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Mixed media art by Robert Rauschenberg; Combine 1972 McGovern Poster


THE ARTS 231


MODERN DANCE


mixture of black blues and white country-western. The music quickly won intense and sustained appeal with young people not only in America, but all over the world. Early rock musicians such as Elvis Presley and Bob Dylan were idolized by millions of teenagers.

In the 1970s and 80s, rock 'n' roll became heavily commercialized. Hundreds of bands copied the formula of success and went into recording studios to make money rather than innovative music. Some rock musicians, however, have emerged from the studio with unique sounds and messages in their music. Among these artists are guitarist-songwriter Bruce Springsteen and singer Stevie Wonder.

Closely tied to developments in American music was modern dance, which emerged in America as a new art form early in the century. The creators of modern dance rejected the artificial formality of classical ballet. Instead, they sought to convey the innermost feelings of the human mind and body in simple, flowing dance movements.

The first and most influential leader of the movement was Isadora Duncan (1878-1927). Martha Graham's New York-based group became the best known modern dance company. America's newest generation of modern dance choreo­graphers includes Alvin Ailey whose style features African dance elements and black music, and Twyla Tharp, who experiments with new areas for dance such as video and films.

In the past three decades, dance, both ballet and modern, has been the most rapidly developing performing art in the nation. New York City has become the dance center of the world.


Modern Dance: The American Ballet Theater


232 AMERICA IN CLOSE-UP


HOLLYWOOD FILMS

INFLUENCE OF TELEVISION


Born in Hollywood after the turn of the century, the motion picture became the monumental popular art form of the century. In Hollywood's golden age during the 1940s, the major studios were turning out over 400 movies each year.

Like most businessmen, motion picture executives and entrepreneurs wanted to develop products that had mass appeal. Once they found a successful formula, they repeated it in film after film. Westerns, gangster films, comedies, and musicals were some of the popular films that emerged as distinct genres. Hollywood films were tailored to an American audience and appealed to its tastes by reinforcing traditional myths, values, and beliefs. The western fused violence and rugged individualism into larger, mythical themes of taming the frontier, curbing lawlessness, and forging a nation. Entertaining comedies and musicals carried messages of aspiration and optimism. In film director Frank Capra's (born 1897) It Happened One Night (1934), the poor boy who fell in love with a rich girl managed to win her heart. Class divisions were healed and everyone lived happily ever after. Audiences were charmed. During these decades of Hollywood's golden age, films, movie stars, and even the architec­ture of the theaters were glittering and glorious.



The movies have changed since television intervened. Film attendance declined sharply, conglomerates bought up studios, and Hollywood's old monopoly on stardom and American style was lost. Today's moviegoers are mostly teenagers. Their parents prefer television entertainment. The major film studios have adapted to the new viewing patterns by cutting back on production, targeting films to the younger audience, and creating new markets. Studios have recaptured television audiences by renting their feature films to television networks and by producing low-budget made-for-TV movies and television series. Video cassettes have also created new markets for film studios. Although the golden age is past, films remain a popular and profitable form of entertainment in America.

Innovations in these varied artistic fields have enriched America's cultural life and have made an impact on the rest of the world. The flourishing of the arts in America today signals a continued momentum for new developments in American art in the future.


part â Texts


Toward a National Theater

By Howard Stein

Today no major playwrights dominate the Broadway stage in the way the giants of past decades once did: from 1920 to 1940 Eu­gene O'Neill and Clifford Odets, from 1940 to I960 Tennessee Wil­liams, Arthur Miller and William Inge. Since I960 there have been no playwrights quite on the level of these, although many talented writers have emerged, such as Ed­ward Albee, Sam Shepard and Neil Simon. In the past quarter century the focus has increasingly shifted away from Broadway to distant re­gions of the country, and energy, poetic imagination and vitality have sparked the American theater in a host of institutions across the country.

