Formatted version
Berkeley: Cultural Programs
Cultural Programs and Activities
By the mid-1960s, the Berkeley campus had become a major
center of Bay Area cultural activity.
Earliest Cultural Activities
In the earliest years of the University's history, there
is recorded a "romantic Italian drama in three acts entitled Marco Spada"
presented by the University Dramatic Association on May 20, 1870. Along with
other early dramatic groups, this one was short-lived. Two student organizations,
the Durant Rhetorical Society, a carry-over from the College of California,
and the Neolaean Literary Society, organized in 1871, met at private homes for
literary or musical evenings. President Gilman initiated Friday afternoon University
assemblies at which faculty members or visitors spoke. After his resignation,
these programs became less regular.
During the 1880s public transportation to the campus improved
and a town began to grow up adjacent to the University. Private citizens began
to take interest in campus cultural affairs. An art collection and a gallery
in which to display it was acquired by the University in 1881 as a gift from
Henry D. Bacon of Oakland. The Berkeley Choral Society, a town and gown group
organized in 1885, supplied volunteer directors for a student orchestra and
the College Choir.
University-sponsored Cultural Events
In 1891, three faculty members, William Carey Jones,
William D. Armes, and George M. Richardson, sponsored the Berkeley Athenaeum
"to furnish the best possible public entertainment in letters, music and art
to the University and to the people of Berkeley, by drawing to the University
the best talent coming to the State." In 1892, Louis Dupont Syle, a serious
student of the theater, joined the English department faculty. Under his direction,
students produced full-length plays and presented them in rented halls and theaters
of Oakland and Berkeley.
Mrs. Phoebe A. Hearst, who became a Regent in 1897, established
the Minetti String Quartet in residence on the campus and opened her Berkeley
home for concerts and art lectures to which faculty members and students were
freely invited.
The Greek Theater
The gift of the Greek Theatre by William Randolph Hearst
in 1903 gave formal impetus to the presentation of music and drama on the campus.
A Musical and Dramatic Committee headed by Armes brought Sarah Bernhardt, Margaret
Anglin, Maude Adams, Luisa Tetrazzini, Ruth St. Denis, other famous artists,
and nationally recognized orchestras and concert bands to the Greek Theatre
stage. After a Department of Music was established in 1905, its chairman, J.
Fred Wolle, formed and directed a University of California Symphony Orchestra
composed of local professional musicians. In 1906, the English Club, at the
suggestion of Charles Mills Gayley, produced the first of an annual series of
Shakespearean plays in the Greek Theatre. Sunday Half-Hours of Music given by
talented amateurs were presented at the theatre free of charge from March to
October.
Cultural Activity Develops
Armes died in 1918 and was succeeded by Samuel J. Hume.
Hume's title was director of the Greek Theatre, but he managed all forms of
campus cultural affairs. He also developed student dramatic talent through the
organization of the Wheeler Hall Players, who gave indoor performances of modern
plays. Art exhibits from out of state appeared more frequently on campus through
Hume's efforts in the Western Association of Art Directors. Paul Steindorff,
San Francisco orchestra leader, was appointed University Choragus and directed
orchestral and choral groups composed of students, faculty members, and interested
Berkeleyans.
Hume resigned in 1923 and a new policy for campus cultural
affairs was established. The management of professional attractions was made
the responsibility of a Committee on Music and Drama with Professor William
Popper as chairman. Responsibility for student productions was delegated to
the Associated Students. This policy was followed until 1941 when the Department
of Dramatic Art was established and the student-sponsored Little Theater which
had flourished under the direction of Irving Pichel and, later, Edwin Duerr,
was transferred to its jurisdiction and became the University Theater.
Popper retired in 1945 and Baldwin Woods, director of University
of California Extension, was made chairman of the Committee on Music and Drama
(later Committee on Drama, Lectures and Music). The lecture department of the
University Extension assumed responsibility for the business management of the
committee's work. As funds became available in postwar years, the scope of the
committee's work was widened.
In 1955, Donald Coney, the University librarian, became chairman
of the committee. In 1960, the committee's budget was transferred from University
of California Extension to the campus. At the same time, its name was again
changed to Committee for Arts and Lectures. The programs of the committee were
enriched by an allocation of funds from the Garret McEnerney bequest to support
its work.
