Vol. XXIII No. 3
November 2007

The Sound and the Fury: Arts and 20th-Century Activism

Art cannot be separate from society. It is human expression. It improves society. It is not an elective in life’s curriculum, but an essential component. The beauty of the arts and their awesome power of communication are understood by all, and have been utilized by man since civilization’s very beginnings.

The potency of the performing arts is witnessed daily in Juilliard’s concert halls, theaters, and rehearsal rooms. As the School moves toward the 20th annual celebration of the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on January 21 in Paul Hall, it is an appropriate time to reflect on the effectiveness of the arts as a communicative tool in the struggle for social change

The arts and social activism have always gone hand-in-hand. After being refused permission to sing to an integrated audience in Constitution Hall, contralto Marian Anderson made history on Easter Sunday in 1939 by singing to a crowd of 75,000 at a concert on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

“Dr. King delivered a universal message that was vital for our collective conscience and the evolution of this country,” observes James Houghton, Richard Rodgers Director of Juilliard’s Drama Division. “He had the discipline, courage, and ability to articulate, in a broad way, an essential question that changed us all for the better. At their best, the arts reflect the conscience of the community they serve—and that conscience is often revealed through art first. Dr. King taught us that we have a responsibility as artists to listen, to act upon, and to articulate questions of the collective conscience with relentless courage and at all costs.”

Throughout the 20th century, performing artists significantly informed the societal conscience through activism. From the earlier part of the century—represented by Martha Graham’s protest against war in the pain and suffering of her work Deep Song (1937), inspired by the Spanish Civil War (1936-1937)—to the later part of the century, in John Corigliano’s Symphony No. 1 (1991), which powerfully reflects upon great grief over friends lost to the AIDS epidemic, artistry has spurred social change.

Dr. King’s path was also informed by many great artists who blazed the trail prior to the mid-century civil rights rallies. In dance, Katherine Dunham established the first permanent, self-subsidized African-American dance company in the 1930s, and she continued to be a strong presence in dance and activism throughout her life. Her dramatic ballet Southland (1951) explored racial injustice as witnessed in a lynching, and protests the vicious power of hate. Dunham’s courageous stand against oppression at that time cost her dearly, and after the premiere of the work at the Opera House in Santiago, Chile, her applications for United States government support and subsidies were denied. Other choreographers followed her example, including Daniel McKayle, notably in his Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder (1959), a dance protest against the cruelty of chain gangs in the American South.

The American theater has been informed by writers such as Langston Hughes. A line from his poignant poem “A Dream Deferred” inspired the title of A Raisin in the Sun, which premiered in 1959 and was the first play produced on Broadway written by an African-American woman, Lorraine Hansberry, and directed by an African-American director, Lloyd Richards. Named the best play of 1959 by the New York Drama Critics’ Circle, it ran for nearly two years. The play was truly an education for Broadway’s largely white audiences because it introduced realities of African-American life in the 20th century, far removed from the comedic stereotypes of the day. It was also the first play that drew a large number of African-American patrons to the theater. In addition, A Raisin in the Sun addressed issues of feminism ahead of their time.

Page #

Event Information
A CELEBRATION OF MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.

Paul Hall
Monday, January 21, 2008 at 7:00 PM

Event Calendar