A merica ffelvisk Periodical Carter
CLIFTON ATINUI • CINCINNATI 10, 01110
PAGE FIVE
TeesPerRon;jonsmentometz
rem arkable
:meats have
y nearly 60
opulation of
Ilion. These
.1 the equal
on which is
ing that we
ding olives,
.nes, grape-
almonds.
:ars a very
and decors.
sided which
.achment of
pas sible the
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mental sta-
;formed that
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been intro.
nodern sain-
ts the health,
people.
irk.
un much has
,gether there
eel institutes
Lion between
hools, secon-
training col-
workshops.
y 550 teach-
pils.
; it is to all
that the Ian.
all schools is
guage of the
is and in the
Et grounds of
r and went
hat is to be
The founda-
m University
, pus in 1918,
her has been
the buildings.
is a rather
t was on the
now being re-
ication, espe-
estined to be-
at magnitude
increases and
her education
st for educe-
;tine of about
ige
■ aee
Request Program Will
Take Place March 23 at
Orchestra Hall.
Last
%)..
04-0 4
.MUSIC AND MUSICIANS
Pa
at' t I re jig
The second and last request pro-
gram of the season will be given by
the Symphony Orchestra under Vic-
tor Kolar in Orchestra Hall next Sun-
day afternoo n , March 23, at half after
The twelfth subscription concert of Lail; d t Miens, lib weiss nicht was three. Therogram
p
will consist of
bedeuten,—but it w as a great Wagner's Prelude to "The Master-
the Detroit Symphony Orchestra can
lie spoken of only in superlatives. performance. singers of Nuremburg;" Schubert's
Not since Bruno Walter's last appear-
Wagner's great "Lohengrin" pre- "Unanishtal" Symphony; Bach-Gou-
ance here as guest conductor, has the lush, through Bruno Walter's exalted nod's Ave Maria; the "Sorcerer's" Ap-
orchestra played so gloriously as it did reading, merges completely into the prentice" by Dukas; Rossini's Over-
last night, completely hypnotized by picture the Bayreuth master had in tare to the opera, ••La Gana Ladra;"
the magnetism of ens same great mind when he composol this master- , Ilandel's Largo; Ponchielli's Dance of
musician and conduetir; swept up- piece. Never have the strings played the flours; Rinisky-Korsakov's "The
ward and (Alward on the mighty wings with such shimmering delicacy and Young Prince and the Young Princess
of great surges of music, that carried surpassing beauty, nor have the from "Scheherazade" and Elgar's
the audience as well as the perform- brasses been made to sound so over- Military March No. 1, "Pomp and Cir
ers into hitherto unsuspected realms whelmingly imposing. If these two • cumstance. In the Ave Maria of Cm-
of purest joy. These who missed Mr. eldes covered themselves with glory nod, the Largo 0 Handel and in M-
Walter's magnificent converts last in this number the weedwinds were gar's "Pomp and Circumstance" the
, year, were to be pitied: but those who at their gayest best in the thrilling great Murphy organ will be used with
failed to witness his sdissonanees
complete triumph of the Strauss tone lean• Frank \V iglew as organist.
last night,—well, their negligence In fact, Mr. Walter's conception of the
ought to be sufficient p un i s h men t. But Strauss—Eulenspiegel pranks is re-
Great interest is shown in the per-
plate with broadest farce and subtile formance of Handel's masterpiece, the
it isn't.
humor, while his performance is fas- oratorio, 'The Messiah which will be
The outstanding features of any
(Attesting in its kaleidoscopic change of
concert under Mr. Walter's baton,
mood and rotor; facts which neeessi-
sung in March
Orchestra
Hall, the
Thursday
evening,
27. Since
first of
which from beginning to end impress
tate the liveliest response tram the the year the Detroit Symphony Choir
themselves upon the (deserver are the
musicians, and that in truest virtuoso has been preparing for this concert
tremendous earnestness of the man,
style. The orehestra surpassed itself under the direction of Victor Kolar.
his unfailing musicianship, and the
in the performance of this grandiose Mr. Gabrilowitsch will conduct the
transfiguring insight of his genius
composition, and with Bruno Walter performance and the entire Detroit
which he brings tt bear upon the in-
d
richly deserved the ovation tendered
Symphony Orchestra will be used.
terpretation of the music at hand;
by the enthusiastic audience at the . A brilliant quartet has been en-
powers which life the sum total of the
gaged. The soprano will be Sue liar-
performance out of therealm of ev- end.
