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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1909)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAS. PORTLAND, yOVE3IBEIt 31, 1909.. . ii ' : . . Music and Drama Entrance New York in One Big Night New Theater Jlonses First Audience, Boston Showhouses Open and Two Opera Seasons Are Begun November 8 "Herodiade," the New Salome, Appears. ' I : i- I i . ! i: V r J Photo copyright, 1909, by George Grantham Bain. MAKV UAHDEX'iXP OSC,AR HAMMERSTF.IX. miEW YORK, Nov. 0. (Special.) ; 1 November 8 was one of the ' memorable dates In musical and 'dramatic life of this country. That J night the New Theater was opened to ' the public, the new opera-house in Bos. ' ton was opened, the Metropolitan ; Opera Company opened its Brooklyn season, and the Manhattan Company opened its fourth season of grand opera, all of which events are signifi cant far beygnd the fact itself. The musical critics in a body were Invited to each of the affairs, but as It is sufficiently-. difficult to divids oneself r,i New York proper, fhe Bos ton Opera-house was dedicated with out the presence of yours truly, also the opening of the Metropolitan Com pany In Brooklyn went on without my presence. A Massenet opera, per formed for the flrnt time in America, was sufficient to keep one eye on the orchestra and the other on the stage every minute of the four hours, with intermissions, that It took te portray the troubles of Mr. and Mrs. Herod, to say nan;; lit of her daughter by a first well, hor daughter, the Impression able Salome, who became desperately enamoured of John the Baptist. This Is not tho Salome as pictured by Oscar Vfllde and translated Into music by Richard Strauss. It Is the Salome of the opera called "Herodiade." and here Is a prize offered for any baritone who never sang "Vision Kugitlf," or the soprane who never sang "11 Est Doux, II Est Bon." However. "Herodiade." as an entity, was never before presented in this country. It was planned for last sea son on account of Renaud. who has the leading part, but It was laid over until a later occasion" to make room for "Salome." the redoubtable of Wilde Strauss. If there are two opinions ex pressed -about "Herodiade." they will rome from two possibilities only, the Kenaud worshipers, and these are not to be counted by the usual methods of computation, and those who thought about the opera as an opera. For the former there never has been anything more divine. Renaud was on the stage almost every minute of the time, and when he was not there was time to think of how lovely It would be when he returned. Now, as a matter of fact, Renaud cannot help being a matinee Idol. A man who is everything lie is in the superlative, is born to be an idol if he is destined for the stage, and if he fol lows this career, as. least there Is some reasonable excuse for worshiping at his shrine, openly, unabashed and with abandon. Everyone idolizes and ideal i7es him. It would be inartistic not to do so. it would, be an admission that one Is not able to understand his mar velous and inapproachable art. Renaud Is also a decided boon for the etitics. especially for those whose tendencies run to superlatives. This is the one case where it is recognized to be so justifiable that even the man with the blue pencil stops with that formidable weapon in the air. while his mind la groping wildly in the rubbish heap ot adjectives cast aside upon former occa sions for something which could be brushed off, polished up and used to advantage in behalf of the great French master. Well. Renaud is the man who has con tributed more to Mr. Hammersteln's standing as an art connoisseur than any one who has evoj- been identified with the Manhattan, unless it might be Mary Garden, who Is not complete without Renaud In the cast, and Renaud's art Is enhanced and supported by the great singer who is now thinking more about her duties at the custom-house than at the opera-house. But Miss Garden Is not the Salome in the Massenet opera. She has had enough Salome troubles of her own. and was calm in her contemplation of those which fell to the lot of Mme. Cavalier!. She was thinking, no doubt, that there are Salomes and Salomes, that there are Richard Strauss and Massenet, and Cavalier! is to be congratulated that to her lot fell Massenet Instead of Strauss. V The stage setting was simply stupend ous, even more so than a setting, for "Aida." but there was a sad anachron'' ism. one which could have been avoided if the horn-player had only thought about memorizing his music. There was the great pageantry with a body of at least IS horn-players on the stage and the eyeglasses that loomed up on the largest man tended to upset the illusion as well as the equanimity of some who are sen sitive to those things. The opera was directly in line with the trend of plays now on in the New York theaters. The scene was laid In Jerusa lem, and of the