here - Temple Judah
Transcription
here - Temple Judah
What do the Civil War, the Charleston 9, and Broadway producer Harold Prince have to do with Cedar Rapids, Iowa? Page 2 of 8 They are recurrent, relevant and reminiscent of an event depicted in Revival Theatre Company’s Production of Parade In Concert Book by Alfred Uhry Music and Lyrics by Jason Robert Brown Co-Conceived and Directed on Broadway by Harold Prince Based on the true story of the trial and lynching of Leo M. Frank Production Team Director Brian Glick Musical Director Cameron Sullenberger Lighting Designer Scott Olinger Projections Designer Kristen Geisler Costume Designer April Bonasera Sound Designer John Lord Conducted by Kevin Brown Stage Manager Amber Lewandowski November 12th, 13th & 14th at Scottish Rite Temple 616 A Ave NE, Cedar Rapids Tickets: artsiowa.com or 319-366-8203 Contact: Brian Glick, b-jglick@hotmail.com Steven Ginsberg, steve@ginsbergjewelers.com Continued Page 3 of 8 How this musical story relates to current topics of injustice, the lingering wounds of the Civil War, and the active missions of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and Anti-Defamation League (ADL). [Compiled from sources listed on last page.] HISTORICAL CONTEXT OF REAL-LIFE EVENTS Parade dramatizes the 1913 trial of Jewish factory manager Leo Frank, who was wrongly accused and convicted of raping and murdering a thirteen-year-old employee, Mary Phagan. The trial, sensationalized by the media, aroused anti-Semitic tensions in Atlanta and the state of Georgia. When Frank's death sentence was commuted to life in prison by the departing Governor of Georgia, John M. Slaton due to his detailed review of over 10,000 pages of testimony and possible problems with the trial, Leo Frank was transferred to a prison in Milledgeville, Georgia, where a lynching party seized and kidnapped him. Frank was taken to Phagan's hometown of Marietta, Georgia, and he was hanged from an oak tree. The events surrounding the investigation and trial led to two groups emerging: The birth of the Jewish civil rights organization, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL); and the re-birth of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK). Leo Frank Frank was born in Cuero, Texas on April 17, 1884 to Rudolph Frank and Rachel "Rae" Jacobs. The family moved to Brooklyn, New York in 1884 when Frank was three months old. He attended New York City public schools and graduated from Pratt Institute in 1902. He then attended Cornell University, where he studied mechanical engineering. After graduation in 1906, Frank worked briefly as a draftsman and as a testing engineer. At the invitation of his uncle Moses Frank, Leo traveled to Atlanta for two weeks in late October 1907 to meet a delegation of investors for a position with the National Pencil Company, a manufacturing plant in which Moses was a major shareholder. Frank accepted the position, and traveled to Germany to study pencil manufacturing at Eberhard Faber in Bavaria. After a nine-month apprenticeship, Frank returned to the United States and began working at the National Pencil Company in August 1908. Leo Frank became superintendent of the factory in September 1908. Leo Frank at trial Frank was introduced to Lucille Selig shortly after he arrived in Atlanta. She came from a prominent and upper middle class Jewish family of industrialists who, two generations earlier, had founded the first synagogue in Atlanta. Though she was very different from Frank, and laughed at the idea of speaking Yiddish, they were married in November 1910 at the Selig residence in Atlanta. Frank described his married life as happy. Frank was elected president of the Atlanta chapter of the B'nai B'rith, a Jewish fraternal organization, in 1912. The Jewish community in Atlanta was the largest in the South. Although the American South was not known for its anti-Semitism, Frank's northern culture and Jewish faith added to the sense that he was different. Continued Page 4 of 8 After Frank's lynching, around half of Georgia's 3,000 Jews left the state. According to Steve Oney, author of And the Dead Shall Rise: The Murder of Mary Phagan and the Lynching of Leo Frank, “What it did to Southern Jews can’t be discounted.... It drove them into a state of denial about their Judaism. They became even more assimilated, anti-Israel, Episcopalian. The Temple did away with chupahs at weddings—anything that would draw attention.” Many American Jews saw Frank as an American Alfred Dreyfus because both were perceived as being victims of antiSemitic persecution. In part because Frank was the president of the B'nai B'rith chapter in Atlanta, Adolph Kraus, national president of B'nai B'rith, invited 15 prominent members in Chicago to attend the formation of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith in October 1913, two months after Frank's conviction. Lynching of Leo Frank On November 25, 1915, months after Frank was lynched, a group led by William Joseph Simmons burned a cross on top of Stone Mountain, inaugurating a revival of the Ku Klux Klan. The event was attended by 15 charter members and a few aging survivors of the original Klan. The Leo Frank story has been examined in books, TV and film. Notably the fictionalized 1937 film They Won't Forget with Claude Rains, and the TV movie The Murder of Mary Phagan with Jack Lemmon, Peter Gallagher and Kevin Spacey. There is also a new historical novel by David Mamet titled The Old Religion. HISTORY OF THE MUSICAL