t SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 1925 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T HIRTEE a ,? ___________u_____c______nd ______r a ma___ ti i 0 _ . The Theatre Ascendant George Pierce Baker, By Robert he still subconsciously regards act- Henderson. ing itself as fit only for gaudy-colored ] * * * mummers . (Editor's Note: This is the third of Yet all this is hardly fair. CertainM a series of six articles on contempor- of his former pupils, Sam flnme or ary personalities in the modern world Colin Clement, regard] his coursesl theatre. Among other subjects there will be an interview by Paul Stephen- as elementary and hothouse, but the sona assistant director of the Ypsil- far greater majority appreciate that 0 anti Players, with Edward Gordon beneath his cold, unbending exterior Craig.) there is an abundant sympathy, a keen tolerance and moulding shill. I have never met anyone con- -his recent act eptace of the chair nected with the theatre from the of dramatc literature at Yale, roused managerial side-directors and the like-whose face was not harder than i -yS nails. It is a bug that necessarily anything else s .ved to asre't his seems to bite the profession, that eminence. At Harvard b- had always makes them cold, a trifle bitter and been regarded as a strange, rather C cynical-peculiarly pokeresque . . ." dangerous eccentrique, interesting And George Pierce Baker, the famous. Professor Baker of the 47 workship but rather futile and peculiar. This shows strange signs of a mild infec- is away t e way of unive-sities: tion; like Cosmo Hamilton it seems ,Columbia has haridly heard of Mlic (ha c all of a certain that his secret am- Pupin, Illinois know:; Stuart Sher- bition is a feverish desire to be ac- man minely as an inst utor, Aichii- tually connected with Broadway. It gan stares biankly at the mention of is Mr. Baker's quiet boast, for in- Moses Gcmberg, while to the world S stance that he trains his students for at large these men epit oize the re- tihe professional 'stage-no art and; spective institutions; surely Profes- little theatre experience except as a sor Baker along with (orge San - side-issue--and this attitude has iltayana was the most iinlg ersou somehow crept into his physical per- ality at Harvar d. soriality. His present position at Yale, o Before you meet him you picture course, is not only a diloati tri- in your imagination, inexplicably of 1uph but at last a field which will course, a round, rather jolly man, truly test his tal-nt. Wth a n flion very hustling and efficient. In real- dollar theatre at his disposal and the ity, he is very tall and collected, very enthusiastic co-operation o a -ril-~ Bostonese-marvellously New Eng- liant dramatic faculty including Wil~ 3 land-with heavy spectacles and this l"4 Lyon Phelps,Dle shoull be able impeturbable face: the only irony is to harvest the full fruit of Iis the~ that Broadway openly, impertinently Ories, now at their high-t de of popu- laughs at his work and calls it l larity. It is an auspicious bubble in S peurile. c the development of college dramatics Naturally, this is in no sense a par- that cannot, must not burst. If this tally wiry 'gentleman from Beacon tide of the the truth, for as a mat- Hill can finally carry his purposes to ter of actual fact Mr. Baker's pupils a climax, its effect will be revolution- include practically every significant ary on the other universities of the American dramatist under forty and cry:n a bittock. Eugene O'Neil, Edward untry: after all, what Yale does Massey, Colin Campbell Clements, * * Philip Barry, to name a certain few, Next week: Jessie Bonstelle, by have all owed their initial experi- Phyllis Loughton. ence to his sympathetic encourage- ment. His courses in Harvard, as everyone now knows, were carried on under maddening, petty opposition, partly from the persistent indifference felt in nearly all universities to the arts but mainly from the crusted profes- sorial group which still regards the' theatre Bas slightly immoral and all dramatic literature by contemporary" authors of no genuine value. t Strangely enough, though remark- ably modern and broad-minded in one sense, Mr. Baker is astonishingly conservative himself in his enthus- - iasms: perhaps this is the very touch- stone of his success. However