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{{Short description|Award for opera in English}}
The '''Bispham Memorial Medal Award''' was an award for [[opera]]s written in [[English language|English]] which was presented annually by the American Opera Society of Chicago from 1921-1932. The award was named for baritone [[David Bispham]], who was a great proponent of performing opera in English in the United States. It was traditionally awarded to [[United States|American]] composers, frequently for an opera on an American subject. It was funded, in part, by composer [[Eleanor Everest Freer]], who was also one of its recipients (for ''The Legend of the Piper''). Other recipients include (alphabetically by author):
The '''Bispham Memorial Medal Award''' was an award for [[opera]]s written in [[English language|English]] which was named for baritone [[David Bispham]], who was a great proponent of performing opera in English in the United States. It was traditionally awarded to [[United States|American]] composers, frequently for an opera on an American subject. It originated from the Opera in Our Language Foundation, Inc., founded by composer [[Eleanor Everest Freer]], and Edith Rockefeller McCormick, in 1921. After David Bispham's death in October 1921, Eleanor Everest Freer also founded the David Bispham Memorial Fund, Inc., in March 1922. Eleanor Everest Freer was chairman, and Edith Rockefeller McCormick was treasurer, of both organizations. On April 7, 1924, the two organizations merged to become the [https://americanoperasocietyofchicago.org American Opera Society of Chicago]. The first medal was awarded by the American Opera Society of Chicago in 1924 to Ernest Trow Carter, for his opera ''The White Bird'', which saw its first full performance at the Studebaker Theater, in Chicago, on March 6, 1924.<ref>MSS 40 The Ernest Trow Carter Papers in the Irving S. Gilmore Music Library of Yale University</ref> (The Opera in Our Language Foundation, Inc. sponsored the performance.) The last Medal for an opera was awarded around 1953 to Vittorio Giannini for ''The Taming of the Shrew''. The award was funded in part by David Bispham's will, and also in part by Eleanor Everest Freer, who, in addition, was one of its recipients (for ''The Legend of the Piper''). Other recipients include (alphabetically by author):
{{Expand list|date=February 2012}}
{{columns-list|3|
{{columns-list|colwidth=22em|
*[[George Antheil]] (for ''Helen Retires'')
*[[George Antheil]] (for ''[[Helen Retires]]'')
*[[Ernst Bacon]]
*[[Ernst Bacon]] (for ''A Tree on the Plains'')
*[[Alberto Bimboni]] (for ''Winona'')
*[[Alberto Bimboni]] (for ''Winona'')
*[[J. Lewis Browne]] (for ''The Corsican Girl (La Corsicana)'')
*J. Lewis Browne (for ''The Corsican Girl (La Corsicana)'')
*[[Simon Bucharoff]] (for ''Sakahra'' and ''The Echo'')
*[[Simon Bucharoff]] (for ''Sakhara'')
*[[Frank Patterson]] (for ''The Echo'')
*[[Charles Wakefield Cadman]] (for ''[[Shanewis]]'')
*[[Charles Wakefield Cadman]] (for ''[[Shanewis]]'')
*[[Charles Frederick Carlson]] (for ''Phelias'')
*[[Charles Frederick Carlson]] (for ''Phelias'')
*[[Ernest Trow Carter]] (for ''The White Bird'')
*[[Ernest Trow Carter]] (for ''The White Bird'')
*Rossetter Cole (for ''The Maypole Lovers'')
*Edward Collins (for ''Daughters of the South'')
*[[Frederick Shepherd Converse]] (for ''[[The Pipe of Desire]]'')
*[[Frederick Shepherd Converse]] (for ''[[The Pipe of Desire]]'')
*[[Walter Damrosch]] (for ''Cyrano de Bergerac'')
*[[Walter Damrosch]] (for ''[[Cyrano de Bergerac]]'')
*[[Francesco Bartolomeo de Leone]] (for ''Alglala'')
*[[Francesco Bartolomeo de Leone]] (for ''Alglala'')
*[[Henry Purmort Eames]] (for ''Priscilla'')
*[[Henry Purmort Eames]] (for ''Priscilla and John Alden'')
*Peter J. Engels (for ''Minnehaha'')
*Ralph Errole (for ''Prince Elmar'')
*[[Pietro Floridia]] (for ''Paoletta'')
*[[Pietro Floridia]] (for ''Paoletta'')
*[[Hamilton Forrest]] (for ''Yzdra'')
*[[Hamilton Forrest]] (for ''Yzdra'')
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*[[Eleanor Everest Freer]] (for ''Legend of the Piper'')
*[[Eleanor Everest Freer]] (for ''Legend of the Piper'')
*[[George Gershwin]] (for ''[[Porgy and Bess]]'')
*[[George Gershwin]] (for ''[[Porgy and Bess]]'')
*Vittorio Giannini (for ''The Taming of the Shrew'')