Two significant changes have taken place: first, the decentraliza­tion of theatrical activity, which has resulted in a nation of theaters rather than a nation whose theater is housed in the few square blocks in Manhattan, New York City, known as Broadway; and second, the en­couragement of writers throughout the nation to develop plays rather than to write scripts which are then presented to a Broadway producer for final judgment. These two changes in the pattern of playmak-ing in the United States have caused


a radical shift in the kinds of plays produced and the kinds of writers nurtured. In fact, America finally has a national theater, although it is not the kind of national theater one associates with the National Theatre of England or the Moscow Art Theater or the Comedie Fran-gaise. Instead, it is a loose network of theaters presenting material that both reflects and illuminates Amer­ican society, a society that continues to be a melting pot full of energy and variety.

No longer dominated by the tyran­ny of Broadway moguls, American theater now includes around 400 pro­fessional not-for-profit companies in cities across the country. Most of these have evolved over the last 20 years, since the establishment of the National Endowment for the Arts. Therefore, American theater is now made up of both commercial and nonprofit interests. In New York Cityitself, for example, the theater world is divided between the commercial producers of Broadway and the scat­tered, smaller, not-for-profit theaters known as "off-Â road way." Although

For more than a century Broadway was a stable and profitable communi­ty. Originating its own shows, which some would describe as manufactur­ing its own products, Broadway pro­duced show business. Broadway pro­ducers tested their wares out-of-town in one of the major northeastern cit­ies (Boston, Philadelphia, Washing­ton or New Haven), opened in Man­hattan, and then, depending upon a play's success or failure as deter­mined by the New York newspaper critics, toured the country, sometimes with the original cast, more frequent­ly with a second company. That pat-

Although Broadway did not pro­duce only one kind of play for all


234 AMERICA IN CLOSE-UP


1. continued

those years, there was a significant similarity in Broadway playwrights' work. Those plays, for the most part, were devoted to social realism, to the family, to middle-class people talking in middle-class language about middle-class problems— problems that centered around marriage, raising children, extra­marital affairs, divorce, business and personal integrity.

The fact remains that a more au­thentic picture of the country would be one of a nation comprised of far more than middle-class families, a


nation of significant variety and ge­ography whose character is perhaps too vast to capture in the theater, certainly in the theater of Manhat­tan. America is a nation of no single background, heritage, culture, lan­guage, interest or set of values. The strength and identity of the nation is in its diversity and boundless ener­gy. The theater of the last 25 years has succeeded in reflecting that di­versity and that energy; this nation of theaters offers the entire world a much more realistic image of Amer­ica than the old Broadway ever did.


Stein, Howard: professor and chairman of Columbia University's Hammerstein Center for Theatre Studies.

O'Neill, Eugene (1888-1953): His plays won him the Pulitzer Prize several times and earned him the Nobel Prize in 1936. Among his plays are the trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra, the New England folk comedy Ah, Wilderness*, and the autobiographical tragedy Long Day's Journey into Night.

Odets, Clifford (1906—63): actor and playwright who became famous by the production of his one-act play Waiting for Lefty, dealing with a taxi strike.

Miller, Arthur: born 1915, author of All My Sons, Death of a Salesman (Pulitzer Prize) and The Crucible.

Inge, William (1913-73): wrote plays about seemingly ordinary Midwestern people. Picnic earned him the Pulitzer Prize.

Albee, Edward: born 1928, author of The Zoo Story, The American Dream and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

Shepard, Sam: born 1943, author of Buried Child (Pulitzer Prize), True West and Fool for Love.

Simon, Neil: born 1927, American playwright and television writer, author of highly successful comedies like Barefoot in the Park, Star Spangled Girl, and The Prisoner of Second Avenue, which reflect his ability to see the comic incongruities of everyday life.

