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‘A wall of darkness dividing the world’: Blackness and whiteness in Louis Gruenberg's The Emperor Jones

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2008

Extract

In Eugene O'Neill's The Emperor Jones, Brutus Jones undertakes a fatal flight through the jungle, near the end of which he stumbles into a clearing and ‘incoherently mumbles’: ‘What is – dis place? Seems like – seems like I ben heah befo’.’ He's right – he has been there. Jones's frantic run has brought him full-circle, leading him to roughly the same place where he began. However, Jones retraces his steps in more man just O'Neill's drama: he repeatedly rushes through die same jungle in the numerous adaptations of the play that followed its successful 1920 première. The first progeny of die Emperor – Louis Gruenberg's opera performed at the Metropolitan and Dudley Murphey's film starring Paul Robeson – appeared in 1933. Surprisingly, given die dated and, to present-day audiences, offensive racial depictions, the work is still being translated into other media, including Sven-David Sandström's 1985 opera and a 1986 dance version by Donald McKayle set to music by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1995

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References

1 O'Neill, Eugene, The Emperor Jones, Anna Christie, The Hairy Ape (New York, 1972), 46. All subsequent citations are to this edition.Google Scholar

2 Another important adaptation is the 1956 ballet featuring music by Heitor Villa-Lobos and choreography by José Limón, who also danced the tide role.Google Scholar

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4 This study will not discuss the reception of the play in the white or black communities. Needless to say, O'Neill's work proved controversial and had detractors in both groups. Many African–American critics attacked the work for perpetuating stereotypes, particularly that of the brutish black male. Black audiences were no less forgiving: Langston Hughes, for instance, recalled that a Harlem performance of the work was ridiculed. To Jones's rushing through the ‘primitive’ jungle, the audience responded: ‘Why don't you come on out o' that jungle – back to Harlem where you belong?’ Hughes, , The Big Sea (New York, 1940), 258–9.Google Scholar

5 A discussion of the genesis and original production of the opera can be found in Nisbett, Robert F., ‘Louis Gruenberg: His Life and Work’, Ph.D. diss. (Ohio State University, 1979), 42–9.Google Scholar

6 Quoted in Nisbett, ‘Gruenberg’, 44.Google Scholar

7 In the two decades following the 1934/5 season, the opera received sporadic performances. After a 1951 performance, the work lay dormant until the Michigan Opera Theatre revived it in February 1979. For a performance history of the opera, see Gruenberg's, Irma contribution to Margaret Loftus Ranald, The Eugene O'Neill Companion (Westport, Conn., and London, 1984), 745–6.Google Scholar

8 For such nationalistic praises, see Downes, Olin, ‘“The Emperor Jones” Triumphs as Opera’, New York Times, 8 01 1933, sec. 1, p. 1Google Scholar and O'Neill into Opera’, Time, 16 01 1933, 20.Google Scholar

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15 Gruenberg, , ‘Jazz as a Starting Point’, 594–5, and ‘Vom Jazz und andern Dingen’, 232.Google Scholar

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17 O'Neill dictates: ‘It [a tom-tom] starts at a rate exacdy corresponding to normal pulse-beat – 72 to the minute – and continues at a gradually accelerating rate from this point uninterruptedly to the very end of the play’ (20).Google Scholar

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19 This discussion of the authoratative invisibility of whiteness draws upon Dyer, ‘White’, 44–9.Google Scholar

20 This line appears in the play, where it refers specifically to Jones's death by silver bullets. Gruenberg, though, only cites the ‘style’ and not the bullets. Moreover, he omits the final line of the play: ‘Stupid as 'ogs, the lot of 'em! Blarsted niggers!’ (53).Google Scholar

21 For a discussion of Jones's linguistic liminality and the interest of the writers Susan Glaspell and Djuna Barnes in this marginal character, see Larabee, Ann E., ‘“Meeting the Outside Face to Face”: Susan Glaspell, Djuna Barnes, and O'Neill's The Emperor Jones’, in Modem American Drama: The Female Connection, ed. Schlueter, June (Rutherford, NJ, 1990), 7785.Google Scholar

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24 This religious ambiguity particularly shapes the film version of the drama, in which the tribal ceremony of the opening shot dissolves into a southern black church scene. Perhaps taking a cue from the earlier opera, the film features Robeson singing a spiritual (‘Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel’) during the jungle escape.Google Scholar

25 The score does feature syncopated patterns but does not incorporate African–American idioms to the same degree as some of Gruenberg's other works, nor does it have as clear a ‘jazz sound’ as those compositions.Google Scholar

26 Whereas Gruenberg's score resists the liminal position in the racial design of the drama, it can be heard as conforming with the representation of whiteness as a background. As many critics remarked, the score largely maintains a subservient position to O'Neill's dialogue, often providing slight underpinnings or brief interjections between vocal phrases. W. J. Henderson, in fact, referred to it as a ‘background’. His description is especially apt: given Gruenberg's investment in the racial representations of the drama, the only place for his music was the unobtrusive white ‘background’.Google Scholar

