Carlisle Sessions Floyd (June 11, 1926 – September 30, 2021) was an American composer primarily known for his operas. These stage works, for which he wrote not only the music but also the librettos, typically engage with themes from the American South, particularly the Post-civil war South, the Great Depression and rural life. His best known opera, Susannah, is based on a story from the Biblical Apocrypha, transferred to contemporary rural Tennessee, and written for a Southern dialect. It was premiered at Florida State University in 1955, with Phyllis Curtin in the title role. When it was staged at the New York City Opera the following year, the reception was initially mixed; some considered it a masterpiece, while others degraded it as a 'folk opera'. Subsequent performances led to an increase in Susannah's reputation and the opera quickly became among the most performed of American operas.
In 1976, he became M. D. Anderson professor at the University of Houston. He co-founded the Houston Opera Studio for the training of young singers. Floyd is regarded as the "Father of American opera".[1]
Life and career
Youth and education
Floyd was born in Latta, South Carolina, on June 11, 1926, to Carlisle and Ida (née Fenegan) Floyd.[2][3] His father was his namesake and a Methodist minister at the local church;[4] on both sides his family was descended from among the first European immigrants to the Carolinas.[5] He had a sister, Ermine, along with a sizable extended family.[6] Being raised in the Southern United States, Floyd would have been well aquatinted with typical Southern ideals of the time, such as Southern hospitality, extra caution to avoid offending others, Protestantism and a general disliking towards the Northerners.[7] Also prominent in his Southern upbringing were revival meetings, and the "small-town bigotry," which later influenced his work.[8][n 1] Though the family was not familiar with contemporary classical music,[9] Floyd's mother enjoyed music and poetry, often hosting family hymn singing events.[10] She also gave Floyd his first piano lessons.[11] Floyd attended North High School in North Carolina.[12]
While at FSU, Floyd gradually became interested in composition. His first opera was Slow Dusk to his own libretto, and was produced at Syracuse in 1949. His next opera, The Fugitives, was seen at Tallahassee in 1951 but was withdrawn.[5]
Floyd's third opera was his greatest success: Susannah. It was premiered at Florida State at the Ruby Diamond Auditorium[11] in February 1955, with Phyllis Curtin in the title role and Mack Harrell as the Reverend Olin Blitch. The following year, the opera was given at the New York City Opera, winning him international recognition.[1]Erich Leinsdorf conducted, with Curtin and Norman Treigle as Blitch. The opera received the New York Music Critics' Circle Award.[1] It was selected to be America's official operatic entry at the 1958 World's Fair in Brussels,[1][11] directed by Frank Corsaro, with Curtin, Treigle and Richard Cassilly.[11]
Floyd's next opera was The Sojourner and Mollie Sinclair, which was a comedy around Scottish settlers of the Carolinas. Patricia Neway and Treigle created the title roles with Rudel conducting.[16] The opera Markheim (after Robert Louis Stevenson) was first shown at the New Orleans Opera Association in 1966, with Treigle (to whom it was dedicated) and Audrey Schuh heading the cast. Floyd himself served as stage director.[17]
After retirement from the university in Houston in 1996, Floyd lived in Tallahassee again.[11] He had composed a Piano Sonata in the 1950s (1957, two years after Susannah) for Rudolf Firkušný, who played it at a Carnegie Hall recital, but it languished until Daniell Revenaugh recorded it in 2009 at the age of 74. Revenaugh worked with the composer in learning the piece (Floyd himself had never learned it), and their rehearsal sessions and the live recording itself were filmed for posterity. The recording was made on the Alma-Tadema Steinway that graced the White House during the presidencies of Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson.[21]
The Houston Grand Opera produced a new opera by Floyd on March 5, 2016, Prince of Players, a chamber opera about the 17th-century actor, Edward Kynaston, conducted by Summers. A live recording of the premiere was nominated for a Grammy Award.[1]
Floyd died on September 30, 2021, in Tallahassee, at the age of 95.[2][22] He had no children, but was survived by four nieces, the daughters of Ermine.[11] His publisher Boosey and Hawkes, announced his death and did not relay the cause.[2]
Music
Legacy and reputation
Floyd is primarily known for his operas, which make up the bulk of his compositional output.[3] Like Wagner and Menotti, Floyd wrote the librettos to his operas.[5] His best-known opera,[3]Susannah, is regarded as his magnum opus.[11] The National Public Radio's Tom Huizenga posits the work as suitable contender to be considered the archetypal "Great American Opera".[2][n 2] Patricia Racette declared that "If it is not the greatest American opera, it's certainly among the great American operas".[2] According to Opera News, Susannah is the most frequently performed American opera after Gershwin's Porgy and Bess and Menotti's Amahl and the Night Visitors.[11]The Daily Telegraph, however, claimed it is the most "widely performed" American opera, purportedly outnumbering some works by Mozart, Verdi and Puccini.[13] In addition to Gershwin and Menotti, Floyd stands with Adams, Barber, Bernstein, Glass and Rorem in the pantheon of preeminent 20th-century American opera composers.[3]
^Floyd later reflected on these, saying "The thing that horrified me already as a child about revival meetings was mass coercion, people being forced to conform to something against their will without even knowing what they were being asked to confess or receive".[8]
^The idea of the "Great American Opera" originates from an earlier debate concerning the Great American Novel.[23]