Harry Lawrence Freeman
Harry Lawrence Freeman was a United States opera composer, conductor, impresario and teacher. He was the first African-American to write an opera that was successfully produced. Freeman founded the Freeman School of Music and the Freeman School of Grand Opera, as well as several short-lived opera companies which gave first performances of his own compositions. During his life, he was known as "the black Wagner."
Biography
Harry Lawrence Freeman was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1869, to parents Lemuel Freeman and Agnes Silms-Freeman. Freeman learned to play the piano and was an assistant church organist by the age of 10. At the age of 18, he was inspired to begin composing his own music after attending a performance of Richard Wagner's opera Tannhäuser.Early career: Freeman Opera Company
By the age of 22, Freeman had founded the Freeman Opera Company in Denver, Colorado. His first opera, Epthelia, was performed at the Deutsches Theater in Denver in 1891. His second opera, The Martyr, premiered at the same theater on August 16, 1893. It was also produced by the Freeman Opera Company, and concerned an Egyptian nobleman put to death for accepting the religion of Jehovah. The Freeman Opera Company went on to produce The Martyr in Chicago in October 1893 and in Cleveland in 1894. This was the first opera in the United States to be produced by an all-Black production company. The Martyr is also listed by John Warthen Struble as "produced in Denver, first known opera by an African-American composer." Although this is clearly incorrect given the staging of Epthelia two years earlier, Freeman was certainly a pioneering classical composer in the African-American community.In 1894, Freeman returned to live in Cleveland, and began formal training in music theory under Johann Heinrich Beck, conductor of the Cleveland Symphony. In 1898, Freeman married Charlotte Loise Thomas, a woman from Charleston, South Carolina who sang soprano. Two years later, Charlotte gave birth to Freeman's son Valdo, and the same year, the Cleveland Orchestra gave readings of excerpts from Freeman's operas. For the next decade, the new family lived in Cleveland, Chicago, and Xenia, Ohio, where Freeman was director of the music program at Wilberforce University in 1902 and 1903.
Harlem: Negro Grand Opera Company
Around 1908, the Freeman family moved to the Harlem neighborhood of New York City. In 1912, ragtime composer Scott Joplin, who was then living in New York, asked Freeman's help in revising his three-act opera, "Treemonisha," production of which had stalled the previous year. The extent of Freeman's help is unknown. In 1920, he opened the Salem School of Music on 133rd Street in Harlem, later renamed Freeman School of Music. Also in 1920, he founded the Negro Grand Opera Company, which produced several productions of his own works. Freeman's wife Carlotta and his son Valdo, a baritone, sang principal roles in many of the Negro Grand Opera Company's productions.In addition to grand opera, Freeman wrote stage music and served as musical director for vaudeville and musical theater companies in the early 1900s. These included Ernest Hogan's Musical Comedy Company, of which Carlotta Freeman was the prima donna; the Cole-Johnson African-American musical theater company, and the John Larkins Musical Comedy Company. He was musical director and wrote additional music for the Hogan's Musical Comedy Company production Rufus Rastus, which premiered on January 29, 1906 at the American Theatre. He wrote the music for the musical comedy Captain Rufus, which premiered August 12, 1907 at the Harlem Music Hall. He was guest conductor and composer/music director of the pageant O Sing a New Song at the Chicago World's Fair in 1934.
Voodoo is perhaps Freeman's best known work. It deals with the cult of that name in Louisiana. Although Freeman finished composing the opera in 1914, it was not premiered until fourteen years later. On September 10, 1928, at Palm Garden at 310 West 52nd Street in New York's Broadway district, with an all-black cast. A May 20, 1928 concert performance of Voodoo was broadcast live on New York radio station WGBS, which Elise Kirk identifies as one of the earliest operas composed by an American to be broadcast on radio. It was the first opera by an African-American to be presented on Broadway. Its score combines themes from spirituals, Southern melodies, jazz, and traditional Italian opera.
Freeman received the prestigious Harmon Foundation Award in 1930 for achievement in music.
At New York's Steinway Hall in 1930, Freeman accompanied at the piano a performance of excerpts from The Martyr, The Prophecy, The Octoroon, Plantation, Vendetta and Voodoo.
Death and obscurity
Freeman died of a heart ailment at his home at 214 West 127th Street, New York City on March 24, 1954. His wife Carlotta died only three months later. The last couple of decades of his life were marked with frustration as he struggled to get any performances of his work. Almost all of his music was unpublished at the time of his death, and no recordings of his work have ever been released commercially. Twenty-one of his operas, as well as many of his other works, survive in Freeman's own manuscripts, and are kept in a collection of his papers at Columbia University.List of works
Freeman composed at least twenty-three operas, Many, including a massive tetralogy Zululand which filled over 2,000 pages of score, were never performed. In addition to composing the music, Freeman wrote his own librettos for almost all of his operas.Freeman's works for stage include:
- Epthalia, opera
- The Martyr, opera in two acts, libretto by the composer
- Nada, opera in three acts, libretto by the composer
- Zuluki
- An African Kraal, opera in one act, libretto by the composer
- The Octoroon, opera in four acts with prologue, libretto by the composer
- Valdo, opera in one act with intermezzo, libretto by the composer
- Captain Rufus, musical comedy
- The Tryst, opera in one act, libretto by the composer
- The Prophecy, opera in one act, libretto by the composer
- The Plantation, opera in three acts, libretto by the composer
- Athalia, opera in three acts with prologue, libretto by the composer
- Vendetta, opera in three acts, libretto by the composer
- American Romance, jazz opera
- Voodoo, opera in three acts, libretto by the composer
- Leah Kleschna. Libretto by the composer, after the play of C. M. S. McLellan
- Allah, opera, based on H. Rider Haggard's novels
- The Zulu King, opera, based on H. Rider Haggard's novels
- The Slave, symphonic poem
- Uzziah
- Zululand, a four-opera cycle based on H. Rider Haggard's novel Nada, the Lily. The titles of the individual operas are Chaka, The Ghost-Wolves, The Stone-Witch, and Umslopogaas and Nada. All were unperformed.
- The Loves of Pompeii, a song cycle
- My Son, a cantata
- The Slave, a symphonic poem
- Salome, a ballet with chorus
Influence