*[[Louis Gruenberg]] (for ''[[The Emperor Jones (opera)|The Emperor Jones]]'')
*[[Louis Gruenberg]] (for ''[[The Emperor Jones (opera)|The Emperor Jones]]'')
*[[Henry Hadley]] (for ''Azora'')
*[[Henry Kimball Hadley|Henry Hadley]] (for ''[[Azora, the Daughter of Montezuma]]'')
*[[Howard Hanson]] (for ''[[Merry Mount]]'')
*[[Richard Hageman]] (for ''Tragedy in Arezzo (Caponsacchi)'')
*[[Howard Hanson]] (for ''[[Merry Mount (opera)|Merry Mount]]'')
*[[W. Franke Harling]] (for ''A Light from St. Agnes'')
*[[W. Franke Harling]] (for ''A Light from St. Agnes'')
*[[S. W. Harwill]] (for ''Bella Donna'')
*[[S. W. Harwill]] (for ''Bella Donna'')
*[[Victor Herbert]] (for ''[[Natoma (opera)|Natoma]]'' and ''[[Madeleine (opera)|Madeleine]]'')
*[[Victor Herbert]] (for ''[[Natoma (opera)|Natoma]]'' and ''[[Madeleine (opera)|Madeleine]]'')
*[[John Adam Hugo]] (for ''The Temple Dancer'')
*[[John Adam Hugo]] (for ''[[The Temple Dancer (opera)|The Temple Dancer]]'')
*[[Frederick Jacobi]] (for ''The Prodigal Son'')
*[[Frederick Jacobi]] (for ''The Prodigal Son'')
*[[Wesley Laviolette]] (for ''Faslstaff'')
*[[Wesley LaViolette]] (for ''Shylock'')
*William Lester (for ''Manabozo'')
*[[William Lester (composer)|William Lester]] (for ''Manabozo'')
*[[Clarence Loomis]] (for ''Yolanda of Cyprus'')
*[[Clarence Loomis]] (for ''Yolanda of Cyprus'')
*[[Otto Luening]] (for ''Evangeline'')
*[[Otto Luening]] (for ''Evangeline'')
*[[Ralph Lyford]] (for [[Castle Agrazant (opera)|''Castle Agrazant'']])
*[[Ralph Lyford]] (for [[Castle Agrazant (opera)|''Castle Agrazant'']])
*[[Quinto Maganini]] (for ''The Argonauts'')
*[[Quinto Maganini]] (for ''The Argonauts'')
*[[William J. McCoy]] (for ''Egypt'')
*[[William J. McCoy (composer)|William J. McCoy]] (for ''Egypt'')
*[[Mary Carr Moore]] (for ''Narcissa (The Cost of Empire)'')
*Gian Carlo Menotti (for ''The Medium'' and ''The Telephone'')
*[[Marx E. Oberndorfer]] (for ''Roseanna'')
*Douglas Moore (for ''The Devil and Daniel Webster'')
*[[Mary Carr Moore]] (for ''"Narcissa," or The Cost of Empire'')
*[[Marx E. Oberndorfer]] (for ''Roseanne'')
*Julius Osiier (for ''The Bride of Baghdad'')
*Frank Patterson (for ''The Echo'')
*P. Marinus Paulsen (for ''The Cimbrians'')
*[[Bernard Rogers]] (for ''The Marriage of Aude'')
*[[Bernard Rogers]] (for ''The Marriage of Aude'')
*Beryl Rubinstein (for ''The Sleeping Princess'')
*[[Karl Schmidt (composer)|Karl Schmidt]] (for ''Lady of the Lake'')
*[[Karl Schmidt (composer)|Karl Schmidt]] (for ''The Lady of the Lake'')
*[[John Laurence Seymour]] (for ''[[In the Pasha's Garden]]'')
*[[John Laurence Seymour]] (for ''[[In the Pasha's Garden]]'')
*[[Charles Sanford Skilton]] (for ''Kalopin'')
*[[Charles Sanford Skilton]] (for ''Kalopin'')
*[[Theodore Stearns]] (for ''The Snowbird'')
*[[Theodore Stearns]] (for ''The Snow Bird'')
*[[Humphrey J. Stewart]] (for ''The Hound of Heaven'')
*[[Humphrey John Stewart]] (for ''The Hound of Heaven'')
*Albert Stoessel (for ''Garrick'')
*[[Deems Taylor]] (for ''[[The King's Henchman]]'')
*[[Deems Taylor]] (for ''[[The King's Henchman]]'')
*[[Jane van Etten]] (for ''Guido Ferranti'')
*Virgil Thomson (for ''Four Saints in Three Acts'')
*[[Jane Van Etten]] (for ''Guido Ferranti'')
*[[Isaac Van Grove]] (for ''The Music Robber'')
*[[Isaac Van Grove]] (for ''The Music Robber'')
*Kurt Weill (for ''Down in the Valley'')
*[[Clarence Cameron White]] (for ''Ouanga!'')
*[[Clarence Cameron White]] (for ''Ouanga!'')
*T. Carl Whitmer (for a selection of religious operas)
}}
*Jean Martinon (distinguished composer and conductor)
*Sir Michael Tippet (distinguished composer and conductor)
*Alan Stout (distinguished American composer)
*Lyric Theatre (''Lord Byron’s Love Letter'' stage sets)
*Lyric Theatre (Lyric scholarship fund)}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
*David Ewen, ''Encyclopedia of the Opera: New Enlarged Edition''. New York; Hill and Wang, 1963.
*David Ewen, ''Encyclopedia of the Opera: New Enlarged Edition''. New York; Hill and Wang, 1963.
*[http://listserv.bccls.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0010A&L=OPERA-L&D=0&P=105030 List of winners], cited on [[Opera-L]]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20110725050947/http://listserv.bccls.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0010A&L=OPERA-L&D=0&P=105030 List of winners], cited on [[Opera-L]]