chosen people there were plenty. There were also long and fre quent harangues on the recital question, but as Massenet wrote In 1SS1. there was pure, mild harmony instead of the sort of discord which is now the reigning requisition in ultra-modern music, spe cially aggressive examples of which may be found In simple love songs or in lulla bies. The rest of the week was filled with .interesting productions and debuts. Wed nesday evening. Mme. Tetrazzini made her re-appearance with John. McCor mack, the young Irish tenor from Covent Harden, who says the noted Italian pri ma donna was his "fairy godmother.", from the time they first met In the Lon don Opera-house. His debut was one of the most successful In the history of the Manhattan, as he Is tall, very good looking, with a most fetching smile and a voice of beautiful lyric quality. Sammar co made the third In a powerful trio, one strong enough to carry into success, even time-worn opera like "La Travlata". or "Lucia." In which the three will- be heard next week. Mme. Tetrazzini t bark with a won derful wardrobe. Three of the most tartltng gowns were shown Wednesday night. The first was a pale blue, soft, . clinging crepe covered to the flounce with an overdress of gold bugle beads, two Inches in length, forming open squares. The next was of Irish lace and the last was still more dazzling than the first. It was a white satin, with a robe of jewels which gave the effect of hun dreds upon hundreds of small diamonds. The New Theater openjed to the public Monday night with the utmost magnin rrwf The New Theater at Central Park. West and Sixty-third streets, is supposed to represent, eventually, to ivew rom what the Oreon is to Paris. Of its in fluence or ita importance there 1s no need to speak at this moment, in the presence of the interest awakened in its opening. The doors were thrown open Saturday afternoon and evening, but that was only bv Invitation. A may well be Imagined, even on Monday night, the house could have been sold out over again, so great was the number of people who wished to attend this auspicious event. Shakes peare's "Antony and Cleopatra" was given with the following cast: Mark Antony '. E. H. Sothern Octavlus i7aear A. E. Anson M. Aemlllim l,epldu Rowland Buckstone Fxtu Pompeius Ben Johnson D"mltiu Enobarbua William Mi-Vay Ero - Charles Balsar Scarus Howard Kyi Agrippa Jacob Wendell. Jr. Proculeiua William Harrtj Thyreua Henry Stanford Mer.as Lee Baker Canldlua ..Reginald Barlow Euphonlus - . . .Oeorge Venning Demetrius O. F. Hannan-Clark Alexas Lawrence Eyre Diomedea Pedro de Coroba Soothsayer Albert Brunlns Clown . . -...Ferdinand Gottschalk Guardsman to Caesar Alfred Croas rleopatra Julia Msrlowc Ortavia Beatrice Forbes-Robertson Chaxmian Jessie Busier l,a Leah Bateman-Hunter The newness of everything, the magni tude of the house and the brilliancy of the audience in a certain sense detracted from the performance, and it did not seem as thetigli the audience was in touch with the stage. It was good to pee SotheYn and Mis Marlowe together again. His qualities are well known, and of her 1t may be said that ehe Is the best actress on the American stage today. Her Cle opatra was superb In its grace and its variety of shades. It 1s expected that a renewed interest in classical drama may be awakened, and that opportunity will be made to present works of high aspirations of which the ordinary manager would be afraid. ' A case in point Is that of William Favershams production of '"Herod,' by Stephen Phillips, which, notwithstand ing its very great merit as a work of art, is not a success at the box office. The production Is massive and artistic In every particular, but the only inter est manltested is ITy the exclusive few exceptionally literary people. "The Harvest Moon." Augustus T'nom.ts latest play presented by Charles Frohman at the Garrick Thea ter, In New York, has caused endless discussion because of the theories of mental suggestion and color -influence enunciated in It. As a play "The Har vest Moon" has received little but praise, but some critics have accused Mr. Thomas of pushing his theories into the realm of the unreal and fan tastic in the matter of color Influence. Now comes the word that Mr. Thomas has received a scientific Justification of his theory. For the State of Illinois, at the State Hospital for the Insane at Bar tonville. has instituted eight different plants devoted to phototherapy, or light healing. ' Mr. Thomas' contention in the "Har vest Moon" is that a scene designated to portray a cheerful domestic episode should be played with red furniture and a red glow in the air. On the other hand, that brown is dismal and depress ing and puts audience and actors out of key with such a scene. Love scenes, he says, speaking through Monsieur Vavin, the character who is the famous French playwright of the piece, should be played in . a violet light, because nature ha shown us that a