The
San Francisco part of this story came
to me in bits, like the insignificant
pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that have
no particular import in themselves,
but which, when placed in their proper
positions in the over- all design,
make a fascinating picture.
I found the first small piece in a
book on old San Francisco. The year
was 1878, and the item tells of the
home of Joseph Duncan, a suave and
cultured gentleman who was a cashier
of the Bank of California and whose
fortune crashed with William Ralston's.
He was known as a connoisseur of the
arts, and was often asked to select
paintings and marbles for the palaces
of his friends who knew little about
them. |
|
His
own home at Geary and Taylor Streets held
many treasures. At one corner now stands
a drugstore, at another a grocery and
fruit store, at another the Bellevue Hotel,
and the Clift Hotel on the fourth. In
1878 Joseph Duncan's home of art treasures
occupied one of those corners. I'm under
the impression that it stood at the northwest
corner where the drugstore now stands.
But it was shortly, after 1878 that the
home was broken up and scandal and divorce
resulted. Mrs. Duncan was a virtuous,
high- principled Victorian lady. Joseph,
the poet– a very good poet, too–
the dreamer, the connoisseur of arts,
had lost his heart to a spinster lady.
on Russian Hill, and Mrs. Duncan divorced
him.
The Duncans had several children and very
little money, and that made the scandal
more tragic. Joseph Duncan had been a
brute and a scoundrel, and Mrs. Duncan
virtuously spent many years telling the
children what a scoundrel their father
was. However, one of the children mat
Papa some years later and found him a
charming, cultured gentleman of appealing
personality. But that all came later.
The second small piece in the jigsaw puzzle
was a personal experience of mine that
happened a few months less than fifty
years after the scandal at the corner
of Geary and Taylor Streets. It was the
summer of 1927. I had been invited to
a soiree– no other word describes
the function– in a home out on Pacific
Avenue. There were long- haired artists;
there were hungry musicians; there were
starving poets; and I, who belonged to
none of those classes, joined the shrilling
throng. It was the hour between sunset
and darkness. Most of the guests congregated
around a grand piano while a lady of mature
years with a page- boy bob explained that
she had never studied music or learned
to play the piano, but in a dream had
been inspired to go to the keyboard, and
play. She now sit at the keyboard and
played the most amazing music I had ever
heard, while most of the guests congregated
around her and sighed and clasped their
hands. I sat on a small stool at Ina Coolbrith's
feet.
 |
Ina
Coolbrith, the poet laureate of California,
was very old. That was last year of
her long life. She was a gentle, sweet-
faced old lady, as old- fashioned
and old- world as a miniature painted
on ivory. She wore a simple, black
silk dress, an old brooch at her throat,
and her mantilla falling over her
thin white hair. She told me of the
men and women she had known when San
Francisco was young.
Her friends had been legion. Many
of them had achieved greatness and
died, and only Ina Coolbrith remained, |
a
link between the Golden Dawn and the San
Francisco of 1927.
Her friends had been Mark Twain, Bret
Harte, Charles Warren Stoddard, Robert
Louis Stevenson, Joaquin Miller, Harr
Wagner, and Jack London, and they all
had loved her. She told me about them
quite simply as though their love was
her rightful heritage. And there was one
other. He was a poet, a dreamer, a musician,
and a connoisseur of the arts! She had
been the one great love of his life. His
name was Joseph Duncan. Joseph Duncan
was long since dead and she, the poet
laureate, went on, dreaming in the memories
of the departed years. Joseph Duncan!
He had been so gentle, so great an idealist,
and so fine a poet! What if he was a cashier
in a bank; even a bank cashier could dream
of sonnets. But he was dead and the pages
of his story were closed. Yet it was not
really ended, for he lived on in his children.
There were four of them, and Ina Coolbrith
had learned to know and love one of them
well. Her name was Isadora Duncan.
As I stated before, that is the second
bit in the pattern of the jigsaw puzzle.
Now, before we come to the story of Isadora
Duncan— for after all, this is her
story— there is one more small piece
in the puzzle pattern. It happened only
a year or so ago. I went to see The Lute
Song, one of the Theatre Guild productions
at the Curran Theatre, and in that lovely
pageantry one of the characters was an
old blind father.
He was led across the stage, his steps
faltering, as the blind should be led.
