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7 - A New Performance for the New World: Carmen in America

from Part II - Across Frontiers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2020

Richard Langham Smith
Affiliation:
Royal College of Music, London
Clair Rowden
Affiliation:
Cardiff University
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Summary

Despite a mixed critical reception after Carmen’s American premiere in New York City on 23 October 1878, the opera quickly became a mainstay of the repertoire in the United States. American reviewers described Carmen as wicked yet compellingly seductive, Micaëla as a paragon of virtue and Don José as a stereotypically violent but manly Spaniard. They framed the opera as a cautionary tale of the dire consequences when women abandoned their traditional social roles. A close reading of the performing materials rented to American opera companies in the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by the Tams-Witmark Company reveals a performance tradition for Carmen which responded to and exaggerated the early critical reactions towards the main characters. Opera troupes used a combination of carefully placed cuts and stage pantomimes to perform an interpretation of the work that subtly tailored Bizet’s music to the American audience, which intensified Carmen’s vicious tendencies, highlighted Micaëla’s femininity and amplified Don José’s masculinity. The modifications to Carmen offer a case study that illustrates American operatic performance practices and illuminates issues of adaptation and cultural transfer in the transatlantic journey of European music to the United States.

Type
Chapter
Information
Carmen Abroad
Bizet's Opera on the Global Stage
, pp. 113 - 129
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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References

Newspapers and Periodical Literature

Boston Daily Advertiser

Boston Herald

Chicago Daily Tribune

New York Times

Music (Chicago)

The North American (Philadelphia)

Philadelphia Inquirer

The Post (Boston)

General Bibliography

Cook, Nicholas. Beyond the Score: Music as Performance. New York, Oxford University Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Howat, Roy. ‘Performance as research and vice versa’, in Ewans, Michael, Halton, Rosalind and Phillips, John, eds., Music Research: New Directions for a New Century. London, Cambridge Scholars Press, 2004, 214.Google Scholar
Krehbiel, Henry Edward. Afro-American Folksongs: A Study in Racial and National Music. New York, G. Schirmer, 1914.Google Scholar
Latham, Alison, and Parker, Roger, eds. Verdi in Performance. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Preston, Katherine K. Opera for the People: English-Language Opera and Women Managers in Late 19th-Century America. New York, Oxford University Press, 2017.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turner, Kristen M. ‘Opera and English: Class and culture in America, 1878–1910’, PhD dissertation. Chapel Hill, NC, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2015.Google Scholar
Turner, Kristen M.Justifiable homicide: The life and death of Carmen in late nineteenth-century America’, in Fallwell, Lynne and Williams, Keira, eds., Gender and the Representation of Evil. New York, Routledge, 2017, 143–59.Google Scholar

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