2/1/2020
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Theater: A dramatic makeover for the Stephen Foster Memorial Sunday, March 30, 2003 By Patricia Lowry, Post-Gazette Architecture Critic It is a striking bit of serendipity that on the all-American day that Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died -- July 4, 1826 -- Stephen Collins Foster, the ďŹ rst authentically American composer, was born in a little frame house in Lawrenceville that came to be known as the White Cottage. Foster's inspiration came from disparate sources, including slave songs, black-face minstrel songs and the African-American dialect he heard while working on the Cincinnati wharf as a clerk for his brother's steamboat company. He wrote 189 songs in his short, troubled life, and while some of his early minstrel lyrics have been criticized as racist, he derided what he called the "trashy and really offensive words" of that genre and sought to reform it. Re-creating the theater in the Certainly in the 19th century, Foster's melodic, sentimental ballads captured the spirit of place and struck a chord in the heart of every man and woman who ever longed for home or a lost love. Serenading college boys sang them in front of the Greencastle, Ind., home of young Josiah Kirby Lilly's grandparents in the 1870s, not long after Foster's death at age 37 in 1864. Then and there, Foster became Lilly's favorite composer for life. In 1930, tapping his pharmaceuticals fortune, Lilly began collecting early and contemporary editions of Foster's music, as well as his original manuscripts, letters, furniture, instruments and all things Foster, housing them in a stone cottage in suburban Indianapolis that he called Foster Hall.
Stephen Foster Memorial gives Buck Favorini, chairman of the University of Pittsburgh Theatre Arts Department, the technical improvements needed to create productions he once only dreamed about, such as the big musical Pitt plans for 2004. In addition to the Charity Randall and Henry Heymann theaters, the Stephen Foster Memorial houses memorabilia honoring its namesake. (Martha Rial, Post-Gazette) Related Coverage New Randall Theatre opens with 'Much Ado'
Memorializing Foster was in the air. In 1934, Henry Ford had the White Cottage, now dilapidated and devoid of paint, taken apart and moved to GreenďŹ eld Village, where he reassembled it and painted it sparkling white -- only to discover he had the wrong cottage. The Foster birthplace, which had been used as a wing of steelmaker Andrew Kloman's 1860s brick house, had been torn down in 1865 and replaced with a brick addition. No matter; another Foster memorial was in the works. In 1927, the Tuesday Musical Club, founded in 1889 by afuent female musicians, and University of Pittsburgh Chancellor John Bowman agreed to collaborate on a performance hall dedicated to Foster that would house the club's recitals. Bowman donated land adjacent old.post-gazette.com/printer.asp
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