|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
In the 1890s, feisty Tod Sloan (1874-1933) abandoned the
centuries-old jockey tradition of riding in a straight sitting
position and instead crouched low on the neck of his horse. The
result was not only a string of victories for young Sloan but also
a revolution in horse racing. In this entertaining book,
award-winning author John Dizikes recounts the remarkable story of
the Indiana boy who rose from obscurity to become the most famous
jockey in the United States and Great Britain at the turn of the
century. Dizikes evokes the turbulent, colorful world of horse
racing and gambling in which Tod Sloan rocketed to celebrity -- and
from which he was just as dramatically ejected.
Sloan's innovative riding style helped to transform horse racing
into the first nationally popular spectator sport, drawing in huge
crowds and vast amounts of betting money. But Sloan's career was
crushingly ended by those who resented and envied him. A dandy, a
big spender, a man whose company women loved, Sloan related to
horses in an almost magical way, yet foundered in his dealings with
people. This book is the biography of a diminutive man who lived in
large style, and lives on in George M. Cohan's musical Little
Johnny Jones and Ernest Hemingway's short story "My Old Man". The
book is also much more -- a fascinating cultural history that
illuminates the history of horse racing and betting, the
democratization of sport, changing conceptions of masculinity, the
hypocrisy of Victorian morality, the lionizing and demonizing of
celebrities, and a variety of other inviting topics.
"I hear the chorus, it is a grand opera, Ah this indeed is
music-this suits me."-Walt Whitman, "Song of Myself" America has
had a love affair with opera in all its forms since it was first
performed here in colonial times. This book-the first comprehensive
cultural and social history of musical theater in the United
States-includes vignettes of productions, personalities, audiences,
and theaters throughout the country from 1735 to the present day.
John Dizikes tells how opera, steeped in European aristocratic
tradition, was transplanted into the democratic cultural
environment of America. With a wealth of colorful detail, he
describes how operas were performed and received in small towns and
in big cities, and he brings to life little-known people involved
with opera as well as famous ones such as Oscar Hammerstein, Jenny
Lind, Gustav Mahler, Enrico Caruso, Milton Cross, Maria Callas, and
Leonard Bernstein. He tells us about the often overlooked African
American contribution to operatic history, from nineteenth-century
minstrel shows to the work of Scott Joplin and Marian Anderson, and
he discusses operetta and Broadway musicals, recognized everywhere
in the world as one of the triumphs of American twentieth-century
art. Dizikes considers the increasingly diverse operatic audiences
of the twentieth century, shaped by records, radio, and television,
and he describes the places where opera now flourishes-not only New
York, Chicago, and San Francisco, but also St. Louis, Boston,
Dallas, Houston, Santa Fe, Seattle, and elsewhere. Generously
illustrated and engagingly written, the book is a fitting tribute
to its subject-as grand and entertaining as opera itself.
|
You may like...
Ouro Negro
Moacir Santos
CD
R679
Discovery Miles 6 790
October 1
Hardcover
R4,802
Discovery Miles 48 020
|