综合音乐剧的出现:奥托·哈巴赫、演讲理论与电影

IF 0.3 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER THEATRE SURVEY Pub Date : 2022-05-01 DOI:10.1017/S0040557422000059
B. Rogers
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1920年,奥斯卡·汉默斯坦二世(Oscar Hammerstein II)刚刚在他的处女作《永远是你》(Always You)中获得了适度的成功,他渴望为弗兰克·汀尼(Frank Tinney)写一部由他的叔叔亚瑟(Arthur)制作的剧。正如休·福丁(Hugh Fordin)所写,“亚瑟对侄子的能力充满信心,但也意识到他需要更多地了解自己的技艺,于是请来奥托·哈巴赫(Otto Harbach)合作创作这本书和歌词,和《沙漠之歌》(1926年,西格蒙德·隆伯格)。在与Harbach合作后(图1),Hammerstein将独自创业,并撰写《俄克拉荷马州的Show Boat!》!,并被认为开创了音乐剧的新时代,主要是他在“融合”方面的成功。正如文学学者斯科特·麦克米林所写,传统的融合理念是“一场演出的所有元素——情节、人物、歌曲、舞蹈、配器和背景——都应该融合在一起,成为一个统一的、无缝的整体。”在流行评论中,这种发展通常归功于罗杰斯和哈默斯坦1943年的音乐剧《俄克拉荷马!》!,正如约翰·肯里克(John Kenrick)所说,“在整个节目中,每一个单词、数字和舞步都是讲故事过程的有机组成部分。每一首歌和每一支舞都没有打断对话,而是继续对话。从序曲到谢幕,一切都第一次以一条完整的叙事线流动。”其他历史学家和评论家则更为温和,吹捧俄克拉荷马州的成功!同时坚持必须将其整合视为更广泛历史弧线的一部分。例如,安德鲁·兰姆(Andrew Lamb)庆祝俄克拉荷马州!斯坦利·格林(Stanley Green)在1962年的一篇文章中指出,这是“科恩和格什温早在20世纪20年代就已经尝试过的东西——这件作品不仅是一组朗朗上口的数字,而且是戏剧、歌曲和舞蹈的融合。”!“将所有的戏剧艺术与许多人认为是戏剧革命的技巧融合在一起”,但他认为他们的成就实际上是“与其说是革命性的,不如说是进化性的。它并没有开创任何融合良好的演出趋势,而是实现了自本世纪第二个十年以来一直在发展的技术上的完美。”格林引用了博尔顿、沃德豪斯和科恩的公主剧院音乐剧作为融合的最早例子,这个谱系可以追溯到更远的地方——比哈默斯坦更远,比格什温更远,比科恩更远。要理解音乐剧“一体化”思想的历史,我们必须回到1910年的艺术家音乐剧《雪莉夫人》,被誉为“一代人的音乐喜剧狂潮”,因其“娱乐元素”被“巧妙地交织成一个一致的整体”,因“歌曲、歌词和合奏数字……与喜剧故事直接相关,每一次音乐中断都有一个合理的借口”而受到评论家的赞扬。“这位艺术家是奥托·哈巴赫,他不仅发展了一种创新的音乐剧方法,而且阐述了一种连贯的音乐剧理论。
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The Emergence of the Integrated Musical: Otto Harbach, Oratorical Theory, and the Cinema
In 1920, Oscar Hammerstein II—fresh from the modest success of his debut musical Always You—was eager to write the show for Frank Tinney that his uncle Arthur was to produce. As Hugh Fordin wrote, “Arthur, confident of his nephew's ability but aware that he needed to learn more about his craft, brought in Otto Harbach to collaborate on the book and lyrics.” The two men joined forces on that show—Tickle Me—and went on to write such classics as Rose-Marie (1924, Rudolf Friml & Herbert Stothart), Sunny (1925, Jerome Kern), and The Desert Song (1926, Sigmund Romberg). After working with Harbach (Fig. 1), Hammerstein would venture on his own and write Show Boat, Oklahoma!, and be credited as having ushered in a new era of musical theatre, chiefly defined by his success at “integration.” As literary scholar Scott McMillin writes, the conventional idea of integration is that “all elements of a show—plot, character, song, dance, orchestration, and setting—should blend together into a unity, a seamless whole.” In popular commentary, this development is often attributed to Rodgers & Hammerstein's 1943 musical Oklahoma!, as seen in John Kenrick's claim that “[t]hroughout the show, every word, number, and dance step was an organic part of the storytelling process. Instead of interrupting the dialogue, each song and dance continued it. For the first time, everything flowed in an unbroken narrative line from overture to curtain call.” Other historians and critics are more tempered, touting the success of Oklahoma! while insisting that its integration must be seen as part of a broader historical arc. Andrew Lamb, for example, celebrates Oklahoma! by noting that it was the realization of “[w]hat Kern and Gershwin had experimented with as far back as the 1920s—a piece that was not just a collection of catchy numbers, but a fusion of drama, song, and dance.” In a 1962 article, Stanley Green notes that the creators of Oklahoma! “blended all the theatrical arts with such skill tha[t] many accepted it as a revolution in the theatre,” but he argues that their accomplishment was actually “more evolutionary than revolutionary. Rather than inaugurating any trend toward the well-integrated show, what it did achieve was a perfection in technique of a development that had been going on ever since the second decade of the century.” While Green cites the Princess Theatre musicals of Bolton, Wodehouse, and Kern as the earliest examples of integration, this lineage goes back further—further than Hammerstein, further than Gershwin, further than Kern. To understand the history of the idea of “integration” in musical theatre, we must go back to the artist whose 1910 musical Madame Sherry, hailed as the “musical comedy rage of a generation,” was celebrated by critics for the way its “entertaining elements” were “cleverly interwoven into a consistent whole,” for the innovative ways that “the songs, lyrics, and ensemble numbers . . . are directly related to the story of the comedy, and there is a plausible excuse for every musical interruption.” That artist—who not only developed an innovative approach to musical theatre but also articulated a coherent theory of it—was Otto Harbach.
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THEATRE SURVEY
THEATRE SURVEY THEATER-
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