, especially for a tenor who consumed his
voice at a high burn rate. His energetic style may not have
been destined for a thirty-year career, but he had broken
into top tier opera in 1910, with the possibility of remaining
there. Oscar Hammerstein’s productions and casts in New York,
Philadelphia, and London were at the level of the Met and
Covent Garden. Even Naughty Marietta was a lavish production,
far above vaudeville and classic burlesque, being one of the
first truly major Broadway musicals. None of Hammerstein’s
performers were absorbed by the Met, which aimed to exorcise
the competition, and in any event, Hammerstein refrained from
putting Orville on the auction block by keeping him under
contract. While London society was not supporting Hammerstein,
numerous London critics were freely rating Orville amid opera’s
top tenors.
One
might ask what created the valley between London and the Met,
recognizing that the question represents a primarily artistic
viewpoint. There appears less of a valley on the basis of
other professional, financial, or stage considerations. While
being encouraged toward opera by his Indianapolis mentor,
Alexander Ernestinoff, before going to New York, Orville had
participated in a variety of choirs, social clubs, musical
productions, and orchestras. Viewing Orville’s overall career
as that of a general musical entertainer, the teen years in
New York followed a similar course, along with the realization
of grand opera. He would sing at the drop of a hat, in concerts,
vaudeville, liberty bond drives during the war, Gilbert and
Sullivan.
Several
years after Orville’s retirement, Met conductor Arthur Bodanzky
stated that opera was declining, in part because of new artists
of limited background83, by which he may have included
Orville. An Austrian classicist who had been assistant conductor
to Gustav Mahler in Vienna, Bodanzky was accustomed to principal
performers who had a decade of experience before reaching
major operatic venues. He was also accustomed to families
who could routinely mount their own string quartets, and the
state of twentieth century music in America did not meet his
standards. Unquestionably, Rosa Ponselle was merely exceptional
when she stepped out of vaudeville and into opera, while she
had become exquisite a decade later. As Bodanzky pointed out,
America did not have adequate schools for operatic training,
nor did it have a large network of smaller opera companies
that could prepare young performers. Finally, Bodanzky lamented
the substitution of modernism for classic lyric opera, the
latter presenting melody such as in “Butterfly”. After all,
“who cannot hum at least two tunes from it?”
Short
of tapping the limited supply of European artists, as Gatti-Casazza
did at the Met, growing American operas could not hope to
present such highly experienced singers. An American operatic
farm system could evolve only over time, and would differ
from the European model, where opera companies were ubiquitous.
The European talent pool would become increasingly expensive,
until even Europe could not afford it, a process cut short
by the Great Depression, which made opera itself barely affordable.
Orville
had the good fortune to arrive in time for a piece of opera’s
golden age, and when he joined the Met he did have well over
a decade of experience, although not all in opera. A number
of his associates had similar experience, coming up through
lesser companies such as the Aborns’ and Century Opera, and
major opera under Hammerstein. Even vaudeville prepared opera
performers for what is still a form of stage entertainment.
(Opera struggles with the choice between pure musical presentation
and acting, but the audience presumably should benefit by
having their eyes open.) Some critics seem bothered that Orville
spent part of the mid-teen years in “second-rate” opera companies,
but that was virtually inevitable during WWI to build exactly
the background that Bodanzky valued. Orville gained experience
and repertoire at Century Opera, Ravinia, and the Society
of American Singers.
Such
companies failed unfortunately often, but Orville was an adventuresome
survivor, not an idealistic artist. Far beyond surviving,
Orville forged his most lucrative contract under such circumstances.
For one who reveled in musical entertainment, a Hippodrome
spectacular was hardly to be dismissed, even at a cost (and
he had to know that it would cost his voice). Afterward, at
his low point, he began at Ravinia to rebuild his opera career.
Orville did not have classic European training, he gambled
with his opportunities, and he devoted a substantial portion
of his performing lifespan to “lesser” satisfactions. But,
he endured, remained popular, and did the work required to
reach top opera. He had the discipline and stamina for success,
and once at the Met, demonstrated intelligence and skill in
assuming his roles.
In
his Etude interview, Orville stated that he had a repertoire
of over thirty operas that he could perform on an hour’s notice.
A careful accounting arrives at a list of thirty-eight operas
in which he performed, with five additional complete operettas
and shows, along with numerous opera acts and pieces from
Sunday night concerts, plus many individual songs from various
concerts elsewhere. There were seven song books for compete
operas in residue from his estate that passed down through
Patti, in addition to several compilation books of operatic
songs. Notable was a 1918 soft cover Ricordi publication of
La Boheme, which was among his best-received Met roles.