Parade is written by Alfred Uhry with music and lyrics by Jason Robert Brown. This musical was first produced on Broadway at the Vivian Beaumont Theater on December 17, 1998. Uhry was already well known for his plays, Driving Miss Daisy and The Last Night of Ballyhoo. However Parade was Brown's first Broadway production. His music has subtle and appealing melodies that draw on a variety of influences, from pop-rock to folk to rhythm and blues and gospel. The production was co-conceived and directed by Harold Prince and starred Brent Carver as Leo Frank, Carolee Carmello as Lucille Frank, and Christy Carlson Romano as Mary Phagan. Harold Prince turned to Jason Robert Brown to write the score after Stephen Sondheim turned the project down. Prince's daughter, Daisy, had brought Brown to her father's attention. Uhry, who grew up in Atlanta, had personal knowledge of the Frank story, as his great-uncle owned the pencil factory run by Leo Frank. Prince commissioned Jason Robert Brown and Alfred Uhry to write what he called “an American opera.” A dark and ambitious piece, Parade received mixed reviews during its initial run at Lincoln Center Theater, but Brown and Uhry both received 1999 Tony Awards for their work. A national tour in 2000 brought the show around the country, a revised version produced by London’s Donmar Warehouse brought renewed acclaim and attention, followed by a remounting at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles. Parade continues to be produced at colleges and theaters around the world. Continued Page 5 of 8 The plot of the musical dramatizes the historical story and does not shy away from the conclusion of some that the likely killer was the factory janitor Jim Conley, the key witness against Frank at the trial. The true villains of the piece are portrayed as the prosecutor Hugh Dorsey (later the governor of Georgia and then a judge) and the rabid publisher Tom Watson (later elected a U.S. senator). In dramatizing the story, Prince and Uhry have emphasized the evolving relationship between Leo and his wife Lucille. Their relationship shifts from cold to warm in songs like "Leo at Work/What Am I Waiting For?", "You Don't Know This Man", "Do it Alone", and "All the Wasted Time". The poignancy of the couple, who fall in love in the midst of adversity, is the core of the work. It makes the tragic outcome—the miscarriage of justice—even more disturbing. Prince told Playbill On-Line the musical is based on the true story of Leo and Lucille Frank whose boring marriage gets an unexpected rebirth when Leo is accused of raping and killing one of the girls working in his Atlanta factory. Clapped in prison, the wimpy Leo is forced to get some backbone. "He starts a coward and becomes a hero," Prince said. His chilly, passive wife "becomes a dynamic woman," he said. Prince said he was intrigued by the show's sociological setting as well. The incident, taking place in a factory, becomes a lightning rod for feelings among Atlantans that Northern industrialization was forced on the city after the Civil War. "The story just seemed like a metaphor for what was happening there at that time," he said. Brown, 29, also has a personal stake in Parade. His marriage was disintegrating as he wrote "All the Wasted Time," the achingly beautiful climactic song in which Lucille and the imprisoned Leo realize that their struggle to clear his name has made them truly fall in love—too late. The lyrics are based on the couple’s letters. WHY THE TITLE, PARADE? "There’s some of me—the nice Jewish Yankee boy—in Leo," says Jason Robert Brown, "and there’s some of my grandfather, too. But a part of me is also in all those people in Marietta who were devastated by the war, forced to send their sons and daughters to work in factories." Hence Jason Robert Brown‘s brainstorm of showing an eager young Rebel soldier going off to war—and then instantly transformed into a grizzled, bitter, one-legged veteran in the fateful parade 50 years later as the chorus sings the rousing anthem, "The Old Red Hills of Home." Brown took the words from the Marietta gravestone of Phagan, never realizing that they were written by the infamous and sensationalist publisher, Tom Watson. Harold Prince, too, knows the Parade ground. Like Alfred Uhry, he’s descended from German Jews who were among the earliest settlers of the South; one ancestor was president of the Texas Cotton Exchange. Controversy would be music to the director’s ears—and nothing new. "I’ve made a lifetime in the theater of doing subjects both serious and controversial, and I have no intention of backing away now," says Prince. "When Continued Page 6 of 8 I did Evita I heard about it from all the Argentines in New York. Half were thrilled and half were mad, but no one was bored." In fact, a case could be made that Parade is not such an unusual choice of subject matter for Prince but may be his most un-compromising work. His 1966 Cabaret looked at Nazism but through the framework of raucous song-and-dance; Sweeney Todd’s wronged hero made his tormentors into meat pies but in the form of a gothic fable, not a study of cannibalism. Parade, though it has its share of pageantry and stirring melody, is focused on injustice. LEGACY The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) of B’nai B’rith is still active, and its mission is as important today as it was in 1913. Continued Page 7 of 8 And the KKK is as active today as it was in the past, though in the shadows of our culture. The Klan was