SThe Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine Page I ; ; ... , -jj "V -7 (' . J F!ic Lyne, the Coloratura Soprano of Mile. Pa1owa'a Opera Company. SO rei METHINO really new In the production ' of rrtnd opera oc curs so seldom that lta adrent asaumea the proportions of an arent worthr- of , more than . casual mention. ' Such a departure from the well-worn thorough fare of , opera per formances .'In New recently gare ; keen York' City pleaaiir '' to Jaded pntrons of that form of. pub' He entertainment, and, perhaps, . Jastlficd a hope of further derelop- meats along similar lines. ' Lant Reason, and for several sea sons past, "Madams Butterfly,", an -opera compoHod by Puccini with a libretto adapted : from De!sco's play with the same title, was the most popular work In the repertory ot the Metropolitan Opera Company. Like the play, this opera depeuds for. Its suceens mainly upon Its se- ductlve exotic scene and central (Character.. It .enacts the affectmg love tragedy of. a naive and trust log. Japanese 'girl amid ths sur roundings) and In the .'deftly, sug gnstcd afuogphere of. her native home. . " : , ' ' ' In presenting the opera; of. "Madame -Butterfly," however, th lyric soprano. enacting the role of heroine baa been one or another of several prima' dnnne who bora not the faintest resemblance to a Jap anese lrl, n,r'semed to have tha rtmotest 'conception of the. char acter and national traits of this en- -paging heroine of an International tragedy. ' They were Italian, French or American hopelewly Occidental - opera alngers; and that was all.' Their interpretations cost tha' af fecting - story the chief element of the cbsrm felt In the reading of John Luther Long'a little master piece, namely, a .visualisation ot the real Japanese Clc-Clo-6an, ' tta , heroine and the opera's main Justi fication for seeing the light of day. - Now, suddenly, this ponderous error Is corrected, and by the sim plest and most direct means. " "Madame Butterfly.' Is lifted out of literary commonplace .by a singer who Is as Japanese as the heroine, Cio-Clo-San, herself a capable op era lyrlo soprano born In Japan of Japanese parents and educated and trained In her art In Toklo. Her name ta Tamakl Mlura, and ber opera Introduction to Western , audiences stands to the credit, of' Mile. Anna Pevlowa, the celebrated ' Russian daaseuse. Btralfht from -Toklo the Japanese opera songbird'., was taken first to London, where the appeared - with the , Imperial Russian Opera Company. When Mils. Pavlowa took over the Boston Grand Ojra Company, with Mas i Itablnoff aa managing director, one f asr first acts was to bring Ta-. . : V ";' MHe.'Anna' -( ! i -'; Pavlowa, in the V v ' , "Snowflake" 1 ' ' Ballet, Which V ; She) Presents in u Her Own Opera v':..." Company'e . Performance of 1 . "Madame " Butterfly' ' : ' . 1- makl Mlura to this country to, be . the heroine of ''Madame ButtorfV.' , , The result of the Japanese fclnp rr's first appearance In that cher acter.ln New York, at the Manl.at tan Opera House, entirely Justif-ed Mile. I'avlowa'a perspicacity.. To a certain extent It duplicated the ef fect of Oscar Ilammersteln's Initial presentation there of Tetrasr.lnl.'the exhilarating Italian coloratura ao prano, when the fortunes of that new. temple ot grand opera were . banging in the balance. It teemed to. place well on lta legs the Russian dancer's rather, risky enterprise. '' ' The. opera reviewers were onanl- - moUsly , cordial In their published reception ot the Indigenous Clo-Clo-8tn. .'The dean of the New York critical corps recorded that Tamakl Mlura, In "Madame Butterfly." "took the house by storm." As subsequent audiences,, successively larger and more representative of New York's opera-going public, manifested the same degree of enthusiasm, that re- viewer's analysis ot the Japanese singer's performance gained in sig nificance: " . "The enthusiasm was entirely Jus tified, for not only is her perform ance authoritative, aoo Occidental conception can be, but she Is a fine actress, reminding one of her great countrywoman, Sada Yacco. As a ; climax to these qualifications for this role she has a voice ot unnxual . beauty, . power and fervor. Even the white.' thin quality of the me dium voice' is an asset in this part, ' aa .Tamakl' Mlura San seems to be the child she Is supposed te be. She Is as gay and childlike, aa full of ' lauf Iter ' aa any ' tiny Japanese maiden -of fifteen would be, but tfiere'ls also remarkable dignity and , polae la bar manner ." Mow a Native Japanese Prima Donna Gave a Convincing of Japan to the m V BV IM-L- Win. .s $v0iO- M-y And when the time arrived tot the dainty, trusting and tender, lit tle Japanese sweetheart to be con fronted with the uncompromising American wife of ber American naval officer lover, Bhe accepted her fate like a true Oriental. Simply, and with fatalistic lack ot hesita tion, and In becoming retirement from the scene, she performed the private and personal last rite ot haraklrL i The audiences at the Manhattan could not resist an appeal . which seemed so true to our Western ideal of the Japaneae feminine character.' Here appeared the results of Tamakl Mlura'a stage training on Occident , el lines.. Instead ot the effect of aloof ness, and the stolid mummery ot Oriental actors In Oriental dramas presented la the Oriental manner, he demonstrated possession of the magnetic -quality, In ' stage phrase called "personality," which , Is ' re garded by actors of this . country and of Europe aa their chief ass?t for It enables them to "get their work over the footlights that Is, to convince and hold the audience. To some, however. It was aad that ao fine and novel a performance should hsve been marred by lack of managerial Judgment In casting the character of the bero'a American wife. A man In Plnkerton's post tlon, aa officer In the United Ststea CopyTlfht 1018, in "Madame Butterfly" r1 - , navy, would be expected to have a wife typical ot the class ot American women who are notoriously well bred and tastefully dressed. It seemed that neither poor little na tive Cio-Clo-San, nor the exigencies of the plot, hardly deserved the shock of