Overture Magazine - 2018-19 Season BSO_Overture_MAR_APR | Page 34

PORGY AND BESS known as “Goat Sammy,” who traveled around the streets of Charleston on a tiny goat-driven cart. Heyward also drew upon the Gullah culture of the sea islands off Charleston; here isolated African-American settlements had retained customs and language very close to their African homelands. At last in 1933, Gershwin felt ready to embark on his operatic project with Heyward. The first major piece composed was the enchanting “Summertime,” which Clara sings at the beginning of the opera. The most intense period of work, however, came during the summer of 1934 when Gershwin rented a cottage near Heyward’s summer home on Folly Island off Charleston and immersed himself in local Gullah and black culture. Gershwin was dazzled by the spirituals and the Gullah tradition of “shouting”: accompanying spirituals with complicated rhythmic patterns beaten out by hands and feet. Listening to black Holy Rollers simultaneously chanting different prayers to different rhythms inspired Gershwin’s intricate six-part prayer sequence that opens Act II’s Storm Scene. Back in New York, George’s brother, Ira, joined the creative team, writing many of the lyrics. Gershwin and Heyward wanted a black cast, and Gershwin insisted on fully developed operatic voices for his music. With opportunities for African-Americans to receive classical training then so limited, the nationwide search took months. At Howard University, Gershwin found Todd Duncan, a strapping six-foot professor with a big, blazing baritone; here was his ideal Porgy. Soprano Anne Brown, the daughter of a Baltimore physician and a 22-year-old student at Juilliard, wrote Gershwin for an audition; though she had no stage experience, he cast her as Bess for her radiantly high notes and vulnerably good looks. Porgy and Bess opened at Broadway’s Alvin Theater in a Theater Guild production on October 10, 1935. The audience loved the show, especially Gershwin’s inspired music and the powerful cast that sang it. But critics were more reserved. They questioned what kind of work Porgy and Bess was — musical, 32 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org operetta or opera. Gershwin maintained that it was an opera, and he had indeed followed the operatic conventions of using continuous music and casting the dialogue largely in sung recitative. African Americans also had criticisms. They decried the show as a white production, created, directed and conducted by white men despite its black cast. Some found the dialect language demeaning and the depiction of African Americans as ignorant, superstitious and living on the shady side of the law insulting. But over the decades, the power and universality of Porgy and Bess has largely won out. It has moved people to tears all over the world. It has created new stars—notably Leontyne Price and William Warfield who played the title characters in a production toured by the State Department in the 1950s. 50 years after its premiere, it scored the ultimate establishment coup when the Metropolitan Opera gave it a new production in 1985 under James Levine. For many, it remains unchallenged as the Great American Opera. A Guide to the Drama and Its Musical Highlights Act I, Scene 1: After a brief orchestral Prelude, the curtain opens on Catfish Row. It is evening, and a jazz piano plays in the background. Home from work, the men of the Row have begun a craps game. Clara, wife of Jake the fisherman, sings a lullaby to her baby (“Summertime”). Jake then takes the baby and sings it a more cynical song (“A woman is a sometime thing”). The crippled Porgy joins the game (“Oh, little stars”), as does the sinister stevedore Crown, with his flashily dressed woman, Bess, on his arm. Crown is drunk and soon gets into a brawl with Robbins (powerful, orchestral fugue), killing him with a cotton hook. Crown flees, leaving Bess behind; as the police arrive, Porgy is the only one who will give her shelter. Act I, Scene 2: Robbins’ body is laid out in his wife Serena’s room with a saucer on his chest to receive donations for his burial; the chorus mourns him (“Gone, Gone, Gone”). Porgy urges everyone to be generous. Serena sings an anguished lament (“My man’s gone now”). The collection amounts to only $15, but the undertaker promises to give Robbins a decent burial. Act II, Scene 1: It is a month later, and the residents of Catfish Row are preparing for a holiday boat trip and picnic on Kittiwah Island. Jake and the other fisherman are repairing their nets (“It take a long pull to get there”). Bess and Porgy have fallen in love, and he expresses his newfound joy (“I got plenty o’ nuttin’”). Bess is reluctant to leave Porgy behind for the picnic, but Porgy urges her to enjoy herself; they sing the famous love duet “Bess, you is my woman now.” Dressed in their Sunday best, the neighbors parade off to the boat. Act II, Scene 2: On Kittiwah Island, the neighbors enjoy themselves to music energized by African drums (“I ain’t got no shame”). The bootlegger Sportin’ Life regales them with the irreverent “It ain’t necessarily so.” As the crowd leaves for the boat, Crown, who’s been hiding on the island, accosts Bess. Loyal to Porgy, she struggles with him, but he seduces her and drags her into the bushes. Act II, Scene 3: A week later on Catfish Row, Bess is lying in feverish delirium after struggling back from Kittiwah. Serena and Porgy pray for her, and she regains consciousness. Though Porgy knows she’s been with Crown, he forgives her, and they renew their love in a heartfelt duet “I loves you, Porgy.” Jake and the fishermen are out at sea, and Clara screams as the wind comes up and the hurricane bell clangs. Act II, Scene 4: The neighbors have taken shelter from the hurricane in Serena’s house. The scene opens with six prayers sung together in the complex style inspired by African-American meetings Gershwin had witnessed. Trembling with fear, the people are astonished by the sudden arrival of the