Debuting Her Political Voice: The Lost Opera of Shirley Graham
2006; University of Illinois Press; Volume: 26; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
ISSN
1946-1615
Autores Tópico(s)Theater, Performance, and Music History
ResumoIn 2001, the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at Harvard University acquired the collected papers of Shirley Graham Du Bois, the second wife of the celebrated sociologist and political leader William Edward Burghardt (W.E.B.) Du Bois. Although his papers are archived at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Harvard is home to the Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research, which cosponsored the acquisition. Moreover, the Schlesinger Library supports the mission of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study to promote studies of women, gender, and society. Within this collection of Graham Du Bois is a document previously believed to have been lost: the musical score to her Tom Tom, a three-act spectacle that she composed and premiered in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1932. (1) The contains valuable clues connecting the young composer Shirley Graham to her later self as a formidable activist and cultural ambassador for socialism. Shirley Graham was the first American woman to compose an for a major professional organization. The Stadium Opera Company, precursor to the Cleveland Metropolitan Opera, commissioned her to write a distinctly black opera for its second summer season in 1932. Graham, then a student at Oberlin College, expanded a one-act play with incidental music that she had written earlier into a three-act titled Tom Tom: An Epic of Music and the Negro. The received generous publicity and earned critical acclaim for its composer, yet it was never performed again and was soon forgotten. Moreover, Graham's career in the arts foundered within a decade. Until recently, information about Shirley Graham--hereafter referred to by her maiden name--was limited to scholarship concerning the life and work of W.E.B. Du Bois, research that acknowledges her contributions primarily in terms of their partnership from the 1940s onward. Gerald Home's Race Woman: The Lives of Shirley Graham Du Bois (2000) is the first biography devoted to examining her entire life and work. Horne acknowledges the importance of Tom Tom to Graham's work toward a career in music, and he discusses briefly the circumstances leading to the creation of her and its reception. Other than Horne's book and an essay by Kathy Perkins (1985), few scholars have discussed Graham's contributions to the arts before her involvement with and marriage to Du Bois. All save Horne presumed that the manuscript for Tom Tom was lost, unaware that Graham had it with her when she settled into residency in Cairo, Egypt, in 1968. It remains part of the trove of documents from Cairo that her son David brought back to the United States in 2000, now archived at the Schlesinger Library. Tom Tom's journey into obscurity was the result of many factors, not the least of which has been a paucity of surviving sources for the opera. In its original form as a play, Tom Tom can be found in The Roots of African American Drama: An Anthology of Early Plays, 1858-1938 (Hamalian and Hatch 1991). (2) A copy of the short score of Tom Tom, archived at the Schomburg Center for Black Culture in New York City, had been the only known source for the work in the United States; it is archived in the papers of Jules Bledsoe, who sang the lead role at the premiere. (3) This score is nearly identical to Graham's, but Graham's contains emendations in her own handwriting, as well as drafts for an overture and extra numbers for the third act. Primary sources for the notwithstanding, Shirley Graham's political activism also contributed to the fate of both Tom Tom and her career in the arts. As will be shown, she had a lifelong passion for advancing her perspectives on social justice, and music was just one of the methods she used to promote her ideas. In a never-ending quest to expose the injustices against people of color worldwide, Graham modulated the rhetoric of her political voice many times and in many ways. …
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