27 Pounding drums play a similar role in Cornel Wilde's 1966 film The Naked Prey. As in The Emperor Jones, drums accompany a chase; however, Wilde's is inmany ways the ‘white version’ of the play and opera. The film centres on the hunt by African tribesmen of a white guide who, unlike Jones, runs towards civilisation (an army fort) and puts on clothes (shoes and a loincloth) during the pursuit.Google Scholar

28 Kramer, A. Walter, ‘Emperor Jones, in Opera Guise, Has World Premiere’, Musical America, 53 (10 01 1933), 1, 20.Google Scholar

29 Gruenberg was aware of this possible confusion and offered an unrealised solution: ‘I shall try to get moving pictures of Jones's hallucinations instead of actual players, I find that actual actors muddle up the clearness’. Quoted in Nisbett, ‘Gruenberg’, 43. In the film version, Murphey avoided the problem by superimposing small shots of the hallucinations in the main frame.Google Scholar

30 In his libretto, Gruenberg directed that the chorus be placed in the orchestra pit and emerge slowly.Google Scholar

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34 Gilman also viewed Jones's suicide as ‘an atavistic sacrifice’. Gilman, ‘“Emperor Jones” as Opera’, 19.Google Scholar

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36 Gruenberg directs that ‘four almost naked negroes with drums suspended round their necks’ perform in the concluding war dance. It is unclear if these drums were intended to materialise the backstage instruments, which, according to the play, should be silent after Jones's death.Google Scholar

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38 Bhabha, , ‘The Other Question’, 26–7.Google Scholar For Freud's views of fetishism, see Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, ed. and trans. Strachey, James (New York, 1962), 1921,Google Scholar and ‘Fetishism’ in The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, ed. and trans. Strachey, James (London, 1961), XXI, 149–57.Google Scholar

39 Kobena Mercer's application of fetishism to racial and male homoerotic contexts has been especially helpful in approaching Gruenberg's opera; see ‘Skin Head Sex Thing: Racial Difference and the Homoerotic Imaginary’, in How Do I Look? Queer Film and Video, ed. Object-Choices, Bad (Seattle, 1991), 169210,Google Scholar and ‘Reading Racial Fetishism’, in Fetishism as Cultural Discourse, ed. Apter, Emily and Pietz, William (Ithaca, 1993), 307–29. In a recent study on cinematic blackface, Michael Rogin has related blackface and fetishism;Google Scholar see Rogin, , ’ “Democracy and Burnt Cork”: The End of Blackface, the Beginning of Civil Rights’, Representations, 46 (1994), 89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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45 ‘O'Neill into Opera’, Time, 20.Google ScholarLiebling, Leonard, ‘Emperor Jones, New American Opera, Given Its Premiere Performance at Metropolitan’, Musical Courier, 106 (14 01 1933), 13.Google Scholar

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47 ‘O'Neill into Opera’, Time, 20; Liebling, ‘Emperor Jones’, 13; Henderson, ‘“Emperor Jones” Has Premiere’, 25; and Downes, ‘“The Emperor Jones” Triumphs as Opera’, 26.Google Scholar

48 Mercer also mentions this image in his comments on the shine of black skin in Robert Mapplethorpe's photographs. Mercer, ‘Reading Racial Fetishism’, 315–18.Google Scholar

49 Thompson, , ‘Success Attends “The Emperor Jones”‘, 6 and Downes, ‘“The Emperor Jones” Triumphs as Opera’, 26.Google Scholar

50 Kramer, , ‘Emperor Jones, in Opera Guise’, 5.Google Scholar

51 This statement is offered as a rhetorical play on Kramer's comments. The racist policies of the Metropolitan obviously led to the casting of Tibbett.Google Scholar

52 Kramer and the other critics also fail to mention the incongruity of having a white singer (Pearl Besuner) play the small role of the ‘old native woman’ in the opening scene.Google Scholar

53 A similar photograph can be found in the New York Herald-Tribune review.Google Scholar

54 ‘O'Neill into Opera’, Time, 20.Google Scholar

55 This recording is of a shortened version of the work and was broadcast on The Packard Hour on 16 October 1934. The Pearl label has included the conclusion of that recording on its collection entitled “The Emperor Tibbett’ (GEMM CDS 9452).Google Scholar

56 As seen in the film version, Paul Robeson also relied on these two gestures. Indeed, there was no escaping them, as they are built into a role that fixates on both the ‘comedy’ of a black emperor and the ‘lure’ of the black body. Moreover, these qualities are enhanced by the mise-en-scène and camera work. As Richard Dyer points out in his discussion of Robeson's film career, though, the actor, through his presence and performance, could ‘work against the grain’ of such white media productions, infusing them with meanings and images appreciated by black audiences. Such subversion can be heard in the spiritual episode: in Robeson's robust, heartfelt performance, the spiritual remains partly outside of the primitivist narrative of the drama, whereas, in Tibbett's performance, it is complicit in that narrative. Dyer, , Heavenly Bodies: Film Stars and Society (New York, 1986), 67139.Google Scholar