violet light induces sweet and tender emotion. And so the love scene in 'The Harvesl Moon" serves te bring two lovers that had quarreled to gether. The account of the work that is being done by medical science along this line comes. In the form of a dispatch from Peoria. III., to the New York Herald un der this head: "Many Tinted Solariums Attached to Illinois. Asylum for Treat ment of Different Forms of Lunacy." The dispatch itself is as follows: "Peoria, III. Two college- buildings erected on the site of the Illinois Hospital for the In sane, of Bartonville, at a cost of $100,000. and equipped with eight solariums for the work of phototherapy inaugurated by Superintendent George A. Zeller, will be dedicated. Thanksgiving day. "Two of the solariums are equipped In ruby, two in vkilet, two In amber and two in opa. The Incandescent lamps are of these colors', also the decorations on the walls. "The doctor has found that despondent insane patients .. are enlivened when placed In the red room and violent pa tients soothed when in the blue room. Opal Is antiseptic and aids the consump tives." In the minds of older people this will revive a memory of the famous "Bine Gross Cure" of 40 years ago. Whether this was a Boston fad or a. Boston contribu tion to science has never been satisfac torily settled. Many extraordinary cures were at one time credited to it by its ad herents snd by its opponents to mind cure. In any case it died away after a time, as other medlcal-fashlons have died, but. unlike others, it has survived in the violet windows in the old Beacon-street houses in Boston in which in other days people sat and bathed In Mr. .Thomas' soothing violet rays. And now It turns out that after all this may not be all "moonshine.", as the severer school of doctors once characterized it. EMILIE FRANCES BAUER. In oroer 10 construct in aianrrnesier ship canal over 51,000,000 cubic yards had to be excavated. T h ajttksgiving' Jpar gains at : . . ; : : : 1 Free Deliver ies to All City and Suburban Points. K mm 12s Cross London Gloves FOR LADIES Street Gloves, hsyid-stitched, 2 buttons. . .$1.50 Street Gloves, hand-stitched, 1 button. .. .1.50 Med. 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Alfred Henry Lewis In Human Life. BE it known that, speaking for my self as to the merits of what con troversies are set forth below, my feeling is upon the side of Mr. Taft. Mr. Balllnger has had two fights. Mr. Taft as President was ex-offlolo referee. He gave a decision in both for Mr. Ballinger. It is upon these decisions that all that adverse, criticism of Mr. Taft depends and hangs as from a hook. Mr. Glavis, a subaltern of he Interior Department, complained that coal land frauds were afoot In Alaska by which the public 'was threatened with the loss of hundreds of millions of dollars. Mr. Glavis said that divers Cunninghams were beinisc employed In those ffauds in the capacity of what New York City's K.ist Side call "(tails": but that the true parties in villain interest, the real buss under those coal-land fraud-chips, were the seven Guirsenhelms, all of them millionaire smelter kings, one ot them In that millionaires' club, the Sen ate. Mr. Glavis explained that by turn ing their bonvenlent blind side to what was so fraudulently going forward. Mr. Ballinger and sundry of his under chiefs were giving nefarious aid and comfort to the Guggcnhetms, alias Cunningham.--. Mr. Taft. as I have stated, went all through the situation ' with a lantern, and decided against the Glavis assump tion. As under the circumstances was fitting, the accusatory Mr. Glavis lost his official head. Mr. Ballinger and his department were exonerated of the charge of conniving with the Guggen helms. tho Cunninghams, . or any one else -to rob the Nation of its sooty rights in coal. There was or rather is a Mr. Pinchot a Mr. Glfford Pinchot. He was born rich, 'which is no good thing for any man. Cradle-riches make one opinion ated, dictatorial, petty. They destroy one's perspective, limit one's experi ences and therefore one's powers of comparison. Worst of all they weaken one's fiber by removing the reason for work. . Mr. Pinchot went to Harvard, which if you are abla to do is a very good thing. There Mr. Pinchot met Mr. Roosevelt. It was a meeting of moment to Mr. Pinchot, since it very much mold ed his career. Mr. pinchot has a Tad. It is trees. Fads are all right in private life. In public, life they have to be watched. It Is' no exaggeration to say that per sonally Mr. Roosevelt really loved Mr. Pinchot. The latter was honest, loyal, clinging, vine-like. ilr. Roosevelt was honest, self-reliant, sturdy, up-and-down as an oak. Mr. Roosevelt. then, loved Mr. Pinchot for Harvard as well as for himself. Never shall I forget the beam ing look of Mr. Roosevelt when he pre sented me casually to Mr. Pinchot. "Pinchot." said he,. slapping that fad swept personage on the shoulder, "is In charge of nyy tree