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To appreciate The Mother of Us All, an experimental opera
with libretto by Gertrude Stein and music by Virgil Thomson, it helps to climb out of the
box of 19th century opera and literature and open the tool case of Einsteinian physics,
William James psychology and philosophy, and Picasso Cubism. In simpler terms, this means
the viewer needs to be aware of Steins use of fractured time lines (Einstein), her
intense look at how people behave and what their value systems are (James), and her
employment of multiple points of view (Picasso). Additionally, the operagoer must be
prepared for a landscape of American music that is not tied to European operatic models.
In a town where Puccinis "Un Bel Di" wafts into the
streets from bars, restaurants, and charming B & Bs, Pamela Rosenberg, General
Director of the San Francisco Opera, boldly opened the 2003 season with The Mother of
Us All, an opera that requires a better than average understanding of the visions and
philosophies of two iconoclastic artists. Ms. Rosenberg, in the aftermath of September 11,
believes opera "in addition to being an escape from harsh realities, can also lend
insights into our present-day lives."
The subject of the opera is Susan B. Anthonys life-long struggle
to gain voting privileges and civil rights for women in the United States. This work is
the second opera collaboration of Stein and Thomson. Mother premiered May 7, 1947,
at Columbia University, commissioned by the Alice M. Ditson Fund of the university. When
Thomson approached Stein about the commission, he suggested a look at political life in
19th century America. Enthusiastically receptive, Stein chose Anthony as the centerpiece
of the work. Anthony (1820-1906) died before the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
became law on August 26, 1920. Anthonys struggle to gain legal respect for women in
the United States by obtaining full civil rights parallels Steins struggle for
recognition as a serious artist.
Virgil Thomsons radical departure from 19th century European
operas that created roles for divas is to this day shrugged off by the casual listener as
too simplistic. In creating the first thoroughly American opera Four Saints In Three Acts,
Thomson infused his musical landscape with hymns reminiscent of his Southern Baptist
upbringing in Missouri. The Mother of Us All features the sounds of American
marches, hymns, spirituals and folk melodies. Except for a short reference to a well-known
childrens song "London Bridge Is Falling Down," all the music in Mother
is original. Subtle bi-tonalities appear throughout the work, but the work is
predominantly lyrical and set in major keys. Emphasis is on the words, and there is
little, if any, ornamentation in either the vocal or orchestral scores. This is not a
divas opera with pyrotechnic arias.
There are 27 players in the opera, and it's impossible in a first
viewing to know who each one is. The players have relational groupings and some of these
characters, anachronistically included by Stein, are people with whom she was friends.
Susan B. Anthony and Anne form the primary pair. Anne represents Anna Howard Shaw, one of
Anthony's disciples and the friend who cared for Anthony at the end of her life. Although
the San Francisco Opera production seems to suggest a gay relationship, there is no
historical evidence to substantiate this.
Some of the disputatious or political groupings include Anthony and
Daniel Webster; Andrew Johnson and abolitionist Thaddeus Stevens; Webster, Johnson, and
Stevens as the VIP chorus in the dream scene of Act I, Scene 4; and Indiana Elliot's
brother who opposes the marriage of his sister to Jo the Loiterer.
Several absurd romantic pairs provide levity against the political
character groups. These include Daniel Webster and the supernatural Angel More, President
John Adams and Constance Fletcher (an American playwright who was a friend of
Steins), and Jo the Loiterer (modeled after the American writer Joseph Barry) and
Indiana Elliot.
Stein and Thomson are also characters serving as narrators. Stein
invented Virgil T but Thomson divided up the text for Virgil T and added Gertrude S. In
the ground-breaking first opera Four Saints in Three Acts, Thomson also created two
narrators named the Commere and Compere which he modeled after similar characters
encountered in French variety shows. This allowed Thomson to include Steins stage
directions.