that' may be, it is surprising to find thatd he basically discredits such groups as the Provincetown Playhoue and ,#x' even the famous Neighborhood Play-4, house. Not openly, you understand, ,ut it takes very few conversations to ." discover that he really admires David Belasco more than Kenneth Mac- Cowan. e As another example, there is his pr present curriculum at Yale perfectly understandable, but how strange:ced- it courses are offered in lighting, playSr writing, direction, con emporary Idrama, in everything but etual act- ing. You see the point-here is 'a man that stands for the highest de- velopment of the theatre in education, giving courses in everything except the basic fundamental element of the . theatre. What a. paradox! The reason, of course, is obvious. Mr. Baker, very Bostonese and mar- vellously New England, is still not quite certain that acting is really an 1 art, at least a strictly proper art; play-acting at Yale!" his grand- mother would have said lifting her horror-stricken eyes virtuously to the ceiling. Naturally, he hardly phrases itas bluntly as that, but the old con- Walker Whiteside, the distinguishe viction must be latent in his concept with Miss Sydney Shields in a melodra --somehow, I strongly venture that by Bertrand Theron Tuesday evening, The Festival In Detail -----__ARIA. "Flower Song" from "Car- men"......................Bizet Mr. Lauri-Volpi Intermission ARIA, "Impreviso" from "Andrea Chenier'................Giordano { - -Mr. Lauri-Volpi SUITE, "Through the Looking In Spiritum" ...... Glass".............. Deems-Taylor . . lr. Tittman Dedication-The Garden of Live anctus." Flowers; Jabberwocky; Looking * * Glass Insects; The White Knight. IA iRudolph's Narrative" from i !i I The Divine Mary The thirty-second May Festival, to he held four days commencing May; 20 in Hill auditorium under the aus- pices of the University School of Music, will present the following pro- grams: First Concert-Wednesday evening, May 20 OVERTURE, "Lenore" No. 3h...... .Beethloven SYMPHONY No. 1, B flat, Op. 39 .. Schuman Andante un poco maestoso-allegro allegro molto vivace ; Larghetto; Scherzo---molto vivace; Allegroj animato e grrzioso. SYMPI-IONIC POEM, "Don Juan" .. ... . . Straus Intermission CONCli TO for pianoforte and Or- chestra, B fiat minor, Op. 23. ... ................ . Tschaikovsky Andante non troppo e molto maes- toso-Allegro con spirito; Andan- tinosemplice-Allegro vivace as- sai; Finale: Allegro con fuoco ............... Mr. Ga rilowitsch Second Concert-Thursday evening--- M ay21. WVlERTURE, "Night on a Bare Mountain"M...........Moussorgsky TIlE'BELLS"'........Rachnaninoft- Poem by Edgar Allen Poe Soli, University Choral Union and Orchestra . The Silier Bells .............. .Mr. Morgan and Chorus . The Golden Bells ............ ..Mi Hgo r a atandChorus The Brazen Bells.........Chorus The Mournful Bells.......... ...........Mr. Tittman and Chorus Intermission SELECTIONS from "B minor Mass" Bach 1. Chorus, "Kyrie Eleison" 2. Aria "Quoniam Tu"-Mr. Titt- man. 3. Duet "Domine Deus"........ .... Miss Hagar and Mr. Morgan 4. Chorus, "Qui Tollis." 5. Aria "Benedictus".......... ...................Mr. Morgan 6. Choruses, "Crucifixus" and "Et i' .; Rlsurrexit, 7. Aria, "Et. 8. ChIrus "S Thi t rd Concert -Friday afternoon, . "La Boheme".............Puccini M)y .. .Mr. Lauri-Volpi () N iez D , O IaeB Ascent of Brunhilde's Rock and (c) Stars ofthe SOmmer Niht ..arn y Finale from "Siegfried" .. Wagner Woodury* * * Boy's Chorus Fifth Concert-Saturday afternoon, } ARIA, "Ah, mon fils" from "Le May 23 Prophet e"..............Meyerbeer Suite, No. 3, D major .........Bach Miss Degnan Symphony;, No. 4, F minor, Op 35.. ! (a) Indian Mountain Song .. Cadman1 ... ........... Tschaikovsky b) Spinning Chorus from "Flying Andante Sostenuto-Moderato con Dutcinnan"... .............Wagner anima; Andantino in modo dil High School Girls' Glee Club I canzona; Scherzo; Pizzicato ost- \ngeius fronm "Scenes Pittoriques" inato; Finale; Allegro con fuoco.j ...................Massenet-Maddy Intermission Harp Ensemble Concerto for Violin, No. 3, B minor, (a) Land Sighting............Grieg Op. 61 ...............Saint-Saens (b) Massa, Dear............. Dvorak Allegro non troppo; Andantino Boys' Glee Club quasi allegretto; Finale: molto' (a) Supplication.......... La Forge moderato e maestoso. (b) Dawn in the Desert .......Ross * * * (c) The Rain Song ...........Ilabn. (d) Bolero........ . . . . . . . . . . Arditi Sixth Concert-Saturday evening, rdit~i IMay 23 Miss Degnan "La Gioconda"...........Ponchielli CANTAT A, "Legend of Bregenz" . . IsaGood ocili .... .. Bend'all An Opera in four acts 'hildren's Chorus iLa Gioconda.......Frances Peralta Laura ...............August Lenska Fourth Concert-Friday evening, Il Cieca............Kathryn Meisle May 22 Enzo................Mario Chamlee OVERTURE, "Carnival" .... Dvorak Barnaba.........Vincente Ballester SYN1IIIONY, No. 3, F major . Brahms Alvise.................Henri Scott Allegro con brio; Andante; Poco Townspeople, Sailors, Etc. Allegretto; Allegro University Choral Union Naturally( it is hardly our business, but may we suggest to what godsI there be that for the coming Choral' Union series-contracts are made so long in advance, you see-may we suggest that Mary Garden, the cli- max, as reason is our judge, of the superb and artificial art of grand opera, be re-engaged for next year. She is really so very wonderful, so perfect . ..- Philip I-1alej for example, Teview- ing the performance of "Pelleas et1 Melisanda" by the Chicago Opera{ Company in Boston, spoke of the "re- markably poetic performance of a most poetically beautiful opera, an opera that, to use the phrase of Swin- burne in praise of Coleridge, is "lone- ly and incomparable" in the litera- ture of the lyric stage. "For in 'Pelleas et Melisande' text,I situation, moodsl emotions and action are as one. Thus, this opera has no parallel, nor is there any operatic music surpassing Debussy's for sheer emotional and dramatic beauty. The play appealed to the composer's pe- culiar genius. Ths tragedy in No Man's Land, with its old castle by an unknown sea, with a princess heroine whose birth and early years are left in mystery, with a venerable monarch brooding over the problems of life and death, this young Pelleas, about to leave the scene but de- tained by fate, the grim Golaud, who found out to his cost that age and youth should never wed, even the physician and the retainers who ap- pear only to be by a death bed-all and everything are of a fantastic dream world, fantastic, perhaps sym- bolical, yet in quality very human. To underline, emphasize, annotate this play with music-who was there but Debussy? "Miss Garden has been Melisande, not merely taking the role, for over twenty years. Others have been seen here as the maiden who lost her crown and was found weeping in the forest by the curious and perplexed Golaud. There was Mme. Georgette Le Blanc with her stained glass at- titudes. There was Mme. Edvina pleasing to eye and ear, but not the Melisande of dramatist or composer. No, there is only one Melisande, a strange; arresting, indescribably pa- thetic figure in life, in love, in death. Only Miss Garden has brought one close to Melisande; only Miss Garden has her face, her voice. She knows of her what neither Maeterlinck nor Debussy has revealed, if it was ever known to them. And for this por- trayal, her dramatic sins in certaii other operatic roles should be for- given her," Everythi.g forBand-and Orchestra We invite you to inspect our display of high quality band and orchestra instruments. CONN INSTRUMENTS with all their exclusive features are recognized as easiest of all to play. i ll111 fi1 i111l 11 1 f 111|t ill 1 1111 111111111i1111 lill lllll1" - - I Just Across from the Lit. w Is a little white shop that serves the best barbecue you ever tasted. Have you found it out? After the show tonight, drop in and enjoy a fresh, hot sandwich. i The fBarbecue .Inn 440 South State Phone 2948-W ri A We call particular attention to our "Detroiter," a new saxophone especially designed for those who desire a cheaper instrument. This wonderful price of musical mechanism is priced. 11 Alto, $98.00 C01111lflsic Zb-op 14 Nickels Arcade I F I There is a reason for having Lyndon and Company develop your films, namely, excellent service and fine workmanship. ed character actor, who will appear ama. of Japanese diplomacy, "Sakura," March 3, at the Whitney theatre. Just Arrived--- A Complete Line of IVichigan Jewelry PEARL PINS AND GUARDS; FOBS, Etc. A rinnl3'_ I CAM~ ERAS CAMERA SUPPLIES Ft For Sale by LYNDON & CO7IPANY trp1 11