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English composer, conductor and playwright From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Christopher Whelen (17 April 1927 – 18 September 1993) was an English composer, conductor and playwright, best known for his radio and television operas. Because much of his work was written for specific theatre productions in the 1950s, or directly for broadcast in the 1960s to the 1980s, little of it survives today, though a number of his scores and related papers have been deposited in the British Library.[1]
Whelen was born in London into a musical family. He became a chorister at New College, Oxford, attended Worksop College (studying piano and 'cello) and then at the Birmingham and Midland School of Music (now the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire) between 1944 and 1946 (studying clarinet and composition). After two years National Service in the RAF he secured conducting lessons with the Austrian émigré Rudolf Schwarz, newly appointed to the Bournemouth Municipal Orchestra, subsequently becoming his Assistant Conductor.[2]
Already interested in Celtic culture (particularly Yeats), the music of Arnold Bax became a central influence for Whelen after hearing a performance of Tintagel.[3] A correspondence began in 1947, which led to a close friendship until Bax's death in 1953. It was at Bax's request that in 1951 Whelen conducted Bax's Sixth Symphony in Bournemouth.[4]
Given the non-availability of conducting posts at the time and needing to earn a living, Whelen moved to London, whilst continuing for a time to guest conduct in Birmingham, Liverpool, Bournemouth and Dublin. He subsequently became Director of Music for The Old Vic Theatre company, then engaged in producing a complete cycle of Shakespeare's plays. This led to his being asked to write incidental music for them.[5] Commissions followed from other theatres and from the BBC.
Whelen briefly ventured into the field of musicals, culminating in writing the music for John Osborne's The World of Paul Slickey (1959). This was Osborne's only attempt at writing a musical, but after the huge successes of his previous plays Look Back in Anger and The Entertainer, the play was to become "one of the most spectacular disasters in English theatre".[6] Despite this setback, a series of commissions by the BBC followed for Whelen from the 1960s into the 1980s, including two operas specially conceived for television, as well as a series of hard to classify musico-dramatic works for which he wrote both words and music, fusing the music and action closely together.
Whelen met his lifelong partner Dennis Andrews in 1948 in Bournemouth. They lived together for many years in London and Cumnor, Oxfordshire, before Whelen's death in 1993. The Christopher Whelen Award for innovation in radio, TV and the theatre was set up in his name. Winners have included Paddy Cuneen, Jonathan Dove, Orlando Gough and Mick Sands.
Whelen was primarily a music dramatist and his most successful works are the series of radio and television music theatre works commissioned by the BBC starting from the 1960s. His first operatic production, broadcast on 6 August 1961, was The Beggar's Opera, for which he contributed new arrangements of the traditional ballads.[7] The original radio opera The Cancelling Dark, with text by the poet Vernon Scannell, followed on 5 December 1965.[8] Based on a true story, the action alternates between a crashed aircraft in the African jungle near Benguela and the radio control room at Kakonda Airfield.[9]
In 1966 the BBC announced "our intention to win wider audiences for opera" and a wide-ranging season was programmed by Cedric Messina (Director of Opera - Drama Group).[10] John Hopkins and Whelen were jointly commissioned to create a work for BBC2 that would explore what a TV opera might look like, featuring "a contemporary plot and modern dress".[11] The first was Some Place of Darkness, described by Jennifer Barnes as " a sombre domestic drama set in the present, it exemplified all that television promoted".[12][13] The second opera, Night Cry, although completed and scheduled for production in 1968, was shelved, following a change in the Directorship of BBC2.
By 1969, for Incident at Owl Creek, Whelen had dispensed with a librettist, adapting the source material (based on the short story by Ambrose Bierce) himself. His next piece, The Findings (1972) had a text based on an original idea concerning the excavation of an Etruscan tomb.[14] Creating his own plot and characters presented through his own words and music, Whelen was attempting to create a more personal form of "total musical theatre".[15] Christopher Palmer identified The Findings and Incident at Owl Creek as "outstanding".[2]
The music drama The Restorer, produced and directed by Martin Esslin, is a further example of Whelen's experimentation with the close combination of words and music. The plot involves the discovery of a mysterious Dutch painting, prompting a journey of self-exploration.[16]
Another strand of Whelen's work was in film. He composed the score for The Valiant (1962), The Face of Fu Manchu (1965) and Coast of Skeletons (1965).[17] There was also a ballet, Cul de Sac, choreographed by Norman Morrice and staged by Ballet Rambert on 13 July 1964 at Sadler's Wells.[18][19]
Whelen wrote incidental music for over a hundred plays in all, including some twenty-nine for Shakespeare productions at the Old Vic, Stratford-on-Avon and Chichester Festival Theatres - and for BBC radio and television - as well as major scores, involving both choruses and orchestras for a series of seven Greek Dramas on the BBC's Third Programme.
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