started by Confederate war veterans after the Civil War to prevent freed slaves from obtaining rights. It has been called the first true terrorist group founded on American soil. Though the US government managed to dismantle the so-called First Klan, its mission remained alive in the minds of racist whites committed to overturning an unjust order. The Leo Frank case inspired Klan-sympathizing racists to expand the parameters of hate by including Jews, who they viewed as dishonest and alien to white society. A cross-burning ceremony attended by some of Frank’s murderers in 1917 marked the official launch of the Second Klan. Future US Senator Tom Watson helped reignite Klan activities through incitement in southern newspapers. Though modern Klan chapters remain decentralized to prevent infiltration, it’s clear the election of President Barack Obama in 2008 fueled membership across the board. Klan leaders have also formed recent alliances with Neo-Nazi groups to fight against illegal immigration and same-sex civil marriage. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has provided – to some observers’ frustration – ongoing support for Klan members’ rights to hold rallies and run for public office. The recent murder of nine people at the Charleston, SC Emanuel AME Church is just one example of a current hate crime that we live with today, and reminiscent of the Leo Frank event 100 years ago. Continued Page 8 of 8 Will this production of Parade be controversial? Will it force the audience to feel, think and discuss what they just witnessed on stage? Sometimes this hits a core with audiences. It is the job of Revival Theatre Company in mounting this production to hold a mirror up to our audience—our society, to make them feel and face what is happening in the world and our everyday lives. It is easy to turn away, ignore and forget. In the case of Parade, will it strike a nerve with someone who has distaste for a Jewish person? An African American? The brutal murder of a young innocent girl? And the corrupt court & law enforcement systems that still affects many today? The common theme here is how our emotions can overcome reason. It might be odd that the retelling of this shameful & horrific scene in American history is in the form of a musical were it not for the fact that the American musical theatre form is as indigenous to our culture as are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. End Sources taken from various internet and Wikipedia articles • Alphin, Elaine Marie. An Unspeakable Crime: The Prosecution and Persecution of Leo Frank. Carolrhoda Books, 2010. Google Books abridged version. Retrieved June 10, 2011. • Blakeslee, Spencer. The Death of American Antisemitism. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000. • Dinnerstein, Leonard. The Leo Frank Case. University of Georgia Press, 1987. • Frey, Robert Seitz; Thompson-Frey, Nancy (2002). The Silent and the Damned: The Murder of Mary Phagan and the Lynching of Leo Frank. New York, New York: Cooper Square Press (of Rowman & Littlefield). p. 132. ISBN 978-0815411888. Retrieved June 17, 2015. (First published in Lanham, Maryland in 1988) • Friedman, Lawrence M. St. Louis University Law Journal; Summer 2011, Vol. 55, Issue 4, p. 12431284. • Golden, Harry. A Little Girl is Dead. Account of Leo Frank case, 1965. Retrieved June 25, 2011. • Knight, Alfred H. The Life of the Law. Oxford University Press, 1996. • Lawson, John Davison (ed.). American State Trials Volume X (1918), contains the abridged trial testimony and closing arguments starting on p. 182. Retrieved August 23, 2010. • Levy, Eugene. "Is the Jew a White Man?" in Maurianne Adams and John H. Bracey, Strangers & Neighbors: Relations Between Blacks & Jews in the United States. University of Massachusetts Press, 2000. • Lindemann, Albert S. The Jew Accused: Three Anti-Semitic Affairs (Dreyfus, Beilis, Frank), 1894– 1915. Cambridge University Press, 1991. Google Books, abridged version. Retrieved June 11, 2011. • Melnick, Jeffrey Paul. Black-Jewish Relations on Trial: Leo Frank and Jim Conley in the New South. University Press of Mississippi, 2000. ISBN 978-1604735956 • Moseley, Clement Charlton. "The Case of Leo M. Frank, 1913-1915". The Georgia Historical Quarterly, Vol. 51, No. 1 (March, 1967), pp. 42–62. • Oney, Steve. And the Dead Shall Rise: The Murder of Mary Phagan and the Lynching of Leo Frank. Pantheon Books, 2003. ISBN 978-0679764236 • Phagan Kean, Mary. The Murder of Little Mary Phagan. Horizon Press, 1987. • Ravitz, Jessica. "Murder case, Leo Frank lynching live on", CNN, November 2, 2009. • Theoharis, Athan, and John Stuart Cox. The Boss: J. Edgar Hoover and the Great American Inquisition. Temple University Press, 1988. • Wood, Amy Louise. Lynching and Spectacle. The University of North Carolina Press, 2009. • Woodward, Comer Vann. 1963. Tom Watson: Agrarian Rebel. New York: Oxford University Press. • Extensive website about the show • Cast and other information from the Geocities Jason Robert Brown website • All the Wasted Time - Parade • Parade at the Music Theatre International website • Profile of the show at the NODA website indicating which characters sing which numbers • ADL press releases via Atlanta Office of the Anti-Defamation League • The ADL and KKK, born of the same murder, 100 years ago How a scandalous Memorial Day strangling led Jews and anti-Semites to rethink survival strategies and form two stalwart organizations, The Times of Israel, by Matt Lebovic May 27, 2013.