National Endowment for the Arts: part of the National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities, an independent agency of the U.S. government, founded by Congress in 1965. It was established to foster the growth and development of the arts in the United States


THE ARTS 235

A Dozen Outstanding Plays of the Past Quarter Century

WIto's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

Streamers

Indians


Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962) by Edward AlbeeWith this searing portrait of a marriage seemingly based on fantasies, infidelities and alcohol, Edward Albee, then 33, achieved instant fame. "The quality and the character of his writing alerted the theater," writes critic Stuart Little, "and excited and challenged his contempo­raries. He had opened a new vein of dramatic writing."

The Old Glory (two parts of this trilogy first produced in 1964; the third in 1968) by Robert LowellCommissioned by an off-Broadway theater dedicated to new works, this play by the late, eminent poet Robert Lowell is based on three stories by 19th-century writerstwo by Nathaniel Hawthorne and one by Herman Melville. "The title, The Old Glory," said Lowell in 1976, "has two meanings: it refers both to the flag and also to the glory with which the Republic of America was started."

The Great White Hope (1968) by Howard SacklerThis drama, one of the first to transfer directly from a regional theater to Broadway, is based on the life of black prizefighter Jack Johnson, who challenged early 20th-century racial attitudes. At a time when civil rights was a major issue in national politics, The Great White Hope, according to critic Ethan Mordden, "made a breakthrough for black theater, acclimatizing the public to racial drama in which rage would be explained rather than exploited, and black culture might be explored."


Indians (1969) by Arthur Kopit—A fantastical rep­resentation of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, this play is also a reconsideration of the treatment of American Indi­ans during the settling of the West. "Indians," wrote critic Otis Guernsey, "reached its climax and fulfillment not in the events onstage... but out in the auditorium, where we were forced to reexamine some of our value judgments through a crack in our beloved national epic of the West."

House of Blue Leaves (1971) by John GuarePro­duced off-Broadway, this black comedy about a middle-aged zookeeper who longs to write songs for the movies is the work of one of America's most idiosyncratic play­wrights. Sometimes criticized for failing to restrain what critic Ross Wetzsteon called "the wild inventions and weird mutations of his imagination," Guare maintains that the theater is "the last refuge for poetry."

Streamers (1976) by David Rabe—With this study of violence setin a military training camp, and two earlier plays. The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel and Sticks and Bones, Rabe became "the first American playwright to write unflinchingly about Vietnam," said David Richards in The Washington Star. Two of these plays were nurtured at Joseph Papp'sinflu­ential Public Theater inNew York.

Photographs by Martha Swope


236 AMERICA IN CLOSE-UP

2. continued

House of Blue Leaves


Uncommon Women and Others (1977) by Wendy WassersteinFirst staged when its author was a stu­dent in Yale University's prestigious playwriling pro­gram, this effervescent comedy focuses on a group of gradu­ates from an elite women's college. Wasserstein's work, wrote Michiko Kakutani in The New York Ti mes, concerns itself with "the choices facing contemporary womenand the additional pressures created by feminist ideals."

Fifth of July (1978) by Lanford Wilson—An oddly assorted group of survivors from the turbulent 1960s try to build new lives in their old Missouri hometown. First produced at the Circle Repertory Company in New York, the play was revived on Broadway in 1980, where New York Times theater critic Frank Rich praised it as "Wilson's own morning-after-Independence-Day dream of a democratic Americaan enlightened place where the best ideals can bloom."

Buried Child (1978) by Sam ShepardShepard

writes plays that take place, as critic Ronald Bryden has written, "in an eternal present haunted fry anunknown past. "In the Pulitzer-prizewinning Buried Child, first staged at San Francisco's Magic Theatre, a young man returns to his family's midwestern farm to find that no one recognizes him.


Children of a Lesser God (1979) by Mark Medoff—Centering on a voice teacher and the strong-minded deaf student he loves and marries, this play was developed at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles and later triumphed on Broadway. John Beaufort said in The Christian Science Monitor: "Children is not merely about the plight of physical impairment. It is about the human condition and the struggle to communi­cate across daunting barriers."


Date: 2015-12-18; view: 712


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