“An Irishman in an opera!”: Music and nationalism on the London stage in the mid-1770s
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
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Music Preferred. Essays in Musicology, Cultural History and analysis in honour of Harry White. ed. / Robin Elliott; Lorraine Byrne Bodley. Vienna: Hollitzer Verlag, 2018.
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - “An Irishman in an opera!”
T2 - Music and nationalism on the London stage in the mid-1770s
AU - Cunningham, John
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - On 21 September 1776 the short dramatic prelude by George Colman entitled New Brooms! was performed for the first time at the Drury Lane Theatre. Commissioned to celebrate the re-opening of the theatre under new management following the retirement of David Garrick (after almost three decades at the helm), New Brooms! was greeted with initial enthusiasm but only ran for 10 additional nights in the season; it was also given at Crow Street, Dublin in 1777. The short play served a dual function: on the one hand it was a way in which to pay homage to Garrick’s dominating presence on the London stage; on the other, it was a public statement of intent on behalf of the new managers. It responded satirically to the popularity of all-sung opera and to what was seen as an increasingly excessive use of music within straight plays. Indeed, although opera was more popular in the last quarter of the century than it had been during Garrick’s tenure the all-sung variety was to all but disappear from the London stage by the late 1770s. Against the backdrop of the American War of Independence, this old argument was couched in strongly nationalistic terms, with Colman’s short satire exploiting (inter alia) stock characterisations of otherness (Irish and Italian; linguistic and musical). Taking New Brooms! as a case study, this paper will explore changing attitudes to the role of music in the theatre in the mid- to late 1770s and its implications within the wider context of British nationalism and Imperialism.
AB - On 21 September 1776 the short dramatic prelude by George Colman entitled New Brooms! was performed for the first time at the Drury Lane Theatre. Commissioned to celebrate the re-opening of the theatre under new management following the retirement of David Garrick (after almost three decades at the helm), New Brooms! was greeted with initial enthusiasm but only ran for 10 additional nights in the season; it was also given at Crow Street, Dublin in 1777. The short play served a dual function: on the one hand it was a way in which to pay homage to Garrick’s dominating presence on the London stage; on the other, it was a public statement of intent on behalf of the new managers. It responded satirically to the popularity of all-sung opera and to what was seen as an increasingly excessive use of music within straight plays. Indeed, although opera was more popular in the last quarter of the century than it had been during Garrick’s tenure the all-sung variety was to all but disappear from the London stage by the late 1770s. Against the backdrop of the American War of Independence, this old argument was couched in strongly nationalistic terms, with Colman’s short satire exploiting (inter alia) stock characterisations of otherness (Irish and Italian; linguistic and musical). Taking New Brooms! as a case study, this paper will explore changing attitudes to the role of music in the theatre in the mid- to late 1770s and its implications within the wider context of British nationalism and Imperialism.
KW - Thomas Liney
KW - Niccolo Piccini
KW - cultural nationalism
KW - David Garrick
KW - George Colman the elder
M3 - Chapter
SN - 978-3-99012-401-7
BT - Music Preferred. Essays in Musicology, Cultural History and analysis in honour of Harry White
A2 - Elliott, Robin
A2 - Byrne Bodley, Lorraine
PB - Hollitzer Verlag
CY - Vienna
ER -