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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN MUSIC, DANCE, AND FILM 719<br />

Her splendid course shall run. . . .<br />

The gods decree<br />

That she shall be<br />

A nation great. . . .<br />

And the suppliants respond:<br />

. . . Let loud paeans rend the skies;<br />

Great Minerva Pow'r divine!<br />

Praise! exalted praise be thine.<br />

The Development of Musical Theater. As far as theatrical performances for the<br />

public were concerned, the struggle for their maintenance and survival in the<br />

eighteenth century confirms the strong religious puritanism of early America.<br />

For many years anti-theater laws in Boston (1750) and Philadelphia (1778) were<br />

inhibiting, but it was impossible to suppress the need and desire of those who<br />

would promote and attend the theater. By the end of the century, such laws were<br />

either repealed or safely ignored and a vigorous theatrical life in America began<br />

to flourish.<br />

Music was an integral part of the theater of the eighteenth century since<br />

much of the repertoire for the early companies included the English type of<br />

ballad-opera (i.e., plays interspersed with music) that was usually compiled from<br />

miscellaneous sources. Then at the end of the century came a piece that foreshadowed<br />

important developments in American musical theater; as Sonneck<br />

perceptively observed: "In 1797 a form of entertainment was introduced in New<br />

York for which I believe the Americans to be peculiarly gifted: the melodrama." 17<br />

This portentous form of entertainment was, significantly enough, initiated by a<br />

work with a classical theme: Ariadne Abandoned by Theseus, in the Isle ofNaxos, in<br />

one act, its text of unknown authorship; its advertisement claimed, "Between<br />

the different passages by the actors, will be Full Orchestral Music, expressive of<br />

each situation and passion. The music composed and managed by Pelissier." It<br />

is not an unlikely conjecture that some songs may have been included along<br />

with the background music. The composer, Victor Pelissier, a French musician,<br />

first appeared in Philadelphia in 1792; he became associated with the Old American<br />

Company, for which he arranged and adapted foreign ballad-operas and<br />

composed original scores.<br />

In the development of the American musical over the years, two on mythological<br />

themes may be singled out. Adonis (1884), by Edward Everett Rice (1848-<br />

1924), was a "burlesque-extravaganza" based vaguely on the theme of Pygmalion<br />

and Galatea. With 603 performances, it had the longest run in Broadway<br />

history up to that time. 18 Up and Down Broadway (1910), a musical revue by Jean<br />

Schwartz, had Apollo and the other gods arrive in New York determined to reform<br />

taste in the theater, but they finally come to the conclusion that they do<br />

not know as much about good entertainment as Broadway does. With them is<br />

Momus. The song, "Chinatown, My Chinatown," originated in this show; the

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