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High Performance
At
the most recent Association of Yale Alumni Assembly, panelists and
delegates considered the role of the performing arts in a liberal
education. by
Mark Alden Branch
February 2001
It was
a polite and high-minded presentation typical of the Association
of Yale Alumni's twice-annual Assemblies:
Representatives of Yale's music and drama programs stood up in the
Law School Auditorium to recount the history of the performing arts
at Yale. But halfway through the talk by Thomas Duffy, the director
of University bands, the calm was shattered by a brassy rendition
of "Bulldog" by a company of the Yale Precision Marching Band, which
had burst through the rear doors to pay raucous tribute to its leader.
The episode helped
to illustrate two of the central points of the Assembly,
which took place October 26-28 and focused on the performing arts at Yale. First,
the existence of top-flight arts programs in a University setting acts as a kind
of tonic, offering a creative counterweight to the kind of analytical activity
that characterizes much of academic life. Second, and more simply, the Band's
invasion confirmed Yale College dean Richard Brodhead's assertion that "there
is a will to performance on the part of Yale students. They're willing to be spectators
on occasion, but they want to perform most of all."
Delegates to the
Assembly attended three panels on different aspects of the performing arts at
Yale. They also were treated to behind-the-scenes tours of arts-related spaces,
including theaters, the new Irving S. Gilmore Music Library, and the School of
Drama's costume and set shops and saw special after-dinner performances in the
residential colleges. The Assembly also featured appearances by two distinguished
alumni: School of Music graduate Joseph Polisi '83MusAD, president of the Juilliard
School of Music, addressed the Saturday night dinner in Commons, and former Yale
Glee Club director Fenno Heath '49, '52MMus, conducted the delegates themselves
in an impromptu chorus.
As more than one
speaker pointed out, the histories of both theater and music at Yale predate by
decades their introduction into the curriculum.
Undergraduates began
making music in more formal ways with the formation of the Glee Club and the Beethoven
Club after the Civil War. Later, music instruction began to be made available
to students under Gustave Stoeckel -- although they did not receive academic credit.
Stoeckel became the first professor of music in 1890, and the School of Music
was founded four years later.
Drama came into the
curriculum later, but followed a similar trajectory. While in the 18th century
students could be fined for performing in or even attending plays, the 19th century
saw a rise in student interest in theater as an extracurricular exercise, culminating
in the founding of the Yale Dramatic Association (the Dramat) in 1900. Then, as
English, French and German literature began to enter the curriculum, drama "sneaked
in," as Dramat member Graham Norris '03 put it. What became the School of Drama
began in 1925.
If the presence of
the Schools of Drama and Music help distinguish a Yale education from those of
its peer institutions (no other Ivy League university has a school of music or
such a prominent drama school), the converse is also true: Being in the midst
of a university helps distinguish the schools from the conservatories with which
they compete for students. School of Music dean Robert Blocker said the opportunities
the University affords are critical for his students. "We need educated musicians
broadened in their intellects so they can be cultural leaders," said Blocker.
"A higher percentage of our students than ever now take courses in Yale College."
While both schools
have had a dramatic impact on their respective fields -- 28 of the 46 winners
of the Pulitzer Prize in music have been Yale faculty or graduates, and the School
of Drama's list of alumni is a Who's Who of American theater, film, and
television -- they both face financial challenges in order to continue to attract
top talent, their leaders said. Unlike the Graduate School, Yale's professional
schools do not offer full funding to their students. While some financial aid
is available, most music and drama students must take out loans in order to pay
for their education -- a daunting prospect, said outgoing School of Drama dean
Stan Wojewodski, when the average starting salary of his graduates is $14,500
a year. Competing drama programs are now offering more generous financial aid,
and students at musical conservatories such as Juilliard and Curtis get free tuition,
room and board, and a stipend. In response to a question from a delegate, Blocker
and Wojewodski estimated that each school would need an endowment of about $150
million in order to fully fund their students' educations.
In addition to discussing
the state of the professional schools, participants also examined Yale College's
undergraduate programs in music and theater studies. Brodhead noted that the arts
are "the one extracurricular activity at Yale that is also a curricular activity,"
wondering aloud why there is no major in "hockey studies." Director of undergraduate
studies in music Leon Plantinga talked about the need to balance performance and
musical analysis in undergraduate education, so that "the performers are grounded
intellectually, and so that on the other hand nobody studies music as simply an
adventure on paper." Theater studies director Marc Robinson described how his
program has swelled in size since a cap on enrollment was lifted, noting the strain
this growth has put on Yale's performance spaces.
Performance space
and other facilities was described as the other major issue facing the arts at
Yale. Blocker said that "when I came here, I told the President these were absolutely
the worst music facilities I have seen anywhere. We have since improved them -- with paint." But Yale's music facilities -- including 435 College Street and Sprague,
Stoeckel, and Hendrie Halls -- are now slated for a major overhaul that will provide
more practice rooms for both undergraduate and graduate musicians. New theater
spaces are included in the University's Broadway redevelopment and in many of
the residential college renovations, and the School of Drama will see its facilities
renovated as part of the $250-million Arts Area Plan.
But Brodhead
said he was skeptical that even these plans will put an end to the
space crunch that Yale's performing arts institutions have long
experienced. "The arts require more space and more money all the
time," he said. "By building new facilities, we only create more
desire. But which would you rather have, no desire or infinite desire?
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