" "Il
VIII
" 0
(.)
ery (lay music, so that it remains to Monday night found a distinguished yard, an American concert soprano of
illumine the mind and warm the heart audience in holiday mood assembled note. Nevada van der Veer, will be
even when all thought of the conduc- at Orchestra Hall, to witness the ded- the contralto, Richard Crooks the ten -
ter is set aside, forgotten. But such ication of the $50,000.00 organ, the sir and Frank Cuthbert, bass. Charles
incomparable readings do not and can- gift of Mr. and Mrs. William II. Frederic Morse will preside at the
under the di- Murphy organ.
.
n o t exist apart from their motive Murphy. The orchestra
,
0
sa
rection o
force; and that is and ever will re-'
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra
of
the
best
and
most
interesting
per-
main the master and propulsive
formances of "Ilk. Meistersinger" pre- announces four extra Sunday pupa-
hand of Bruno Walter.
time, tar concerts to be given on the after-
a
10111;
Mr, Walter's program provided the hide that I have heard in
essentiel elements of novelty, con- and after the intermission, assisted nouns of March 30, April 0, April 13
least and familiarity. Now on these the soloist, Marcel Dupre, organist, and April 20. Mr. Kolar has wrought
programs was Gustave klahler's First in Saint Saens' Third Symphony in , four unusually interesting programs.
On March 30 he will play a program
C minor, for organ and piano.
Symphony in D major; more
the feature of
Details of the specifications of this of Bohemian music,
the Prelude to "Loliengrin;" while in
magnificent organ were published in which will be Dvorak's masterpiece,
c;adrast to these, both in form and in
ople the New World Symphony. April 6
e
substance, was Richard Strauss' bril- all the Detroit newspapers, and p
mote to this dedicatory concert on- brings an All-American program with
liant musical joke, "Till Eulenspiegel's
dentiv expecting to he swept off their NIcDowell's Indian Suite and three
Merry ('ranks." What • program and
t ; ' "Ad-
feet for at least, out of their seats) nisi emenlr .
what a treat!
Years ago, while a student in New , by the might and majesty of the in- ventures in a Perambulator" as the
York, I used to sit spell-bound by thelstrument. But the presiding organist principal items. April 13, Palm Sun-
magic of Nlahler's conducting. I heard I of one the finest of France, proved to day, will be an all-Tachaikovsky pro-
may. grant with the "Pathetique" Symph-
him with the Philharmonic Orchestra I he an etcher and not a painter; a
and at the Metropolitan Opera House.1 ter of the subdued, the shadowy and • troy in its entirety. The "1012" Over-
I thought then that never again would , the elusive; a great artist and refined. tore will also be played and in it the
I hear such wonderful readings (gib; gave no hint of the greater powers Murphy organ will be used. For the
Beethoven and Mozart or witness such i and volunin hidden in this mighty , final program on Easter Sunday Mr.
permitting the organ to Kolar ha3
in
, selmfed music written
S '
tremendously absorbing performances mechanism
t
"roll and thunder" only in accompani- celebration o
of Wagner. Mahler was my super- went to the orchestra. The public was This last will be one of the most de-
man in the world of music—until I therefore and naturally disappointed, lightful concerts ever given in De-
heard his own compositions. Then,
and will no doubt flock to the hall trait.
what a fall there was These long
when some lesser light comes to show
endless symphonies that moved on in
Cecilia Hansen M Recital.
off the tremendous depth of the instru-
big blocks of sound,—often so much
heavy noise; could this man who made went.