[[Category:Music awards]]
[[Category:American music awards]]
[[Category:Awards established in 1921]]
[[Category:Awards established in 1921]]
[[Category:Awards disestablished in 1932]]
[[Category:1921 establishments in Illinois]]
[[Category:1932 disestablishments in Illinois]]




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{{award-stub}}
{{music-award-stub}}

Latest revision as of 17:12, 3 July 2024

The Bispham Memorial Medal Award was an award for operas written in English which was named for baritone David Bispham, who was a great proponent of performing opera in English in the United States. It was traditionally awarded to American composers, frequently for an opera on an American subject. It originated from the Opera in Our Language Foundation, Inc., founded by composer Eleanor Everest Freer, and Edith Rockefeller McCormick, in 1921. After David Bispham's death in October 1921, Eleanor Everest Freer also founded the David Bispham Memorial Fund, Inc., in March 1922. Eleanor Everest Freer was chairman, and Edith Rockefeller McCormick was treasurer, of both organizations. On April 7, 1924, the two organizations merged to become the American Opera Society of Chicago. The first medal was awarded by the American Opera Society of Chicago in 1924 to Ernest Trow Carter, for his opera The White Bird, which saw its first full performance at the Studebaker Theater, in Chicago, on March 6, 1924.[1] (The Opera in Our Language Foundation, Inc. sponsored the performance.) The last Medal for an opera was awarded around 1953 to Vittorio Giannini for The Taming of the Shrew. The award was funded in part by David Bispham's will, and also in part by Eleanor Everest Freer, who, in addition, was one of its recipients (for The Legend of the Piper). Other recipients include (alphabetically by author):

References

[edit]
  1. ^ MSS 40 The Ernest Trow Carter Papers in the Irving S. Gilmore Music Library of Yale University
  • David Ewen, Encyclopedia of the Opera: New Enlarged Edition. New York; Hill and Wang, 1963.
  • List of winners, cited on Opera-L