The Undesirable in Box 14: Jews and Opera in Gilded Age New York

For the Public
Wednesday, April 3, 2024
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM EDT

The Athenaeum of Philadelphia

219 S. 6th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106

Contact:
Athenaeum Events

Free

REGISTER
RSVP REQUIRED

The recent television series The Gilded Age depicts the birth of New York’s Metropolitan Opera House as a class war between the city’s established “old money” clan and its newly wealthy arrivals. In this talk, historical musicologist Samantha Cooper will draw on archival, oral history, and press findings to reveal the real-life dynamics that characterized Jewish involvement with the opera in that era.

Her presentation will retell the well-known story of the Met’s first sixty years with a new emphasis on the essential roles that Jewish men played behind the scenes as patrons and laborers. Even as the Met employed Jews and hosted Jewish community events, Jews at the opera house also faced a fraught and often antisemitic environment in which they were the institution’s main “undesirable persons.”

Featuring

Samantha M. Cooper

Harvard University

Samantha Cooper is a historical musicologist specializing in American Jewish cultural history. As a Katz Center fellow, Samantha will continue working on her first monograph, American Jews and the Making of the New York Opera Industry, which she began as a Harry Starr Postdoctoral Fellow in Judaica at Harvard University’s Center for Jewish Studies. Cooper received her Ph.D. in Historical Musicology at New York University in May 2022 for her dissertation, “Cultivating High Society: American Jews Engaging European Opera in New York, 1880–1940.” Cooper is the producer and host of “The Sounding Jewish Podcast,” and the associate executive director of the Jewish Music Forum, a project of the American Society for Jewish Music.

Read more

Cosponsors

This program is hosted and cosponsored by the Athenaeum of Philadelphia.