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DuBose Heyward - A Charleston Gentleman and the World of Porgy and Bess (Paperback)
Loot Price: R532
Discovery Miles 5 320
You Save: R102
(16%)
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DuBose Heyward - A Charleston Gentleman and the World of Porgy and Bess (Paperback)
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List price R634
Loot Price R532
Discovery Miles 5 320
You Save R102 (16%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In 1924 DuBose Heyward (1885-1940) was a businessman absorbed in
his Charleston heritage. One year later he was the world-famous
author of Porgy, the first major southern novel to portray blacks
without condescension. Just a decade later George Gershwin had
transformed Heyward's book into an opera that would become one of
the most enduring masterworks of American music.As a young man
Heyward was immersed in the Gullah culture of his city. Especially
through his mother, a performer and interpreter of Gullah life in
folktale and song, he discovered the gateway into the fascinating
world he would immortalize in the characters of Porgy, Bess, Maria,
and other denizens of Charleston's Catfish Row. In this full-dress
biography Heyward is seen for the first time as a southerner who
overcame social restrictions to perceive humanity beyond the class
and color lines. Drawing on nearly fifty years of private papers
and on previously untapped personal correspondence, this book
places Heyward in the social and cultural framework of his time and
marks the power and empathy of his extraordinary achievement. Until
now, Heyward's role in the writing of George Gershwin's acclaimed
opera Porgy and Bess has remained almost unknown. He wrote the
libretto singlehandedly, and nearly half the arias are by him. Long
thought to have been merely an assistant to Gershwin, he actually
was involved in most phases of the production. Although the opera
eclipsed Heyward's book, it was Gershwin's foundation stone. Mainly
known today as the author of Porgy, Heyward was a versatile artist
equally at ease with verse, short fiction, novels, plays, and
Hollywood screenwriting. He and his wife Dorothy helped to energize
the nascent black theater movement in New York. A cofounder of the
Poetry Society of South Carolina, the first regional poetry circle
in America, Heyward became a vigorous promoter of southern writing
that was to peak in the great southern literary renaissance. Pulled
by tradition into a way of life he did not completely accept, he
developed a growing social conscience through writing. He began as
a social conservative but ended his life as a staunch progressive
committed to the advancement of African Americans.
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