Also present were Rigoletto and Aida. Somewhat
surprising were hardcover editions of Valkyrie and
Les Huguenots, for which he had no known appearances,
although these could have been used for concerts. There was
also HMS Pinafore, which could have been either his
or Patti’s from the Society of American Singers.
It
may have been that the occasion of Marjorie’s death was when
the family became aware that Orville was leaving opera. The
impression is that the two events became associated in family
perception, such that the tragic occurrence appeared to influence
a decision on Orville’s part. While there is some juxtaposition
of circumstances, Orville’s operatic fate had already been
determined for some time, joining a group of factors that
made 1924 an extremely discouraging year for him.
Marjorie’s
death forever marked the family. Although her actions may
have been reasonable and justified, Patti never shed the guilt
of her role in the events leading to the accident, and Orville
perhaps did not either. His passions had shaped the family
and much that followed. Without miring in psycho-babble, his
daughters married impulsively, likely to establish stability
and permanent companionship. The tragedy certainly disturbed
issues and differences that had been resting forgotten and
forgiven, and Orville could not have escaped some regrets
in the weight of the moment. Patti thereafter spent considerable
time with Orville and Blanche at Bo-Le in Connecticut, participating
occasionally in local benefits and events. Orville’s relationships
with Blanche and Patti became the staples of his life.
Complete shows and operas
performed by Orville Harrold, with first performance date,
the majority being leading roles:
Title Date
Producer Character
The Social Whirl 1906
Shubert Brothers
The Belle of London Town 1907 Shubert
Brothers Lord Drinkwell
Wine, Women, & Song ca. 1907
Mortimer Theise Harmonists Quartet
Pagliacci 1910
Manhattan Opera Canio
Cavalleria Rusticana 1910 Manhattan
Opera Turiddu
Rigoletto, 1910
Manhattan Opera Duke of Mantua
Naughty Marietta 1910
Oscar Hammerstein Dick Warrington
William Tell 1911
London Opera Arnold
Faust 1911
London Opera Faust
Lucia 1911
London Opera Edgardo
Les Contes d'Hoffmann 1912
London Opera* Hoffmann
La Traviata 1912
London Opera Alfredo
Romeo et Juliette 1912
London Opera Romeo
La Favorita 1912
London Opera Fernando
Les Cloches de Corneville 1912
London Opera Jean Grenicheaux
Aida 1914
Century Opera Radames
Martha 1914
Century Opera Lionel
Madame Butterfly 1914
Century Opera Pinkerton
Carmen 1914
Century Opera Don Jose
Hip Hip Hooray! 1915
Dillingham, Hippodrome The Hero
Les Contes d'Hoffmann 1916
Ravinia Summer Opera* Hoffmann
The Bohemian Girl 1916 Ravinia Summer
Opera Thaddeus
Il Barbiere di Siviglia 1918
Ravinia Summer Opera Almaviva
Manon
1918 Ravinia Summer Opera Des Grieux
Lakme 1918
Ravinia Summer Opera Gerald
Fra Diavolo 1919
Society of American Singers Fra Diavolo
Robin Hood 1919
Society of American Singers Robin Hood
The Mikado 1919
Society of American Singers Nanki-Poo
L'Oracolo 1919
Scotti Opera Win-San-Lui
L'Elisir d'Amore 1919
Ravinia Summer Opera Nemorino
La Bohčme 1919
Metropolitan Opera Rodolfo
La Juive 1919
Metropolitan Opera Prince Leopold
Boris Godounov 1919
Metropolitan Opera Grigory
Cleopatra's Night 1920
Metropolitan Opera Meiamoun
Parsifal 1920
Metropolitan Opera Parsifal
Louise 1921
Metropolitan Opera Julien
Die Tote Stadt 1921 Metropolitan Opera
Paul
Lohengrin 1921
Metropolitan Opera Lohengrin
Sniegourotchka 1922
Metropolitan Opera The Czar
Tosca 1922
Metropolitan Opera Cavaradossi
L'Amico Fritz 1922
Ravinia Summer Opera Fritz Kobus
Der Rosenkavalier 1922 Metropolitan
Opera The Italian Singer
Thaďs 1922
Metropolitan Opera Nicias
Holka Polka 1925
Carl Reed, at the Lyric Theatre Peter Novak
* There is some uncertainty as to whether Orville sang Hoffmann
in London, which he otherwise first sang at Ravinia in 1916
1. Opera In Crinoline and the Race of the Tenors, William
B. Chase, New York Times, November 6, 1921
2.