The opera begins in Susan B. Anthonys parlor and sets up the
theme of womens suffrage and Anthonys struggle. There is a public debate
between Anthony and Webster. Webster refers to Anthony as he, underscoring that
women were not recognized in public forums. Stein also introduces the theme of the overly
serious patriarch and emphasizes the name Daniel which was both her fathers
and Anthonys fathers name. Andrew Johnson and Thaddeus Stevens argue and refer
jarringly to Gallup the poll. (Donald Gallup, the Yale University Librarian who
archived Steins work, also appears in this scene and cannot help Anthony.) Ulysses
S. Grant makes reference to Eisenhower. These anachronistic reaches into the
Twentieth Century were Steins way of stirring her audience from complacency by
changing the reality. Also note that Stein actually uses quotes from many of the
historical figures on which her characters are based, including Anthony and Webster.
Anthony deliberates about how difficult her mission is. Most of this
scene is a dream where she seeks help from men who cant or wont help her,
including a black man whom she helped enfranchise. The VIP chorus of Webster, Johnson, and
Stevens ignore Anthonys plea for help while exclaiming their own importance. One
suspects Virgil Thomson is spoofing Gilbert and Sullivan. The scene concludes with a
discussion between Anthony, Jo, and Chris the Citizen about the difference between the
rich and the poorthe rich dont listen while the poor do, but are powerless to
act. Jo the Loiterer and Indiana Elliot marry over the protests of Indiana Elliots
brother. Anthony reflects on the institution of marriage and why she has not married.
The second act finds Anthony at home doing housework and refusing to
speak at a political gathering. The crowd outside her door asks if she is still alive.
(Anthony campaigned for suffrage into her 80s.) Anthony answers with a reference that
clearly invokes Gertrude Steins life, "Painters paint and writers write and
soldiers drink and fight and I I [sic] am still alive." Eventually she relents and
joins the crowd to speak. She speaks so persuasively that she scares the men into writing
the first occurrence of the word male into the Constitution. In real life, Anthony
used the 14th Amendment, which guarantees civil rights to all citizens to
convince petty officials in Rochester, NY, that she was eligible to vote and vote she did
for Ulysses S. Grant. For this act, she was arrested and because she was a woman she was
neither allowed to defend herself nor have a jury of peers. Subsequently the 15th
Amendment was ratified. Although it prevents states from prohibiting the right to vote
based on race, color, or previous servitude, it restricted illiterate men, non-tax payers,
and women from voting.
The Epilogue occurs after Anthony is dead and a statue of her is
being unveiled in the halls of Congress. Anthony, as statue, views the reveling of Grant,
stage star Lillian Russell, Jo, Chris, and Donald Gallup. She sings, "Life is strife,
I was a martyr all my life not to what I won but to what was done." (Many hear these
words as Steins last words. Stein died 10 months before The Mother of Us All
premiered.)
SFO has pulled out all the stops to make this production successful.
Susan B. Anthony is sung by Luana DeVol, an American singer whose career has been largely
in Europe. On first thought, one would imagine Ms. DeVol as too big a woman to play
Anthony, whose photos show a small, frail figure. However, DeVol in a black Victorian
dress created an appropriate and impressive Mother of Us All, both in appearance and
voice. All the singers offer outstanding credentials, including SFO first-timer Wendy Hill
as Constance Fletcher. Ms. Hill, one should note, created the leading role of Alice B.
Toklas in Jonathan Sheffers Off-Broadway opera Blood
on the Dining Room Floor.
In 2000, stage director Christopher Alden and set designer Allen Moyer
also worked on the New York City Opera production of The Mother of Us All. The
same impressive sets from that earlier production here complement Steins absurd
character combinationsAnthonys desk is piled sky high with books,
Anthonys parlor wall contains unexpected windows, doors, and a mini-stage, and the
podium from which Webster and Anthony speak is gargantuan.
The volume of sound produced by the singers was unfortunately
insufficient. One yearned to hear the words more loudly and not have to rely on the super
texts. Occasionally it was hard to tell which singer was singing. This might reveal a lack
of confidence on the singers parts because it seems impossible to think the
individual singers, especially DeVol who is known for her Wagnerian roles, are not capable
of filling the San Francisco Opera House with their well-trained voices. Conductor Donald
Runnicles and his 54 musicians produced a balanced level of sound and a beautifully
delivered concert.
San Francisco, September 10, 2003 - Karren L. Alenier