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Discovering America: From Paul Bunyan to Peter Grimes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2015

Abstract

Britten and Auden’s ‘choral operetta’ Paul Bunyan, written in New York in 1939–41, has often been seen as out of touch with its American context and as an anomalous precursor to the triumphant Peter Grimes (1945). A closer look, however, suggests a more complex engagement with American musical life and with the problem of American operatic populism. Indeed, if Paul Bunyan offered one set of answers to this problem, toying with popular genres and smaller forms, the rejection of this approach in Peter Grimes also seems tied to shifting American ideas about contemporary opera. Attention to Paul Bunyan in its American context highlights the transatlantic nature of both American and British operatic developments in the mid-twentieth century, while also recasting Britten’s operatic trajectory, restoring a sense of scepticism and uncertainty to his operatic project at its very beginnings.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2015 

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Footnotes

*

Heather Wiebe, King’s College London; heather.wiebe@kcl.ac.uk.

References

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32 Britten to Ralph Hawkes, 19 October 1939, in Letters II: 712. Britten also publicly mentioned the possibility of a Broadway premiere in a 1940 interview: William G. King, ‘Music and Musicians’, New York Sun (27 April 1940) (BPL).

33 Kildea, Paul, Benjamin Britten: A Life in the Twentieth Century (London, 2013), 179 Google Scholar. Also see Mitchell, , ‘The Origins, Evolution and Metamorphoses of Paul Bunyan’, 8891 Google Scholar, 97–8; Reed, Philip, ‘A Rejected Love Song from Paul Bunyan ’, Musical Times 129 (1988), 283 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Both Mitchell (91) and Reed (283–4) point out that Broadway increasingly accommodated political and social seriousness in the 1930s.

34 One article, which quotes Colin Graham, states, ‘Britten wrote it about three years before Oklahoma! was written and it is a real traditional American musical’ (East Anglian Daily Times (2 June 1976) (BPL)). Also see Dennis Barker, ‘London Letter’, The Guardian (5 June 1976) (BPL). The positioning of Paul Bunyan as a musical also had to do with the company performing it in 1976, the English Music Theatre Company, which replaced Britten’s disbanded English Opera Group and was meant to perform musicals as well as opera. On the ‘musical-isation’ of the work, also see Ward-Griffin, Danielle, ‘“The Wrong Piece in the Wrong Place”: Resituating the Operas of Benjamin Britten’, Ph.D. diss (Yale University, 2012), 237238 Google Scholar.

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37 Marc Blitzstein, untitled (‘In America…’), Orson Welles Manuscripts, Lilly Library, Indiana University, Box 5, f22, quoted in Denning, The Cultural Front, 285.

38 Garafola, Lynn, ‘Lincoln Kirstein, Modern Dance, and the Left: The Genesis of an American Ballet’, Dance Research 23 (2005), 1835 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Steichen, James, ‘The American Ballet’s Caravan’, Dance Research Journal 47 (2015), 6994 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Copland could have been one point of contact with Kirstein (see Letters, II: 646). However, Auden knew Kirstein independently; indeed, it was Kirstein who provided funds for the Brooklyn house where Britten, Pears and Auden lived during the creation of Paul Bunyan ( Tippins, , February House, 3738 Google Scholar). Britten went on to write Matinées Musicales for Kirstein’s American Ballet Caravan in 1941 (Letters, II: 646).

39 ‘American Lyric Theater [sic] Makes Debut May 18’, Chicago Daily Tribune (7 May 1939), 7, quoted in Jerry L. McBride, Douglas Moore: A Bio-Bibliography (Middleton, WI, 2011), 418. The performances were at the Martin Beck Theatre, at the start of the Broadway off-season.

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64 ‘Messalina’ is an anonymous poem from Henry Youll’s madrigal collection Canzonets to Three Voices (1608).

65 Many critics and listeners, to be sure, hear the song as more straightforward. See Evans, The Music of Benjamin Britten, 71; and Peter Pears, ‘The Vocal Music’, in Benjamin Britten: A Commentary on His Works from a Group of Specialists, ed. Donald Mitchell and Hans Keller (London, 1952), 61. Mitchell is one of the few critics to hear something amiss (Britten and Auden in the Thirties: The Year 1936 (Seattle, 1981), 41).

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69 Here I am referring to the version in Add. MS 60622, cited above.

70 The recording is held at the BPL (BPLCD00018).

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