The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 13, 2011- 3B OPERAS From Page 1B Two more Union Operas fol- lowed "Koanzaland": 1910's "Crimson Chest," a pirate tale, and 1911's "The Awakened Ramses," a riotous mummy com- edy. "Ramses" began the tradi- tion of including football players in the operas, after they stepped in at the last minute when half of the cast was deemed ineligible to participate. "Not only were the guys play- ing the women's roles, but these big, beefy, hairy guys were play- ing the women's roles," Rowe said. By then, the operas had become a regular fixture on cam- pus, yet a lack of organization and continuity from year to year was a problem. So in 1912 a fixed managerial position was created, andthe Operawas organized into a permanent theatrical organiza- tion known as the Mimes. In the introduction to his score of the Mimes' first show, 1913's "Con- trarie Mary," Prof. Moore wrote that the formation of the Mimes would allow for the "attainment of ideals hitherto impossible." Women in the operas - World War I The creation of the Mimes also began the tradition of taking the Michigan Union Operas on the road. After "Contrarie Mary" successfully toured, subsequent productions made visits to cities across Michigan and the Mid- west. "Michigan alumni were - and are - everywhere," said Marilyn McNitt, an associate archivist at the Bentley Historical Library who organized a 2008 exhibit celebrating the Mimes' 100th anniversary. "So they would go to places where there were large groups of alumni. And then other people would hear about it, too. It was new and fresh - there weren't a lot of college troupes going on the road to perform their original plays. And all guys!" With the aid of funds raised from the Mimes' local produc- tions and road shows, the Union was able to complete just the exterior of its new clubhouse, which can still be seen today. But when war broke out between the U.S. and Germany in 1917, finish- ing the interior became a dire necessity. A government loan allowed the Union to be complet- ed enough to serve as a barracks and mess hall for the Student Army Training Corps. In 1918, with much of the Uni- versity's male population enlist- ed or conscripted, the Mimes faced a major dilemma: whether to allow women students to par- ticipate in the Michigan Union Opera. "The Union was a male bas- ket," McNitt said. "It was really hard for them to let women in. There was a big controversy about that." Many protested the inclusion of women, claiming this would ruin a decade-old tradition. Yet the faculty, including Prof. Moore, objected to "the impro- priety of sending out to its alum- ni an entertainment representing the university with a score of men frolicking in petticoats when the nation is at war," according to an article published in an unidenti- fiable newspaper in January 1918. Feminism won out, and in March 1918 "Let's Go," the only D Michigan Union Opera in his- tory to feature women in the cast, was produced. With a score by Prof. Moore, this propagandistic wartime comedy helped to raise funds for the war effort. The heyday of the Michigan Union Opera - The 1920s With the end of the war in November 1918, the doughboys returned to Ann Arbor and the University's women were forced out of the spotlight. The Mimes resumed their all-male tradition for the March 1919 production of "Come on Dad." The Michigan Union also opened in 1919. The building - which would become the heart of the University community in the coming decade - housed common areas, dining rooms, ballrooms, libraries, a hotel, a soda bar, a barber shop, an indoor swimming pool (where D Barnes and Noble is located today) and a bowling alley. Yet women, who had helped save the Michigan Union Opera the year before, were only allowed to enter through a back door and had tobe accompanied by a male escort while in the building. "We were such a dominant men's university," said Carl Smith, a retired CPA who serves as faculty advisor for the Men's Glee Club. "Women had their League; men had the Michigan Union. That was just the way it was. It took a long while for that to change." With the arrival of the 1920s the following year, there was an explosion in the popularity and sheer size of the Michigan Union Operas, reflecting the extrava- gance and excitement of the Roaring Twenties. With elaborate sets and cos- tumes that required custom- designedshoes, the Union Operas of the '20s were on par with pro- fessional theater companies. Pro- duction costs soared as high as $80,000 (comparable to $1 mil- lion today). The quality of female impersonation also reached new levels with the December 1923 production "Cotton Stockings," which starred leading "lady" Lio- nel Ames. "He was so good that there were men who saw him in his performance and didn't real- ize that he was a female imper- sonator," McNitt said. "So they would wait for him backstage with flowers and candy, and he would walk bythem. "He had very delicate, femi- nine features. He was a very attractive, um, 'woman."' Ames, who would eventually become a professional female impersonator, led "Cotton Stock- ings" on a 15-city tour that included performances in Chi- cago, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Washington and New York's Metropolitan Opera House. "(His legs) were insured because the routines in 'Cotton Stockings' were so acrobatic," McNitt said. "They were afraid that he'd fall and hurt himself.... They wanted to make sure that if their star hurt