Venues
From the beginning, the development of cultural programs
on the campus was hampered by the lack of adequate halls, theaters, and galleries.
The situation was partly relieved by the remodeling of the "old power house"
art gallery and the completion of the Alfred Hertz Memorial Hall of Music in
1958. The next year, Kroeber Hall with its Worth Ryder Art Gallery and Lowie
Museum (anthropology) exhibit space further relieved the problem. Performance
of the drama and the dance remained confined, however, to the restrictions of
the lecture platform in Wheeler Auditorium.
Construction began in 1966 on a new auditorium-theater building
that accommodates a small multiform theater seating 500 to 600 persons, and
a large auditorium seating 2,000 persons. The Regents also authorized construction
of a University Art Museum to include both an art museum and the Hans Hofmann
Art Gallery.
Committee for Arts and Lectures
Cooperation between the Associated Students and the Committee
for Arts and Lectures was maintained continuously. The committee assumed responsibility
for management of large scale affairs such as an annual Folk Music Festival
until they became well established. It also joined forces with the Associated
Students to organize a University night at the San Francisco Spring Opera.
The committee also handled ticket and business matters for
the Departments of Dramatic Art and Music, for All-University Concert series,
and for the Intercampus Art Exchanges.
In 1963, the committee sponsored 381 events attended by 215,630
people. University events handled by the committee were attended by 45,361 people
yearly.
source
Musical Organizations
Symphony Orchestra
A symphony orchestra has been on the Berkeley campus
since the founding of the music department in 1906. By the mid-1960s, the orchestra
presented four pairs of concerts on the campus each year, with a repertoire
ranging from Bach through Schoenberg to contemporary music. At one pair of concerts
each spring, the winner of a student contest was presented as soloist.
The University Chorus
The University Chorus, also begun in 1906, was organized
in in 1936 by the noted composer, Randall Thompson. In 1951, Edward Lawton,
who succeeded Thompson as conductor, formed the Repertory Chorus, a smaller,
more specialized group that explored unusual and early music. The Collegium
Musicum, a small group of singers and players founded in 1960, presented many
concerts and had one performance of songs by Monteverdi and Frescobaldi recorded
by Cambridge Records.
Noon Concerts
Since 1953, the music department sponsored a series of
weekly noon concerts on campus. For the most part, the performances were by
student soloists and groups initiated by the students themselves.
Marching Band
The University of California Marching Band was formed
in 1891 to perform for military drills and University ceremonies. Early in its
history it became associated with official events and celebrations of the state
of California. Finally, in 1923, the marching band was formed as an activity
of the ASUC and began performing at football games and other University events.
The system of self-government within the band was developing at this time.
In 1926, when the ASUC took over the financial sponsorship
of the band for the first time, the band underwent an extensive reorganization
with the advent of its first formal constitution. By the mid-1960s, the band
was comprised of 120 members with 20 reserves and was the only university band
in the country that maintained a residence hall for its members, Tellefsen Hall,
purchased by the band alumni in 1960. The band performed at such events as the
San Francisco Mid-Winter Fair of 1894, the dedication of the State Capitol in
1909, the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition, the Golden Gate Exposition of 1939,
and the 1958 Brussels World's Fair.
The Straw Hat Band
The Straw Hat Band was an informal organization within
the marching band formed after World War II. This band took over activities
of the marching band at the close of football season each year, following athletic
teams (mainly basketball, though the band also appeared at track meets, crew
races, baseball games, and rugby matches) to perform at many of their road games.
During football season the band appeared at the traditional Friday noon rallies
prior to the games. At first, members wore a variety of hats, but at the state
fair in Sacramento in 1950, they purchased a quantity of straw hats and wore
them ever since.
Glee Club
The University of California Men's Glee Club, founded in the 1890s, was a major concert, musical entertainment and spirit unit on campus and on tours around the state for about 100 years. Except for a brief period in the 1930s it operated as a student activity under the ASUC not in the Music Department. At some point in the late 1930s, the Glee Club was linked or partnered with the women's choral group, the Treble Clef Society that had been founded in the 19th century as the Ladies Mandolin Society.
