- Date: 1929 06 -1929 08
- Composer: Kurt Weill
- Period: Modern (1910-1949)
Review
Throughout 1929, Kurt Weill was a busy man. The phenomenal success of his collaboration with Bertolt Brecht on Die Dreigroschenoper the year before -- a craze which persisted until the Nazis banned it -- sparked a demand for his music which he was hard pressed to fill. Moreover, he was scrambling to complete the opera Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny, his most ambitious work to date, for its première in the spring of 1930. When Ernst Josef Aufricht, proprietor of Berlin's Theater am Schiffbauerdamm (and scene of the Dreigroschenoper triumph), asked Weill and Brecht for another piece in the same vein, Weill accepted -- less from a desire to duplicate his hit than to develop the Dreigroschenoper's "new song style"; its jazz-inflected rhythms and bittersweet melody was a radical departure from his previous, self-consciously avant garde works. Brecht, the Marxist engagé, on the other hand, had little interest in work which did not directly further his ideological aims, and turned the project over to his mistress and collaborator, Elizabeth Hauptmann. Drawing heavily on Shaw's Major Barbara, Hauptmann patched together the tale of Salvation Army Lieutenant Lilian Holiday -- a woman with a steamy past brazenly revealed in the "Matrosen-Tango" and hauntingly recalled in "Surabaya-Johnny" -- and her uneasy "reformation" of Chicago gangster Bill Cracker. With Brecht's desultory collaboration, she put together two of the projected three acts for Brecht to take with him to the French Riviera in May, where he was to catch up with Weill and work in earnest. An automobile accident prevented him, and Weill composed quietly, setting Brecht's lyrics (some from earlier works) by June.Directed by Erich Engel, with sets by Caspar Neher, Theo Mackeben, and his Lewis Ruth Band in the pit, and an all-star cast on stage -- including Carola Neher (Lilian), Oskar Homolka (Bill), Kurt Gerron, and Peter Lorre -- the show aired on September 2, 1929. By curtain time, however, the third act had still not been finished; apparently, the actors improvised. Aufricht recalled that "Up to the interval after the second act it was as big a success with the audience as Dreigroschenoper had been. Then came the third act. Palpably disappointed, they started coughing and fidgeting ... Then to my amazement ... I saw Helene Weigel [another of Brecht's mistresses, cast as the gangster boss] advancing to the front of the stage. Reading from a scrap of paper, she shrieked out into the auditorium in a piercing voice, "What's a picklock compared to a share certificate? What's robbing a bank compared to founding a bank?" and similar bits of crude Marxist propaganda." The enraged audience rose in tumult. The show closed after two further performances. The critics buried it in scorn.
Thus, some of Weill's most immediately gripping music went into eclipse. Lotte Lenya recorded the "Bilbao Song" and "Surabaya-Johnny" before the year was out -- initiating their ever widening popularity as cabaret standards -- while the Lewis Ruth Band recorded instrumental versions of the latter, the "Matrosen-Tango," and "Der Song von Mandelay." Weill continued to seek a dramatic "scaffolding" in which his music might score, but without success, and the score in its entirety was not heard until after his death, though he adapted three of its numbers (most fetchingly "Das Lied von der harten Nuss") for incidental music to Jacques Déval's play, Marie Galante (1934). Not until Lenya's 1960 Columbia recording of the music -- complete, with conductor Wilhelm Brückner-Rüggeberg -- could Weill's audience hear how the composer had played off the pizzazz of the familiar hits against the ambivalently parodistic, yet bleakly moving Salvation Army numbers. ~ All Music Guide
Albums with Complete Performances of the Work
| Title | Date |
| Happy End | 2006 |
| Masterwork Portrait: Kurt Weill | 1990 |
| Weill, Blitzstein, Kander and others | 1998 |
| Weill: Concerto for violin Op12; Berliner Requiem | 1976 |
| Weill: Happy End |