himself, they didn't lose everything." In crisis - The Depression and World War II Yet, the dazzling and carefree era of the '20s, the Michigan Union Operas would grind to a halt when financial difficul- ties set in. Beginning in 1927 the operas failed to turn a profit, and by 1929 the Mimes had lost a total of $15,000 from three productions. The stock market crash of that same year was also a major contributor to the Opera's demise. In 1934 the Union Operas made a brief revival with two productions, but this revival was short-lived. The University didn't see another Mimes production until .1940's "Four Out of Five," which starred the Wolverines' halfback, eventual Heisman Tro- phy winner Tom Harmon. Two more Union Operas were produced in December 1941, but these would be the last produc- tions for several years. Four days before "Take a Number" opened, the Japanese attacked the Ameri- can fleet at Pearl Harbor. Just as in World War I, the Mimes' activities were interrupted when much of the University's male population marched off to the Pacific or Europe. With the women on campus mobilized to assist the war effort, this made even a co-ed Union Opera impos- sible. The Michigan Union Opera Renaissance - The 1950s With the end of the war in 1945 and the introduction of the G.I. Bill, men soon returned to campus en masse. With the Uni- versity's male population now restored, it seemed sensible to bring back the all-male Union Saying Ido-' for the dollars Cross-dressing actor Lionel Ames had his legs insured for "Cotton Stackings." Operas. 1949's "Froggy Bottom," the first production in seven years, centered on the lives of tenants in Willow Run Village apartments, a housing facility the University created for returning veterans who had married. The show was also the first Michigan Union Opera run entirely by stu- dents. "This was a novel experience for everybody in it," said Phelps Connell, a 1950 'U' alum who played in "Froggy Bottom." "Whoever was running it imported a professional director from Broadway to come in and direct the show," Connell added. "I can't imagine how he did it, but he had to teach people who had never danced before how to dance and had to teach the acting. It had to take incredible patience." Though the Union Operas were successfully integrated into post-war campus culture, the 1950s saw much debate sur- rounding the now-antiquated tradition of men playing wom- en's roles. In 1954, a committee was formed to address this and other problems that plagued the Mimes. According the commit- tee's report, the cross-dressing element was now "in poor taste" and modern audiences were tir- ing of this archaism. While the committee ulti- mately voted against a co-ed Opera, the "apparent feminiza- tion of the choruses" was dis- continued. Instead, the sex of the men in drag had to be appar- ent to audience members at all time. The sort of gender bending that Lionel Ames had perfected more than 30 years before was replaced with what the report called "hairy legs and male mas- querade." And yet the co-ed debate raged on. Both sides of the issue were manifested in the shows during the 1950s, which contain increas- ingly nostalgic subject matter and feminist themes. 1954's "Hail to Victor" took place in turn-of- the-century Ann Arbor, when the all-male Michigan Union Operas were just beginning, but focuses on the women's suffrage move- ment with an opening number titled "It's Equality We Demand." Despite this attempt at open- mindedness, the Mimes' days were numbered. 1955 saw the final Michigan Union Opera, "Film Flam." In 1956 - the same year women were first allowed through the front door of the Union - the Mimes changed their name to MUSKET (Michi- gan Union Shows, Ko-Eds Too) and began performing main- stream Broadway shows. The all- male cast hung up their garters and corsets for good as real-live women took the stage. Why not today? While MUSKET has been a source of quality entertainment on campus for the last 55 years, its shows bear little in common with the cross-dressing, satirical spectacles of the Michigan Union Operas. The change to MUSKET and the switch to well-known musicals ensured that any ves- tiges of the drag tradition would be eliminated; yet this also did away with the original, student- created material. Would student-run shows in the tradition of the Union Operas have an appeal on campus today? A revival of "Michigenda" or "Koanzaland" would most likely come across as outdated and even offensive in the case of the latter. Yet original productions focus- ing on modern student life and lampooning campus celebrities like University President Mary Sue Coleman, Michigan football coach Brady Hoke or quarterback Denard Robinson could generate considerable interest. The Union Operas' niche may already be filled by such Univer- sity organizations like Basement Arts and the Educational Theatre Company (ETC), which perform their own shows. Team StarKid of "A Very Potter Musical" fame has even toured across the coun- try, bringing to mind the Mimes' road shows. So while MUSKET may be the direct descendant of the Michigan .Union Operas, campus theater troupes like these can be seen as their spiri- tual successors. As for the Michigan Union Operas themselves, all that is left are a few cardboard boxes of scores, programs and photo- graphs at the Bentley Library. While there are some reminders around campus, like the opera Lounge in the Union and the School of Music's Earl V. Moore Building, the Mimes and their 36 