"Peer of the Auer Clan" was the
During the intermission there were
the music of Beethoven and Brahins
noble speeches and dazzling gifts, entlius:astic tribute of the critic of
and Wagner live, could he have been
while
the
last
speaker
voiced
the
son-
the
New York Times to Cecilia Han-
serious when he wrote these exhaust-
ing pages upon pages of notes? I timents of the interested onlookers by sen after her American debut. An
wishing
all
who
had
a
hand
in
the
pro-
almost
unparalleled success was Miss
could never concentrate at a Mahler
symphony; these was nothing tangi- ceedings a "Merry Christmas." (Ilansen's, the young Russian violinist
I who plays here on Friday evening,
ble upon which to fasten my thought.
March 28, at Orchetra Hall, when
I was interested in everything save
Eduard Werner, director of the see- she played in Carnegie Hall last fall.
the music, which, despite a wealth of
ies of popular Sunday noon concerts; Miss Hansen was unanimously ac-
pregram notes didn't mean a thing to
me. Even when Mahler played his at the apitol Theater, announces that claimed not only, a peer am ong
York violinist, in violinists, but among all violinists.
own music, I at back and dreamed of the distinguished New
other things, while I webbed his di- S s ha Jacobson,will be the assisting It was one of the greatest successes
soloist with the Capitol Symphony I in New York concert history.
minutive person direct so much mass-
The blond beauty of Cecilia Ilan-
ed sound. Oceassionallv there was a Orchestra this Sunday, March 23. At
least four thousand people crowded sen, the Russian violinist, has led
lively suggestion of a folk-theme,
into the Capitol Theater many to inquire why Miss Hansen is
"echt bauerlich," but it quickly gut their WAY
She is a
Sunday, and it may be surmised designated as "Russian.
lost in the ensuing shuffle. Brune last
Walter made all that mortal inns that with this well-known assisting native of Russia, but her grandfather
mold possibly make of this first sym- artist even a larger throng will be on was a Dane, and it is from the Ilan-
phony; but even his magnificent read- hand for tomorrow's concert. 91r. sen flintily that she inherits her
ing of the difficult score and the trans- Werner begins his program promptly Norse name and her Scandinavian
type of beauty. Russia, however, is
cendental response of the orchestra at 12:30.
her native land, and Russia is the
Her pro-
violinist's native tongue.
gram to lie offered is as follows: Cha-
•enne, Vitali; Larghetto, Haendel-
Ilubay ; Rondino, Beethoven-Kreisler;
Gavotte, Bach-Kreisler; Concerto in
D. major, Paganini; Nocturne, Cho-
pin-Sarasate ; Carmen Fantasy, Bizet.
Sarasate. Boris lbakharoff will be
the accompanist.
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THE FilARRYJ„ PEAK
1227 Griswold St., between Grand River and State
Telephone Main 0224
Abraham Goldfadden and
"The "Two Kuni-Lemels"
(On the Occasion of Maurice Swarts's Production in Commemoration of the
y of Goldfaden's Death.)'
Fifteen& Ann'
By ELBERT AIDLINE-TROMMER
a Yiddish theater after his own heart
production, but • new but met with little success. After a
sojourn in Galicia, Roumania, France
Swart..
and Russia, Goldfaden returned to
America where, lonely and almost for-
Abraham Goldfaden, the pioneer of
the Yiddish theater, was born in gotten, he died 15 years ago.
J. T. A. BULLETIN, AWARD
WINNER, TO GIVE PRIZES
ing students to perfect themselves for
greater service in their chosen fields
of endeavor."
PHILADELPHIA.— (J. T. A.)—
Samuel S. Fleisher, founder of the
Graphic Sketch Club and winner of
the Philadelphia award of $10,000 for
1923, created by Edward Bok, has
announced that he "will invest the
fund and devote the annual income to
the awarding of prizes to be known
as the Bok Award Prizes, or In help.
