Monday, October 31, 2022

Merola Organizes San Franciscans To Present Outdoor Opera on The Peninsula

Visit our exhibit Bringing The Opera To The People and The People To The Opera on display in the Steve Silver Beach Blanket Babylon Music Center on the 4th floor of the Main Library through January 15, 2023.

Merola's advertisement in the Pacific Coast Musical Review, April 1, 1922

Once he received financial backing and the space to present outdoor opera in 1922, Gaetano Merola had to marshal the a variety of forces to stage his festival.  Opera is far more than the great artists singing and acting on the stage -- it requires an army of supporting participants. Transporting the forces necessary for this undertaking required a charter train to carry 500 people including a chorus consisted of 150 members, the orchestra numbering 110 musicians. There was an additional ballet corps of 50 dancers.  These numbers do not account for the necessary stage hands and ticket takers. Additional trains were also added to bring the audience to Palo Alto from San Francisco and back again.

Merola was assisted by the Baker & Taylor engineering firm who had helped construct Stanford Stadium. Contractors from the University built the stage, 80 feet wide, 40 feet deep and elevated four feet off of the ground that gave every seat a clear view of the performance. Experts also worked out acoustical issues of performing outdoors constructing a sounding board at the back of the stage to assist the voices and instruments in projecting toward the audience. Ramps were placed at the rear to bring horses on stage during some scenes in Carmen.

Ray Coyle was one of the earliest of the first participants in Merola's project. Well known locally as a muralist, illustrator and interior decorator, he also had experience created scenery for the Bohemian Club's "Lo-Jinks" performed in their redwood grove. Marjory Fisher noted "The scenery in all of the productions was of necessity simple but highly artistic and adequate ... lighting, setting and orchestral effects helped to make the performance conspicuously outstanding."  

Illustration of the open-air setting for Merola's 1922 performance of Pagliacci (source: Musical America June 17, 1922)

Jeanne Lane, writing for the Chicago-based Musical Leader, gives a vivid description of the scene:
The night panorama of opera in the stadium is pure magic. The stage built at one end of the great bowl is more than 80 feet in width. The drapery of midnight blue which masks the outer circle melted into the blue of the night where the moon and the stars completed the picture. The stage sets were built especially for this outdoor need and the furniture as well. There has been no makeshift. By a clever arrangement of lights the audience was illuminated and shut out while changes of the sets were being made.
Merola boasted of "the largest picked chorus of local singers ever assembled on the Pacific coast." He recruited the 75 member Stanford University Chorus, the A Capella Choir of the College of the Pacific (then located in San Jose) and a third chorus that he trained in San Francisco. The chorus of 150 voices rehearsed at Frank Carroll Giffen's house (also called the Humphrey-Giffen house) at the corner of Chestnut and Hyde. 


Arthur Bloomfield tells of a gripman hearing these rehearsals from the passing Hyde Street cable car line calling out the Chestnut Street stop as the "Rue de l'Opera." An editorial in the Chronicle noted with civic pride the appreciation of the opera stars who marveled at the assembled chorus.

"Where could you find such a chorus?" asked [Giovanni] Martinelli, amazed.


"Even the Metropolitan cannot excel in this," exclaimed [Vicente] Ballester.
Walter Oesterreicher, the orchestral manager of the San Francisco Symphony, assembled an instrumental ensemble of 100 musicians. Armando Agnini of the Metropolitan Opera, who would collaborate with Merola for many years, directed stage action. Luigi Raybaut was also a stage manager. The ballet was directed and choreographed by Natale Carossio.

The Chronicle's music critic, Ray Brown, summed up the effect of the first evening:
The setting in the great bowl of the stadium was one of beauty, under the blue-black canopy of night. The sky was cloudless, save for a few filmy veils floating slowly beneath a half-moon in the zenith. A silvery wave of fog reared its crest on the summit of the far western hills and stayed its motion there. The winds were still, and there was no intrusion of the out world upon the fairy land of make-believe, except an interrupting whistle or two from a passing locomotive.

Gaetano Merola conducted with admirable authority and control of the large orchestra and the choral cohort. When he appeared on the stage at the close of the opera, the embrace that he exchanged with Martinelli was a symbol of congratulation to which the audience shouted approval.
source: San Francisco Examiner June 15, 1922

Bibliography:

Brown, Ray C.B., "600 Witness Opera In Open At Stanford," San Francisco Chronicle June 4, 1922

Bloomfield, Arthur, The San Francisco Opera, 1922-1978 (Comstock Editions, 1978).

Brown, Ray C.B., "600 Witness Opera In Opera At Stanford," San Francisco Chronicle June 4, 1922

Fisher, Marjory M., "Open-Air Opera A Far West Magnet," Musical America June 24, 1922.

"The Golden Gate of Music: Our San Francisco Chorus Amazes the Great Stars of the Opera World," San Francisco Chronicle June 9, 1922.

"Great Chorus To Sing in Stanford Event," San Francisco Chronicle May 13, 1922.

Hughes, Edan Milton, Artists in California, 1786-1940, 3rd ed. (Crocker Art Museum, 2002).