that brutally assertive ap parition In the "Qrand Street" mon strosity, yclept , hat. t The disillu sioned little Oriental could have been trusted to save the tragedy with barl- klrt, anyway. ' It will be of Interest to every play and opera goer In this country to know that thU Japanese prima donna not only slogs Occidental music In the Occidental, manner, .but acquired that art In ber own country in Toklo where opera is given as In Europe and America, and where muslo Is taught and voices cultivated by the same meth ods used In New York, London. Paris, Dresden and Milan. -. So there la no longer any excuse . In grand opera for Broadway or Piccadilly Interpretation of Japan ese characters. Further, the advent 'here of Tamakl Mlura, with such distinct success In a favorite opera, shows that snore is now expected of an opera impresario than the pres entation of the most famous sing ers with the most famous and ex pensive voices. As In the case ot the legitimate drama, tha tinblio by ths Star Comosay. Great Britain Heroine Stage V ''i. will expect the cbaractera to be ap propriately and faithfully interpre ted. Japan la now added to the list of countries which produce capable singers who can act In greater numbers than probably any im presario will admit Which leaves them no excuse for going on pre senting Japanese, Swedish, German, French, Russian, Eskimo and Zulu heros and heroines in the Broadway-Piccadilly cabaret manner. The Pavlowa-Ilablnoff new opera organisation thus auspiciously started on Its career is full-fledged on up-to-date lines, presenting with capable artists most of the grand operas which have won favor In thla country.' The old opera com poners nearly always engineered their scenes to Include a ballet Lat terly the cut-and-dried. stiff-corset-ted, fluffy-skirted aggregation of premiere and corypbeea has gone out ot fashion In presentations of grand opera., In Russia, however, the ballet Is retained In the char acteristic development demonstrated as a performance In Itself In this country by Pavlowa and other danc ing celebrities of that nation. Hav ing acquired an opera organization of ber own, Pavlowa puts the two together again and thus adds ad vantages of ber own special art and reputation to the fortunes of tha Boston Qrand Opera Company. Rights Rsssrvsd. V J. rt.".V...... . t V." ''V' r.j--?j njs'-a This feature with the success ot the real Japanese "Butterfly" points to a possibility of another, though lesser, opera war In New York, with the Manhattan Opera House as its storm centre as be-. fore. At present this prospect is somewhat remote owing to the fact that the Pavlowa-Rablnoff organ ization and the Japanese "Butterfly" are not yet a permanent New York institution. Boston Philadelphia, Chicago and other large cities come in for their attention, also, and they do not expect to appear In New York again until next Spring. It may be well, Just the same, to bear in mind recent opera history in New York. Ten years ago, when Oscar Ham mersteln built the Manhattan Opera House and announced his purpose of becoming a grand opera Impres ario in New York City, everybody laughed except those who wept over the anticipated total wreck of. the Hammersteln fortunes. How could anybody expect anything but failure In a contest with the old, entrenched, socially fortified Metro- Bedtime No Time for Candy CANDY Is a good thing. There would be a lot more hungry people In the world If it wasn't for candy. Even In favor of cheap candy there's a lot to be said. Sugar, in whatever form, is a real food aa well as an actual stimulant But you ought not to eat It before going to bed. The digestive organa work aa well during sleep aa during wake fulness, though not as fast, but the salivary glands do not Accustomed to being stimulated 1 4 M Tamaki Mlura, the Little' Japaneae Grand Opera Lyric Soprano Who Givea to the Stage a, Genuine Native Opera Heroine. polltan Opear with its com pany of world famous sing ers T The cost ot Mr. Hammer eteln's new home tor grand opera alone waa $1,600,000. It bad required! Caruso, at $2,600 a night, to spares the Metopolltan the pain of an in? nual deficit, in spite of the manage ment'a enormous subscription sales: of seats and boxes. Where would. Mr. Hammersteln find a Caruso, at any price? And, lacking any such means of drawing several thousand opera lovers past his box office at the Manhattan for at least two or three performances a week, how could he stand the strain ot the enormous ordinary expenses ot pro ducing grand opera? But Mr. Hammersteln bad laid foundations for grand opera other than those of the Manhattan Opera House. First, be delighted New York operagoera with a fascinating revival of their faTorlte "Carmen. This lifted him safely ever the first hurdles. Then he played his trams card. He astonished New York by presenting a highly efficient female foil to Caruso Tetraszlni, who proved to be the most magnetlo coloratura soprano ever heard in the Eastern metropolis. Thereafter, how Mr. Hammersteln rattled the desslcated opera skele tons in the Metropolitan "property" room by ignoring the trite old work with which the metropolis bad been surfeited for a generation and giv ing splendid productions of tha great modern French operas a revelation to American audiences Is familiar recent history. The Metropolitan Opera organisa tion, with all its wealth and social prestige, was so worried that it gave Mr. Hammersteln a million dollars in cold cash to go elsewhere and let the "Diamond Horseshoe" sleep in peace. Is it the destiny of Mile. Pavlowa and a native Japanese prima donna, weighing perhaps ninety pound: against the two hundred odd of let raxzlnl to again disturb those slumbers? Q. E. D. by the act of chewing, the Juices that come into tne mouth readily at that time, and often during the day, are apt to be dormant during Bleep. Candy, like all sugars, requires a great deal of the substances In the saliva to help It through its various transformations Into alco hol, starches and then the various organic compounds that the body needs. If we eat candy overnight we are very likely to have a "bad taste In the mouth" in the morning.