Page 56 - Weiss, Jernej, ur./ed. 2021. Opereta med obema svetovnima vojnama ▪︎ Operetta between the Two World Wars. Koper/Ljubljana: Založba Univerze na Primorskem in Festival Ljubljana. Studia musicologica Labacensia, 5
P. 56
opereta med obema svetovnima vojnama

with a wild desire to understudy those two […] imprudent charac­
ters. He certainly looked awfully nice, his figure being perfection.23
It’s a dimension to operetta performances – and their success back in
the 1860s and 70s – that has not been examined by historians either. In the
context of today’s casting politics, let’s say by Netflix, to attract female teen-
age viewers, a discussion of male stars in operetta and the effect they had on
the reception of the shows seems overdue. Because isn’t Mr. Marius a clear
forerunner of heart throbs such as Jacob Elordi and Noah Centineo?
First and foremost, though, it was the leading ladies who sold the
shows and made operetta a phenomenon, also in the United States. New
York discovered the joys of opéra bouffe in 1867 when Hezekiah Linthicum
Bateman imported a French company, with Lucille Tostée from the Paris
Théâtre des Bouffes Parisiens as its prima donna, playing La Grande-Duch­
esse. This was followed in 1868 by a production of Genevieve de Brabant. The
Tribune reported on 22 October 1868:

Mr. Grau has distinguished himself by producing at the French
Theatre the most revolting mass of filth that has ever been shown
on the boards of a respectable place of amusement in this city. […]
Geneviève is not merely indecent, but it grovels in a low depth, even
below decency.24

Operetta as Family Entertainment
With such moral outrage gaining momentum, not just in New York, it was
only a matter of time till the pendulum swung back. This happened after
the French-Prussian war was lost by the French in 1870/71. Suddenly, all
things associated with the Second Empire were spurned. (This is the situa-
tion in which Zola writes Nana.) At the same time, interest in the genre op-
eretta spread and reached the middle classes who wanted their share of the
fun. Laurence Senelick writes: “Bourgeois society, more venturesome in its
money-making and more secure in its income, aspires to imitate the court.”25

What happens when the spurred-and-ridiculed-for-their-morals sud-
denly enter the safe space of aristocratic operetta and fill the stalls that had
been left empty when La Snédèr performed in Gerolstein? A counter move-
ment can be discerned in Austria in the 1880s with a new wave of shows

23 Emily Soldene quoted in Gänzl, Emily Soldene, 320.
24 Quoted in Gänzl, Emily Soldene, 416.
25 Senelick, “Sexuality and Gender,” 82.

54
   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61