Lane, Jeanne, "San Francisco's Open Air Opera A Triumph," The Musical Leader June 15, 1922.

"Merola To Conduct Open Air Opera," Pacific Coast Musical Review April 15, 1922.

"Open-Air Opera Fete Arousing Interest," Pacific Coast Musical Review May 29, 1922.

"Open-Air Opera Performances Planned for Stanford University," Musical America May 13, 1922.

"Opera Master Tests Stadium for Accoustics [sic]," San Francisco Chronicle April 23, 1922

"'Pagliacci' Begins Open-Air Opera Series at Stanford University," Musical America June 17, 1922.

Thursday, October 13, 2022

The Big Game, North Beach and The San Francisco Opera


The earliest seeds of the San Francisco Opera Company were planted in two places: the City's North Beach neighborhood and in Palo Alto at the "Big Game" between Stanford and California on November 19, 1921 – the inaugural football match at the newly constructed Stanford Stadium.

Several sources state that Gaetano Merola first visited San Francisco before the earthquake in 1906 as the accompanist for Signora Eugenia Mantelli. The 1906 date given seems unlikely since Signora Mantelli gave her final recitals in San Francisco in June 1903. Merola's presence cannot be verified since no pianist is credited in the advertisements for these performances.  

He later returned as a conductor with the International Grand Opera Company while on tour in San Francisco during the summer of 1909.  He made a strong impression in his presentation of Mascagni's L'Amico Fritz; the Chronicle noted that "Merola, made the evening not only the most memorable of the present season, but also eloquently expressed the fact that the composer's lyric work has met with unmistakable favor." It was with this troupe that Merola began his long collaboration with stage director Armando Agnini.
 
Merola as one of the touring conductors with the San Carlo Opera during their annual visits to San Francisco between 1918 and 1921. In the summer of 1921 he decided to remain behind in San Francisco. According to Arthur Bloomfield he earned a living giving lessons. He also began making friends in social circles to further his aim of creating an opera company for the City.

"Opera Stars Raise Their Voices to the Open Sky" shows photographs of opera stars Bianca Saroya and Giovanni Martelli, image source: San Francisco Chronicle June 4, 1922

One of his new opera-loving acquaintances, lawyer Horace Clifton, invited Merola to Palo Alto to experience a college football match. But, as Bloomfield put it, the conductor had "tenors more on his mind than quarterbacks." Clifton's wife, Olga, recalled many years later:
My husband and I took Maestro and his wife, Rosa, to the Big Game in November of 1921," she recalled. "While we were in the grandstand the Stanford Band came out. 'My God,' Merola said, 'I've never heard such acoustics in an open air stadium. This is magnificent I've got to give opera here!
Contemporaneously, the San Francisco Examiner's music critic Redfern Mason remarked: "The artist in him was impressed by the great spectacle. It made him think of the games in the ancient Roman amphitheaters." Merola was also impressed with acoustics. Very aware of the San Francisco fog, Merola also remarked "The nights are wonderful... There is no mist to chill you to the bone. It is as delightful as a night in Naples."

Merola turned to his friends in Italian-American community for support in his venture. A later account in Etude magazine described:
The tall, wiry, gentle-mannered young Italian spoke English very well, but always with the mellifluous accent that is heard in the laughter around the Bay of Naples. This stood him in good stead, because it was to his countrymen he went first with his plan to present a season of outdoor opera, to members of the San Francisco Fisherman's Association with whom he played cards of an evening and ate pizza. These were they who gave him the first $10,000, and on the strength of which he managed to borrow $13,000 more from a bank.
Redfern Mason gave the lion's share of the credit for the stage of Merola's extravaganza at Stanford Stadium to the conductor and to the generosity of his Italian-American friends.

source: San Francisco Examiner June 22, 1922
They have set an example to San Franciscans generally which, if followed up, will make California what by genius and temperament it seems intended to be--the Hellas of the Western world.

So I will set down the names of these gentlemen in enduring type that folks may know to whom they owe a debt of gratitude. They are Gaetano Merola, A. Farina, G. Torchia, G. Napolitano, A. Napolitano, G. Milani, V. Frevola, A. Paoni, G. Brucia and G. Stradi.
Antonio Farina, manager of the Crab and Salmon Fisherman's Association, hosted the card games where Merola and company hatched the idea. Guglielmo Torchia, also known as William Torchia, ran the Agenzia Torchia and was railroad and shipping agent. He was also the publisher of newspapers like Era Democratica and L'Italia. He also organized the Federation of Italian Societies.

Giuseppe Brucia (who sometimes went by Joseph Brucia), who was an olive grower and purveyor of dried fruit, secured the loan from Amadeo Giannini and the Bank of Italy.  Giulio Stradi was successful in the produce business.  At the age of 16, Stradi's daughter Louise became Merola's secretary.

The 1922 City Directory shows that brothers Alfonso and Amedeo Napolitano worked as a foreman and a clerk respectively (the initial G. Napolitano must have been a mistake?). Redfern Mason's list includes an A. Paoni, but later account list three men with that surname - Amedeo, Amalio and Anacleto Paoni appear to have been cousins (Amelio is usually listed with the surname Paone). They variously worked a produce clerk and machinist, grocer, and fitter.

