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Local Glories - Opera Houses on Main Street, Where Art and Community Meet (Hardcover)
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Local Glories - Opera Houses on Main Street, Where Art and Community Meet (Hardcover)
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Opera houses were everywhere. Many towns had at least one opera
house on Main Street by 1900. Hundreds of theater troupes, opera
companies, individual performers, and many sundry entertainers then
tred the boards of these halls as new rail lines could bring these
troupers to previously isolated hamlets in new and old sections of
the country. Five hundred troupes called "Tommers " performed only
Uncle Tom's Cabin. Sarah Bernhardt, Mark Twain, and John Philip
Sousa entertained thousands of townspeople as did innumerable minor
league magicians, circuses, lecturers, and theater companies. At
that time, more people saw live entertainment than at any other
period making this the Golden Age for this distinctly American
rural institution and the beginning of an era of mass entertainment
These halls, called "opera houses " to lend a touch of urban
sophistication, were often the only large place for public assembly
in a town. Aside from cultural events, they served as a public hall
for local activities like school graduations, recitations, sports
and town meetings, elections, and political rallies and even social
dances and roller skating parties. Some were housed in town or city
halls, but most were built by local entrepreneurs or committees
interested in promoting the town as well as attracting performers.
Considered local landmarks, often in distinctive architect-designed
buildings, they aroused considerable pride and reinforced town
identity. These once-proud halls, however, succumbed in the early
twentieth century as radio, movies, and later television and
changing tastes made them seem obsolete. Some were demolished, but
those that were abandoned to pigeons languished for decades until
discovered in the last three decades by stalwart revivers in small
towns across the county. The phoenix has indeed arisen. The
resuscitation of these opera houses today reflects the timeless
quest for cultural inspiration and for communal engagement to
counter the anonymity of the virtual world. These revived halls are
where "art and community " meet.
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