policy." Mr. Pinchot, officially as well as pri- vatelyi was raised a pet. He was a favorite and trusted member of Mr. Roosevelt's famous "tennis cabinet." I do not understand that Mr. Pinchot was riotously popular elsewhere than at the White House. That may have been born of his nearness to Mr. Roosevelt. As the poet Gray explains tr) what lines he tearfully commemorates the. drowning of his pet tabby cat and how little the sad affair affected the other animals, "A favorite has no friends.' As forestry chief under Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Pinchot did as he pleased. He dealt with the law as It should have been and not as It was. Full of his tree fad, he carried forestry as an element of govern ment to every exaggeration. He robbed the present to enrich the future, and so they say took liiC.000,000 acres out of pub lic lands available for settlement, and enthusiastically added them to the "For est Reserve." Mr. Roosevelt, looking the other way, thinking on other things, busy with his great plan to make Mr. Taft his successor, leaving all forest things to his "dear Pinchot," promptly O. K.'d the con fiscations. " ' Also, like Mr. Glavis, Mr. Pinchot dis covered a mare's nest. The Pinchot nest related, not to coal, but water. He de tected symptoms-of attorning water-power trust. In some recondite way, which I do not understand and therefore shall not try to lay bare, that coming water-power trust was to be knocked on the head, killed as it were on the nest by a sheer first effect of that forestry confiscation of lSO.OOO.OW acres. , But behold you, along' comes Mr. Bal linger as Secretary of the Interior. Keen, clear, alert, law to 'his finger-tips, all spring steel and action and In the pride of his youth sets aside the Pinchot con fiscation, deforests that conquest of iX CiO.OOO acres and readds it to the general public domain from which, by Mr. Pin chot, it had been so feverishly subtracted. Naturally Mr. Pinchot carried the storm of his griefs to Mr. Toft. That executive, at cheerful ease In his Beverly splint bottom rocker of double width and strength gave judgment as aforesaid for Mr. Ballinger. and Mr. Pinchot dolefully withdrew, as depressed as some peacock bereft of its tall.x . It's awful to be born rich. It's more, awful when thus conditioned you are taken captive by a fad. The two com bined make "No" so hard to bear. Mr. Pinchot hasn't left the department Mr. Glavis has being incontinently chucked out. Mr. Ballinger won from Mr. Glavis on a knock-out from Mr. Pin chot on points. Mr. Roosevelt was in the White House. Junior Jimmy Garfield sat In the Cabi net. Mr. Roosevelt went looking about for a superintendent of the Land Office. Mr. Garfield said. "Get Ballinger." Mr. Garfield had met -Mr. Ballinger at Williams about the time Mr. Roosevelt at Harvard was meeting Mr. Pinchot. "What's his politics?" asked Mr. Roose velt. "He hates thieves," was the reply. Then Mr. Garfield told Mr. Roosevelt an engaging tale of how Mr. Ballinger had once killed three rattlesnakes with his quirt during those far-off cowboy days. This tragedy took place appro priately on the banks of Rattlesnake Creek. "There are rattlesnakes in the Land Office," observed Mr. Roosevelt to Mr. Ballinger. having speciously roped the latter Into the White House on a pretenn" of lunch. "I've pitched upon you to kiir them." Mr. Bal!ingr. Snake-Killer, reform Mayor of Seattle, became Superintendent of the Government Land Office. True t' his employment, he did for that Land Office what St. Patrick did for Ireland. When he got through, not a graft-rattle, not a fraud hiss could anywhere be heard. The land snakes were gone. With broom of law. with besom of dismissal, Snake Kliler Ballinger had swept tliein out. Mr. Roosevelt was working as heaver never worked to make Mr. Taft his suc cessor. Brother Charles Taft down in Cincinnati was spending Sl.200.rcto of hiH wife's money inherited from her iron mongering father, old dead Dave Sinton in the same good cause. Mr. Ballinger, inspired by so much and such high ex ample, began to get busy along similar lines. . Mr. Ballinger caused himself to ho named National committeeman from his State of Washington. He saw to it thar he was sent delegate to the Chic-ego Convention. He maneuvered himself del icately yet sufficiently upon the conven tion's platform committee. On all occa sions and in, every corner he was for Taft and Taft alone. Also ho showed himself as apt for politics as any Irish man. To' Mr. Ballinger. as debts of politics are counted. Mr. Taft owed much. It was the expected thing that Mr. Bal linger .should be invited into the Cabinet. It was just as expected, that being in vited, he would come. He was invited. He did come. He's there now, to the de struction of the Glavises and the dismay of the Pinchots. It might be subjoined, too. that lie is there to the advantage of the public and the truth in n" wise be overrun. 1 07.2 r