Mason lists a G. Milani among Merola's benefactors (there was a clerk named Guido Milano living in North Beach at that time). However, later accounts give the name of Milano Milani who appears as actor in the Italian language press of the 1910s. Later City Directories show him working as a bookkeeper and clerk. V. Frevola is actually James V. Frevola who also worked as a bookkeeper.

Opera at Stanford Stadium was a tremendous success -- artistically.  It, however, was a failure financially.  Merola's friends were never paid back. Merola had to work off the remaining debt by conducting in Mexico City for a spell.

The San Francisco Opera formally acknowledged the contribution of Merola's Italian-American friends with a plaque dedicated in 2003. Although they were not among the 45 sponsors for the San Francisco Opera's inaugural season, Gaetano Merola could not have stage his Stanford Stadium success and garnered wider community support.


Bibliography

"Appointed General Agent for Cunard and Anchor Lines," Weekly Commercial News August 7, 1920

Bishop, Cardell, The San Carlo Opera Company, 1913-1955: Grand Opera for Profit. (Bishop, CA, 1978).

Bloomfield, Arthur, The San Francisco Opera, 1922-1978 (Comstock Editions, 1978).

"Cook, John Douglas, "'Mr. Opera' Takes a Curtain," Etude May 1954.

"Cook, John Douglas, "Twenty Five Years of Opera," Opera and Concert September 1947.


Fichera, Sebastian, Italy on The Pacific: San Francisco's Italian Americans. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2011).

"G. Brucia, 90, Olive Grower," San Francisco Examiner April 16, 1974.

Hunt, Grace Rollins, "George Hamlin Will Sing Here," San Francisco Chronicle November 28, 1909.

Jones, Idwal, "Out With The Fishers," San Francisco Examiner January 8, 1925

"Many Curtain Calls Demanded," San Francisco Chronicle July 7, 1909.

Mason, Redfern, "Al Fresco Opera at Palo Alto Will Be Done On Magnificent Scale. Great Artists to Sing," San Francisco Examiner May 21, 1922.

Mason, Redfern, "Stanford Opera Is An Ideal Expression of Latin Culture," San Francisco Examiner June 18, 1922

Rando, Maria Gloria, "The Italian Connection With The San Francisco Opera House," L'Italo Americano October 12, 2021. [webpage].

"S.F. Opera Honors Founders in Program," San Francisco Chronicle February 26, 2003.

Venturini, Donald Joseph, "La Vittoria del'Opera nel San Francisco," San Francisco Quarterly Winter-Spring 1951-1952.

Wiegand, David, "S.F. Opera honors founders in program Merola, other 'angels' on new plaque." San Francisco Chronicle 26 Feb. 2003

Tuesday, October 4, 2022

Presentation: James Brown


A talk and slideshow by Richie Unterberger

Tuesday, October 11, 2022
12 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Virtual Library - ZOOM

Author and music historian Richie Unterberger presents a program celebrating the music of James Brown, one of the all-time great soul singers and charismatic live performers. The event will focus on his prime from the mid-1960s to the early 1970s, including performances of classics like “Out of Sight,” “Papa’s Got a Brand New Bag,” “I Feel Good,” “Cold Sweat,” and “Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud.”

Richie Unterberger is the author of numerous rock history books, including volumes on the Beatles, the Who, the Velvet Underground, Bob Marley and 1960s folk-rock. He teaches courses on rock and soul music history at several Bay Area colleges. His newest book, San Francisco: Portrait of a City, was published this year by Taschen.

This virtual program is offered as a one-time event only by agreement with the presenter. THIS PROGRAM WILL NOT BE RECORDED. Presented by the Art, Music & Recreation Center of the San Francisco Public Library.

Register HERE

This program is sponsored by Friends of the San Francisco Public Library


BOOKS AVAILABLE @ SFPL:

I feel good : a memoir of a life of soul / James Brown
780.2 B813a2 

James Brown, the godfather of soul / James Brown
780.2 B813a 2002 

Cold sweat : my father James Brown and me / Yamma Brown
780.2 B813br  

Presence and pleasure : the funk grooves of James Brown and Parliament / Anne Danielsen
784.5 ZD2286p 
 
The James Brown reader : 50 years of writing about the godfather of soul / edited by Nelson George and Alan Leeds
780.2 B813ge 

There was a time : James Brown, the Chitlin' Circuit, and me / Alan Leeds 
780.2 B813L  

Kill 'em and leave : searching for James Brown and the American soul / James McBride 
780.2 B813m 

Say it loud! : the life of James Brown, soul brother no. 1 / Don Rhodes 
780.2 B813rh 2014 

Living in America : the soul saga of James Brown / Cynthia Rose 
780.2 B813r 
 
The hardest working man : how James Brown saved the soul of America / James Sullivan
780.2 B813su 
 
The one : the life and music of James Brown / R.J. Smith
780.2 B813sm 

Live at the Apollo / Douglas Wolk 
780.2 B813w 

Working for the man, playing in the band : my years with James Brown / Damon Wood  
780.2 W8502a