The Philadelphia Award, created In
1921, is paid each year to the man or
woman in Philadelphia or vicinity
who during the preceding year "shall
have performed an act or contributed
a service calculated to advance the
best interests of the community." Mr.
Fleisher received a gold medal in ad-
dition to the Award.
"Not merely • new
conception."—Maurice
Eleonora Ouse, Italian Trage-
dienne, Will Play in "La
Southwestern Russia, in 1840. His
Goldfaden may have died half-for-
Porta Chiusa," Orches-
father, a watchmaker by trade and gotten, a great many of his plays,
tra Hall March Z4.
Hebrew scholar and lever of litera- such as "Bar-Kochba," "Sulamith,"
ture by avocation, inculcated in the "The Witch," "The Two Kuni-Lemels"
Elconora Dose, one of the world's boy, at an early age, love for poetry etc., will live on. They will live not
greatest tragediennes, whose fame is and things beautiful. Progressive in alone because they are Jewish folk
coupled with that of the immortal his ideals, yet Jewish to the core, he lore incarnate, because the essence of
Scab Bernhardt, will appear in De. sent his sun first to a government the Jewish spirit gives soul and sub-
trait Monday evening, March 21, at school fur Jewish boys and subse- stance to their character who are
Orchestra Hall in "La Porta Chiusa" quently to a Rabbinical Seminary. It drawn from every walk of life, from
(The Closed Dood). Madame Dune was there, while participating in an
the wealthy merchant to the beauti-
has appeared in notable plays in the amateur performance, that young Ab- ful worldly woman, from the most fa-
leading countries of Europe and in raham conceived the idea of founding
natical Chassid to the greatest dis-
America and is regarded as one of a Yiddish theater ter the masses.
senter. Nor is this all. Every one of
the supreme tragediennes in the his-
1072 he wrote his first play, and Goldfliden's plays contains a number
fury of the theater. During her Ares-1
years
later
resigned
his
position
of wondrously beautiful Jewish melo-
ant tour of the United States she has two
a ch er. to be ableto de vote all his dies crystallized from folk songs in
of thrby
p eeeee t • P urim ay appeared in the leading cities of the
e Ki Tamud Torah w ill
The Kin derg•rtn
e
875
n1
.
I
actisit
as
y
the fertile .brain of their creator who
auditorium of the school, Kirby pond
and country and was given triumphant tim e to librar
in Hebrew Sunday, March 23, in that
ovations wherever she played. Ma- he went abroad and discovered in Rou. thus was both his own librettist and
St. Antoine. The children of the class will graduate next month.
dame Duse was born in Italy 65 years • mania, a few cabaret performers who composer.
lebno ago and appeared on the stage when were destined to become the nucleus
In producing on the fifteenth an-
a mere child, playing with her par. of the present day Yiddish theater. In
niversary of the author's death, with
the various Rathskellers as abundant
ants, who were itinerant actors tour-
the opening performance on Jan. 25,
in Roumania he met a number of Jew-
ing all over Italy. Among the plays
"The Two Kuni-Lemels"—the first of
ish "liedersingers" who also every now
a series of Goldfaden's revivals to be
in which she acted the leading female
and then delighted their audiences
role are "Otello," "A Doll's llouse,"
given at the Yiddish Art Theater ,
, Antony and Cleopatra," "La Tosca" with grotesque dialogues. The Russo- Maurice Swartz, the daring innovator
Turkish
war
was
being
fought
just
and a host of others among the
of the Jewish stage, is not only pre-
world's greatest tragedies. then, money was a..plenty among mei:-
senting one of the world's greatest
chants and contractors and when
comedies, full of clever satire, incom-
Geldfaden made his stage debut with
Jan Chiapusso, Pianist, Will Be „ The Recruits," its success was im- parable wit and truly Jewish humor,
but he is offering the public an oppor-
t Thirteenth Attraction of the
mediate.