Their modern paired identity as Glee Club-Treble Clef began during the war when both groups were conducted by Rochelle Paul Weiman, and then later, from 1946 to 1950, by Walter Nollner, later to become Glee Club director at Williams College and finally at Princeton University. His successor was Robert Commanday, from 1950 to 1963, subsequently to become the Music and Dance Critic of the San Francisco Chronicle.
During these 13 years of their highest activity, the groups of between 55 to 70 members each, annually gave joint concerts, fall and spring, two performances each. Together they sang some six major choral works with the San Francisco Symphony, operated an annual High School Singing Festival which brought 60 high school choirs to the campus one Saturday each fall, and maintained an active social program within the groups. Glee Club and often Treble Clef, gave performances off campuses in the area, and for major University functions such as the Christmas Meeting. Glee Club in particular was called on many times during the year to provide the music at Charter Day, the dedication of buildings and monuments, at large student events like freshman orientation and the Big Game Rally. Throughout their history, the two groups were administered by a corps of student managers, the managerial as well as the ASUC support being central to the tradition and strength of the groups.
From its inception in 1948 until the formation within Treble Clef of a small women's sextet, Jade, and of a Madrigal Group of 12 of singers from both groups 14 years later, the Glee Club Senior Men's Octet was the singular a cappella group on campus, always a part of the Glee Club. It was featured on the groups' concerts and pursued an active independent life singing around the Bay Area on invitation.
The Glee Club's most highly anticipated events were its annual tours of the state during the winter break, singing concert programs nightly and at high school assemblies during the day. A few of the tours took the Glee Club from one end of the state to the other, and one toured the men through six western states. In 1957, under the sponsorship of the Mainichi Newspapers, the UC Men's Glee Club became the first American college musical group to visit Japan after World War II, performing 22 concerts in 30 days to capacity audiences comprising many tens of thousands of Japanese citizens. On many of the concerts, male glee clubs from major Japanese universities participated as guests; fellowship among all the singing students was a major aspect of the tour project. At the opening concert in Tokyo, the Japanese royal family headed by the Crown Prince, the current Emperor, was in attendance and received Robert Commanday and the student managers.
The year 1962-63 was the most active. In addition to the fall and spring concerts, the Glee Club's January tour in the state, and the typical on-campus appearances, the groups gave performances on television, made recordings, and Treble Clef made a concert tour to Hawaii during the Easter recess. The women's a cappella group, Jade (a sextet), and the mixed Madrigal Group of 12, founded that year performed on the concerts as extra features, along with the Glee Club Octet. Finally, during the summer of 1963, the Glee Club made a European Concert Tour of 40 concerts in eight weeks in nine countries.
Following Robert Commanday's resignation in the summer of 1963, the groups were led by a succession of directors, James McKelvy, James Fankhauser and Elizabeth Davidson, Donald Aird, Milton Williams, Carol Young, Tony Pasqua and Mark Sumner. Following the great changes in campus life and culture that were launched with the Free Speech Movement in 1964 and the subsequent major adjustments in the university's requirements, curriculum and class schedules, it proved difficult to sustain the size and activity level of the Glee Club and Treble Clef, and the ASUC's choral activities took a different form.
Treble Clef Society
The Treble Clef Society, the women's choral organization
at Berkeley, was in existence after 1870 and performed before audiences that
have included the United Nations Delegation, community concert associations,
and the Armed Services, with programs ranging from musical comedy selections
to premiere performances of contemporary choral works. The group made appearances
at choral clinics and at high schools and other colleges in order to stimulate
student interest in choral music. As with the Glee Club, all business procedures,
concerts, and public relations were handled by student managers.
The Jade Ensemble was formed in 1963 by members of the Treble
Clef Society who took part in the tour of Hawaii. Its purpose was to provide
variety and contrast to the tour program and its repertoire concentrated on
songs in the modern or ballad style.
The Madrigal Singers
The Madrigal Singers, composed of from four to 12 members
of the Glee Club and the Treble Clef Society, performed such works as the madrigals
of Weelkes, Morley, Byrd, and Monteverdi, popular in the 16th and 17th centuries.
The group sang German, French, Italian, and old English madrigals.
Copyright © 1999-2007
The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Last updated 11/30/07.