Men, Women, and Tenors, Frances Alda, Houghton Miflin Co.
Boston, 1937, pg. 237
3. Discussion of Met wage scales is compiled from various
portions of: The Golden Age of Opera, Robert Tuggle, Holt,
Rinehart, & Winston, New York, 1983
4.
ibid, pg. 158
5. ibid, and from a web discussion of Aureliano Pertile
and other Met tenors of the 1921-22 season, by Robert Tuggle
at metoperafamily.org
6.
ibid, pg. 150
7.
“Carmen” Sung For French, New York Times, January 25, 1920
8.
More Singers Ill, Changes In Operas, New York Herald, January
25, 1920
9.
Orville Harrold in “La Boheme”, New York Times, February 14,
1920
9.5
Orville Harrold (Wolfsohn broadside), Musical Currier, December
23, 1920, pg. 17
10.
The Opera, Richard Aldrich, New York Times, February 20, 1920
11. The Comeback of Don Jose, article, The World Magazine,
March 21, 1920, pg. 12
12.
All-American Cast Sings Classic Faust, New York Times, April
20, 1920
13.
Norwalk, CT Land Records for various years, researched by
Melanie Marks
14.
“Lohengrin” in Overalls In West Norwalk, The Norwalk Hour,
Dec. 3, 1925, pg. 5
15.
ibid.
16.
Scotti as Opera Pioneer, New York Times, April 18, 1920
17.
Greeting to Scotti, Impresario, New York Times, June 6, 1920
18. Orville Harrold Singing In Houston, unidentified
Houston newspaper, 1920 (only part of date remaining) from
Patti Harrold’s scrapbook
19.
Plans of Musicians, New York Times, June 6, 1920
20. Art of Making Over A Plump Figure, Boston Sunday
Globe, January 1, 1922, pg. 34, and also, The Stage section
of Munsey’s Magazine, October 1920, pg. 112
21.
ibid.
22.
Second Harrold Succeeds, The Muskogee Times-Democrat, August
3, 1920, pg. 7
23. Patti Harrold Rejoices in Chance to Develop, The
Salt Lake Tribune, March 12, 1922, pg. 6
24.
Plans of Musicians, New York Times, June 6, 1920
25. Art of Making Over A Plump Figure (The Boston Sunday
Globe, January 1, 1922) pg. 34
26.
See America With Scotti, Music section, New York Times, September
5, 1920
27. Patti and Orville Harrold on the Met stage on the
same day, from hand written notes of Orville’s granddaughter,
which referenced an article in the New York Telegraph.
28. Difficult For Mimi To Shiver, John Marsh, The Atlanta
Georgian, April 27 1921
29. Lucrezia Bori And Harrold At Their Best, The Atlanta
Georgian, April 27 1921
30. Opera Critic On The Job, Col. John Caruthers, The
Atlanta Georgian, April 27 1921
31. What Do You Know About Orville Harrold?, Muncie
Evening Press, May 7, 1921
32. Art of Making Over A Plump Figure, Boston Sunday
Globe, January 1, 1922, pg. 34
33. Boston Sunday Globe, December 25, 1921, also unnamed
article (The Hutchinson (Kansas) News) February 27, 1922
34. Music Notes, The New York Record, September 18,
1915, Lydia Locke credits Adelina Patti, who attended London
Opera, with sage advice to work hard. From the scrapbook of
Lydia Locke
35. Oscar Thompson, Musical America, unknown edition,
quoted in archival section of the Metropolitan Opera Company
on line database at metoperafamily.org
36. opera review, Henry Krehbiel, New York Herald, November
20, 1921, quoted in archival section of the Metropolitan Opera
Company on line database at metoperafamily.org
37. ibid.
38. Oscar Thompson, Musical America, unknown edition,
quoted in archival section of the Metropolitan Opera Company
on line database at metoperafamily.org
39 ‘Die Tote Stadt’ Fantastic Opera (Whole Conception
Fantastic), New York Times, November 20, 1921
40. Harrold Risks His Neck, Fuzzy Woodruff, Atlanta
Constitution, April 27, 1923, pg. 9
41. ibid.
