Friday, May 25, 2018
91制片厂 graduate and composer Richard Alan White '58

Richard Alan White 鈥58听(Photo:听Rebecca White)

It started when he was a small child in Manchester, New Hampshire, hearing his mother prepare for her performances as a professional singer. It continued at 91制片厂, where he received his degree in music. But it was at the age of 82 that Richard Alan White 鈥58 would see his passion for music reach a pinnacle few attain.

Last October, White鈥檚 opera 鈥淗ester鈥 received its professional debut with two sold-out piano-vocal performances at the Center for Contemporary Opera in New York. His 900-page labor of love, written over the course of four decades, retells Nathaniel Hawthorne鈥檚 classic work, 鈥淭he Scarlet Letter.鈥 And with write-ups in The New York Times and on NHPR, White found himself in the limelight at an age when the majority of his classmates are well into retirement.

White鈥檚 journey to composing an opera for full orchestra and voices 鈥 with, as he puts it, 鈥減arts for everyone but the chandelier鈥 鈥 began early. Like the plot of a great story, however, his path was not a straight line: He would take myriad jobs to pay the bills and support his family, but through it all, music remained his true vocation from his earliest days.

鈥淭he important things in my life are what come first,鈥 White says, speaking from his Brooklyn, New York, home studio. He recalls taking clarinet lessons and singing in churches and synagogues in the 1940s. At Manchester High School, he loved performing in Gilbert and Sullivan operettas, recalling how the curtain would go up on a tableau of actors frozen in place during 鈥淗MS Pinafore鈥 and the audience would erupt into applause. 鈥淟ittle things like that, you always remember,鈥 he says.

鈥淭his opera and all those 900 pages were put together with a No. 2 pencil.鈥澨

At 91制片厂, he sang in the choir and studied music with professors like Donald Steele and Vincent Bleecker, whom he recalls to this day. After graduation, it was off to New York City, which included work in freelance orchestration and a master鈥檚 degree from Columbia in 1965. There were the odd singing jobs, all while studying at Herbert Bergdorf Studios with acclaimed theatre educators like Uta Hagen. 鈥淚 performed in several off-off Broadway shows,鈥 he says. He also took roles in television shows including 鈥淕eneral Hospital鈥 and even appeared as a photo-double for Bob Newhart in the movie 鈥淢arathon.鈥

However, the work of a journeyman tenor and freelance musician did not always pay well. Married with a family on the way, he went to work in social services, eventually taking a post as a security guard at Columbia before moving back to New Hampshire with his family to take a similar position at Daniel Webster College. In that work, he explains, 鈥淚 was able to have a certain freeness of my mind that if I was a professor or a conductor, I wouldn鈥檛 have. I didn鈥檛 have to take my job home with me . . . and I composed every day.鈥

It was back in 1979 that he began writing 鈥淗ester.鈥 He always liked 鈥淭he Scarlet Letter,鈥 he says, and felt a connection to the setting: His father and grandmother both were born in Salem, Massachusetts, where Hawthorne鈥檚 introduction to the story is set. Decades later, White鈥檚 opera is hundreds of pages longer than the work that inspired it. 鈥淭his opera and all those 900 pages were put together with a No. 2 pencil,鈥 he says.

So why opera? White says he knew his primary talent was composing, but his experience in theatre also inspired him. 鈥淲hen you add music and theatre together, you get opera.鈥 The work of a composer is often, by necessity, solitary, but seeing his opera performed for the first time brought home an important truth. 鈥淭he composer feels at the nerve center of everything,鈥 he says, but, 鈥測ou cannot do things by yourself. It is the director, manager 鈥 all the pieces to make this possible.鈥

Originally published in