After the war, however, Goldfaden tunity to see how a play, penned al-
Civic Music League.
most half a century ago by a poet
and his first company left impoverish-
whose heart and soul throbbed with
Jan Chiapusso, the distinguished ed Roumania and came to Russia. love for his people, still has the pow-
pianist, who is appearing in America They made a tour of the cities and er to grip and hold audiences in a
for the first time, will be the thir- towns in the Jewish Pale of Settle- sway of heartfelt joyous laughter,
teenth attraction of the Civic Music ment, with Goldfaden's two historical that laughter which, to quote Sholom
2 league at Arena Gardens Tuesday operettas "Sularnith" and "BarKoch- Aleichem, is prescribed by doctors be-
• evening, March 25. Mr. Chiapusso
cause it makes for health and happi-
who is of Dutch and Italian parent- ba"—added
success of this
to enterprise
the repertoire.
among The
the
.0
g age, studied in Cologne, was discov-lJewish masses, to whom the theater ness.
Goldfrolen's "The Two Kuni-Le-
ered by Raoul Pugno and completed had heretofore been a closed book,
his studies with Frederic Lamond, the I was tremendous. Wherever Gelded- melt", at the Yiddish Art Theater is
The products that make you
his company came, they play- not a mere coincidence. It is no more
$ great interpreter of Beethoven's mu-
enjoy the Passover Holidays
sic. He scored successes in the prin- , en to overcrowded houses. Finally, , than fit and proper, it could not be
the3 were invited for guest perform otherwise but that Swartz who does
' cipal cities of Europe. In Paris he cI
AT ALL GROCERS
was awarded the coveted "Musics ances in the Russian capital, and scar- not hesitate to go forward in his se-
AND DEALERS
trium ph in Petersburg as lection of plays, should be the one to
Prize" in a contest in which 60 pi-
same
• anists took part. Critics in Brussels ed
in the
the
Pale. E verything bade fair delve into the very dawn of the Yid-
g acclaimed him an accomplished mu-' toward the establishment of • perms- dish repertoire and offer the Jewish—
and non-Jewish—theater-goers a mod-
sician
technician.
called and
him admirable
the "pianist
with the They
vel- vent Yiddish theater in Russia, but in
ernized version of this immortal farce-
Cincinnati. 0.
0
1883 a ukase was issued prohibiting
new pro-
The B. mentischewIts Co.
vet fingers."
I performances in the Jewish "jargon." comedy. "It is not merely a
Mr. Chiapusso's programs are not- The Yiddish players, together with duction, tut a new conception,"
during
a
rehearsal
0
able
for
their
extensiveness
of
reper-
after
a
few
Swartz
remarked
$
1 their author-director,
Loire. In his concerts last season he . I years of wandering from one Euro- of the old-new play. "I feel with ev-
played nearly 200 different works. Aran country to another, set sail for ery fiber of my being the "The Two
Kuni Lemels" contains many a treas-
A American critics have accepted him, the New World.
• as a pianist of the foremost rank of 1 ; In America Goldfaden found a few ure which has not yet been brought
out in any previous production, and
the present day.
theaters
organized
by
former
Yiddish
fall to our
members of his comp any, but his own I feel certain that it will
f
little
plays,
those
heartfelt
effusions
lot to show the public the sparkling
YOUR APPEARANCE
by this,
poe t's soul were quite oyershad- gems of Goldfaden's genius
Marcel Waving.
of
ow by melodramas end similar con- our first, venture into his repertoire."
Facial and Henna Packs.
the
past
with
Everything In Beauty Culture.
coctions. Ile no longer was king of Those who are familiar
the Yiddish theater, nor were his heirs performances of Maurice Swartz and
ADELL BEAUTY SHOPPE
his Art Theater—and who is not—do
worthy successors to his crown.
Garfield 8064
9107 Twelfth St.
In 1889 Goldfaden left for London not doubt that his expectations will
(Corner Clairmount)
to
build
fully be realized.
attempted
once
more
where he
ilmmwmgem`
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