productions are quickly fading into obscurity. As a 1930 Detroit News article stated: "Thus, with a final glitter of its costumes, and a last ges- ture of its he-she chorus, into the discard tumbles an institution which cometed from unpreten- tious beginnings into a series of musical revues of a technical per- fection and beauty." J t finally happened. We haven't solved the economic crisis in America, we still haven't resolved the unrest in the Middle East and our public school system is still down the tubes. But rest easy because ... Kim Kar- dashian is married! Yes, it's true - HALEY Kim and Kris GOLDBERG Humphries, an NBA bas- ketball player, tied the knot on Aug. 20 in Montecito, Calif. Kris - who so conveniently fits in with the all-'K' first initials of the Kardashian family clan - and Kim became engaged after only six months of dating (though they still dated longer than Kim's sister Khloe, who married Lakers basketball player Lamar Odom after one month). The two-night weddingspecial E! aired, nos- talgically titled "Kim's Fairytale Wedding: A Kardashian Event," gave us an inside look at the wed- ding and, of course, the drama behind the "I Do's." But how much did the fairytale spectacle that had us glued to the tube for two nights actually cost? Thanks to TheHollywoodRe- porter.com, we know the major expenses. And just takea look at these figures: $2.5 million for the Lorraine Schwartz head- piece Kim wore when walking down the aisle, $5 million for the 28-carat earrings she wore, $200,000 for her wedding band - which includes "15 carats of emerald-cut diamonds" - and $150,000 for her grooming, including hair and makeup. These figures don't even include the cost of the private estate the newlywed couple rented, the three custom-made Vera Wang gowns Kim wore throughout the night and the catering of celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck! Don't worry about Bruce Jen- ner's wallet being empty after the event, as the Kardashian family had help paying offthese costs from the money made off the wedding. Kim waspaid to get married ... sort of. People magazine spent $1.5 million for exclusive access and licensing fees for photos, accordingto TheHollywood Reportercom. The magazine didn't even feature Kris on the cover, just a solo shot of Kim. And other people are making money off of her marriage too. E! charged up to $100,000 for ad rates duringKim's wedding special, which it anticipated would be seen by five million viewers. Call me old fashioned, but isn't a weddingsupposed to be a celebration of love between two people, not a commodity exploitedby reality television and gossip magazines? Since when has getting married become a business where people not even working for the wedding can "make money" off the nuptials? Can these extravagant weddings actually lead to what matters the most - a good marriage? The answer to that question can be found in any gossip maga- zine on any given week. While we see many celebrities engaging in these lavish ceremonies, we also see an excess of celeb marriages ending in bitter divorces. Take Eva Longoria and Tony Parker, for example. Their July 7, 2007 wedding at a chateau in Paris was estimated around $1.5 million according to People.com. Their divorce? Finalized this January. How about Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony'swedding? Lopez wore more than $7 million in jewelry at their ceremony in June 2004. After seven years, they called it quits this July. Kim and Kris: money or love? While I'm not predicting that Kim and Kris's marriage will end the same way or saying putting a significant amount of money into a wedding will always lead it astray, it's hard not to make a connection between the two. An exception is Kim's sister Khloe, who married Lamar in the same lavish fashion with a reality tele- vision extravaganza and recently celebrated her one-year anniver- sary with him. Maybe the big fat reality television wedding can lead to a lasting marriage. But when and why have wed- dings become such a commercial spectacle? Why couldn't Kim and Kris have simply gone down to the courthouse and tied the knot there? Well, anyone who has watched "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" knows the Kar- dashian family does not do things without effect. The family has a reality show based on the mem- bers' lives, and in order to keep viewers interested they have to go big or go home. But what does that say about Kim's marriage? Is it real, ortis it all for the sake of the ad price E! can charge on the special, or the money that was paid by People for the rights to the wedding? Even parts of the wedding special were reported by PerezHilton. com to have been scripted. While E! depicted the image of love between Kim and Kris, we won't know for sure until we see their marriage last. And as a Kardashi- an fan, I hope Kim and Kris are truly happy. But still, as a follow- er ofcelebrity gossip, I've seen too many of these over-the-top weddings end in divorce. While the weddinghad all the amenities one could think of, let's hope for Kim and Kris that it had the one key component: love. Goldberg is waiting for Prince Charming or a bunch of cash. To provide, e-mail hsgold@umich.edu. Six unemployed guys + One unexpected way to earn money = An evening of unlimited laughter & fun U Ui I U OF M HOUSING FAIR li THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13TH 1 PM -4PM AT THE "U" - RIGHT ON CAMPUS! 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