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Lucy Caplan, "Dreaming in Ensemble: How Black Artists Transformed American Opera" (Harvard UP, 2025)

Nov 15, 2025
Lucy Caplan, a musicologist and author, dives into her groundbreaking work on Black participation in opera. She explores how opera served as a means of self-expression and community identity for Black artists. The discussion highlights key figures like H. Lawrence Freeman, Nora Holt, and Theodore Drury, who each contributed uniquely to the operatic landscape. Caplan also examines the contrasting narratives in Black and white press coverage and the impact of segregation on operatic strategies. Her insights reveal a rich, previously untold history of Black operatic legacy.
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ANECDOTE

Seed Archival Find That Launched The Project

  • Lucy Caplan discovered Shirley Graham's score Tom Tom as an undergraduate and wrote a paper that launched her career-long research.
  • That archival find led to a senior thesis, graduate school, and ultimately this book.
INSIGHT

Why Black Artists Chose Opera

  • Opera offered Black artists an aesthetic space beyond mere sociological representation, allowing imaginative departure from literal depiction.
  • Its collectivist production model and elite cultural associations made it useful for experimentation with respectability and self-fashioning.
INSIGHT

Beyond 'Firsts' Narratives

  • Caplan rejected a 'firsts' narrative because it recenters mainstream institutions and overlooks autonomous Black operatic activity.
  • She focused on Black-press listings, short-lived companies, and community practices to reveal a broader operatic counterculture.
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