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M.
Tracey Ober '85 is a journalist based in New York City.
AYA
Contact: Information on the AYA and its programs is available at
www.aya.yale.edu
or by writing to Rose Alumni House; Box 209010; New Haven, CT 06520-9010.
This
space is made available to the Association of Yale Alumni by the
Yale Alumni Magazine.
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News From the Alumni House
300 Ambassadors of Song Celebrate Yale's 300th
March
2002
by M.
Tracey Ober '85
This
column is about audacity, unfettered Eli audacity,
and the responsibility incumbent upon us as Yale alumni to honor
our 300-year history.
It
started out as a how-I-spent-my-summer piece that described how
my sense of "alma" had been renewed for "mater" Yale while I traipsed
around Great Britain and Russia as an "ambassador of song" with
430 fellow Yale Glee Club alumni and groupies, ranging in age from
6 to 86.
I thought
a lot about our school last year, not only as a participant in Yale's
Tercentennial celebrations both here and abroad, but also as part
of the "mission" of the Yale Alumni Chorus, which was formed in
1998 with an inaugural concert tour to China. My mission -- a
word instilled in us by YAC visionary and executive producer Mark
Dollhopf '77 -- entails sharing the passion of choral singing
with Yale alumni across generations and relaying this joy and harmony
across the world.
I looked
back over the yearlong planning craziness, when those of us on Dollhopf's
organizing committee -- the "kitchen cabinet" -- confronted
the challenges of moving 430 people of all ages and generations
around various countries and cultures on a constantly changing itinerary
subject to, say, the whims of a world-renowned conductor or an underpaid
Russian bureaucrat. And I wondered, "What were we thinking?"
Only
a bunch of overachieving Yalies who never properly learned the meaning
of the word "no" would dare to pull off a concert tour of such scale.
But more important, there's something about Yale's profound singing
tradition that made this group actually believe the world would
somehow be a better place if we did pull it off.
Traveling
en masse in St. Petersburg, Moscow, Wales, and London, we certainly
made an impression. We could hardly fail to as such a Goliath group
singing in prominent public places and sporting identical white
Panama hats with blue bands designed as part of the "haberdashery"
of our tour. (Do other tour groups even have a haberdasher?)
I loved it when we tested the acoustics in a St. Petersburg train
station with Yale songs and yodels, a gesture that reached at least
one young Russian couple standing nearby. They pantomimed their
pleasure, and I sputtered out what I thought was "thank you" in
their language. Their smiles widened, and I can only assume they
were thoroughly amused -- whether at our singing, our hats, or
my Russian.
I also
loved the grander gesture of our final Tercentennial Tour concert,
held in St. Paul's Cathedral in London with none other than the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. My breath escaped me as I watched
the regal, rainbow-hued procession of academic flags, robes, and
banners float down St. Paul's massive nave aisle before the concert.
Carrying a banner at the rear, I looked up misty-eyed to see a splendid
chorus in elegant ebony gowns and white tie and tails spread out
beneath the impressive dome.
When
Elihu Yale gave a bunch of books to a struggling theological college
in Connecticut 300 years ago, could he have envisioned such a spectacle?
Later,
we rented out Britain's equally venerable Royal Courts of Justice,
swing-dancing, drinking, and blithely snapping photos where a security
detail normally prevents anyone from even holding a camera. At the
party, YAC director David Connell '91DMA, who has led the undergraduate
Glee Club for nearly ten years, wryly remarked that only Yalies
could host a celebration in two of London's grandest institutions -- St.
Paul's Cathedral and England's supreme courts -- and not recognize
the audacity of it all.
We
accept such privileges as part of being Yalies, but we also must
accept the serious responsibility that comes with representing one
of the world's finest academic institutions. When we stopped by
the Welsh gravesite of Elihu Yale, our contingent of clergy planned
a service to honor Yale and Yalies. We welcomed top officials from
Wrexham to join top officials from Yale, including Vice President
Linda Koch Lorimer and Dean
Richard Brodhead, at the church. According to local media, our visit
helped heal an institutional rift between Yale College in Wales
and Yale University in New Haven.
Maybe.
But
more important, we came together to sing. We know the same songs,
albeit overlaid on vastly different undergraduate memories (and
somewhat different harmonies). We share the same Yale, and as the
Yale Alumni Chorus, we carry the same quirky but worthy legacy of
friendship, grace, and goodwill around the world.
That's
Eli audacity, but it's also Eli responsibility, and I, along with
my fellow alumni singers, take seriously our supremely rewarding
mission.
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