42. unnamed article, New York Times, June 4, 1922
43. unattributed news clipping from Patti Harrold’s
scrapbook
44. various newspaper articles: Boston Globe, December
25,1921, The Hutchinson (Kansas) News, February 27, 1922,
Salt Lake City Tribune, March, 12, 1922, Helena (Montana)
Daily Independent, April 30, 1922, Bismarck (North Dakota)
Tribune, May 5, 1922
45. from personal discussions with niece of Patti Harrold
46. Patti discussing long working periods for Irene,
Boston Sunday Globe, January 1, 1922, and Salt Lake City Tribune,
March, 12, 1922
46.5. From Plow-Boy to Parsifal, Orville Harrold (Etude
Magazine, New York, July, 1922) pg. 444
47. Opera review, Richard Aldrich, New York Times, November
18, 1922
47.5. Review by Oscar Thompson in Musical America, November,
1922, quoted in archival section of the Metropolitan Opera
Company on line database at metoperafamily.org
48. Review by Oscar Thompson in Musical America, December,
1922, quoted in archival section of the Metropolitan Opera
Company on line database at metoperafamily.org
49. ibid.
49.5 Harrold Rites At Mortuary, the Muncie Star, October
25, 1933, from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook
50. ‘Glory” Makes Hit With Pretty Tunes – Patti Harrold
Charming, New York Times, December 26, 1922
51. ibid.
52. Orville Harrold and Daughter Patti, The Kokomo Daily
Tribune, May 5, 1924, pg. 7
52.5 Orville Harrold’s Daughter, Tipton (Indiana) Daily
Tribune, August 29, 1924, pg. 3
53. Pretty Patti Patterns Papa’s Precedent, The Lima
News, October 21, 1923, pg. 17
54. ibid.
55. Patti Harrold Gets Divorce, New York Times, November
23, 1923
56. Wilton, CT Land Records for various years, researched
by Melanie Marks
57. Jeanette Shimans Middlebrook, residences, passports,
and history, researched by Melanie Marks
58. My Memories of Oscar Hammerstein, Orville Harrold
(Theatre Magazine Company, New York, April, 1923) pg. 64
59. Orville Harrold and Daughter Patti, The Kokomo Daily
Tribune, May 5, 1924, pg. 7
60. How Operatic Stars Spend Spare Moments, The Bridgeport
Telegram, November 8, 1923
61. Orville Harrold’s Father Dies, New York Times, February
21, 1924
62 She Walks All Over Rudolf Friml,
90, Los Angeles Times, September 25,1970. p. H1, quoted
in article on Emma Trentini, Wikipedia.com
63. ibid.
64. Orville Harrold and Daughter, The Kokomo Daily Tribune,
May 16, 1924, pg. 3
65. From the Paul Dresser Memorial Committee, unattributed
newspaper article from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook
66. Orville Harrold and Daughter Patti, The Kokomo Daily
Tribune, May 5, 1924, pg. 7
67 There are various brief descriptions of the tour
presentation, with more definitive details in: Want Grand
Piano, Logansport (Indiana) Pharos-Tribune, May 16, 1924,
pg. 1, Critic’s High Praise for Concert By Orville Harrold,
Logansport Pharos-Tribune, May 17, 1924, pg. 5, and Famous
Singer Comes Here Next Wednesday, Logansport Morning Press,
May 18, 1924, pg. 3
68. The Harrold Concert, Logansport Pharos-Tribune,
May 20, 1924, pg. 4
69. Patti Harrold in Concert With Her Father, unattributed
newspaper article from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook
70. News of Vaudeville, New York Times, August 31, 1924
71. Promising Life Is Snuffed Out In Auto Crash, The
Muncie Evening Press, August 29, 1924, pg. 1
72. Harrold’s Daughter Dies, New York Times, August
30, 1924
73. ibid., and telegrams describing train arrangements,
from the collection of Patti Harrold
74. From personal discussions with Orville Harrold’s
granddaughter
75. Promising Life Is Snuffed Out In Auto Crash, The
Muncie Evening Press, August 29, 1924, pg. 1
76 Orville Harrold’s Daughter, Tipton (Indiana) Daily
Tribune, August 29, 1924, pg. 3
77. Promising Life Is Snuffed Out In Auto Crash, The
Muncie Evening Press, August 29, 1924, pg. 1
78 Orville Harrold’s Daughter, Tipton (Indiana) Daily
Tribune, August 29, 1924, pg. 3
79. Karlen In Jail After Coroner Starts Probe, The Muncie
Morning Star, August 30, 1924, pg. 1
80. Relative of Girl Dies Near Marion, The Muncie Morning
Star, August 30, 1924, pg. 1
81. War Aviator, Student, Die, The Logansport (Indiana)
Press, October 18, 1929
82. Orville Harrold, Opera Tenor, Dead, George E. Hogue,
New York Times, October 24, 1933
83. Opera Pains Maestro, The Salt Lake Tribune, November
28, 1926, pg. 6
See also
three Orville Harrold articles by Charle A Hooey:
• Chronology
• Discography
• An
American Original