But this wasn't acting; He was in fact
blind, He was Raymond, one of children
of Joseph Duncan.
There are the bits in the pattern. It
was in Oakland, a few years after the
scandal at Geary and Taylor Streets, that
Ina Coolbrith met the child, Isadora.
She came to the Oakland Public Library,
as a few years later Jack London was to
come, to ask the library lady, Miss Coolbrith,
for a book to read. Just as Ina Coolbrith
was to guide Jack London's reading some
time later, so she guided and shaped the
mind of the small daughter of Joseph Duncan.
Isadora was a quaint child, a strange
mixture of practical common sense and
worldly sophistication, and she was a
dreamer like her father. The child loved
poetry, beauty, and rhythm, and she hated
reality. She was, in fact, a rebel. Her
childhood had been an unhappy one. There
was strife and divorce, with her mother's
insistence that her father, Joseph, was
a demon in human garb. Then there was
her mother's disavowal of the religion
in which she had been raised, and her
espousal of the atheism of Robert Ingersoll.
These were the unhealthy shapers of Isadora's
childhood. Of course, when she eventually
met her father, she found him a charming,
lovable poet, and that heightened the
confusion in her mind. Passing years tend
to soften the intolerance of childhood,
but Isadora Duncan never lost her contempt
for the institution of marriage as she
had seen it. When she was twelve years
old she made a solemn vow that she would
welcome love when it came, but she would
never marry.
After the divorce, Mrs. Duncan found a
small, drab home in Oakland for her brood
of four children. The constant poverty
in which they lived was softened by the
wealth of poetry and music that Mrs. Duncan
brought into the home, molding the lives
of her small offspring. The four of them
loved to sing, loved to play- act, and
above all, loved to dance. Somewhere I
have read that Isadora Duncan gave no
thought to becoming a dancer until she
had gone to Europe.
This was an absurd distortion of fact.
Isadora Duncan danced as soon as she could
walk. The children read every book, good
or bad, that chance flung in their path,
and when chance was busy with other people's
problems, Isadora went to the Public Library.
There she met Ina Coolbrith. Ina possessed
a rare talent. She not only created beauty,
but she had the gift, as well, of inspiring
the creative instinct in others. Isadora
was an eager pupil. Her reading carried
her back to the classical culture of ancient
Greece, and the natural, unaffected, spontaneous
Grecian art became her inspiration and
dream. Toe- dancing, social gymnastics,
was to be scorned. She demanded, from
the very beginning, self- expression unrestrained
by rule and custom.
When she was fourteen years old, pupils,
children of neighbors, came to her to
be taught to dance. The Oakland classes
grew and then there were classes across
the bay in San Francisco. Every day Isadora
and her sister, Elizabeth, took the ferryboat
to San Francisco and then walked from
the Ferry building to Sutter and Van Ness
Avenue. There, in the old home they had
rented— the Castle mansion—
they taught the young hopefuls of San
Francisco society forms of the dance that
were fifty years ahead of their time.
Charles Caldwell Dobie, speaking of those
days, said that he visited the old Castle
mansion after the school had seen its
last days, and found the hardwood mantels
chopped away. Possibly surmises Dobie,
it was used for kindling wood to keep
the Duncan sisters and their pupils warm
during their days of poverty.
But Isadora didn't like poverty and she
didn't like restrictions. There were distant
horizons awaiting her. She read about
them in her books, the faraway places
that call to all imbued with the creative
instinct. Any place would do as long as
it was "away." She induced her
mother to take her to Chicago. What matter
that the family purse was, as always,
almost empty? Funds were found and, armed
with a wealth of enthusiasm, mother and
daughter started out.
The Eastern theatrical managers saw the
girl dance, praised her, told her it was
all very lovely. But, after all, that
wasn't the accepted way to dance; it wasn't
the way of the theater. No, it would never
do. She'd better go home to San Francisco
and be a schoolteacher! Their funds were
gone, so they pawned their jewelry. They
ripped a bit of old Irish lace from Isadora's
dress and sold it.
Finally,
starvation, not a threat but an actuality,
faced them, and then Isadora received
an engagement. At last, she was to dance–
to dance in a music hall. In a fogged
atmosphere of stale beer and tobacco smoke
the girl appeared, a breath of ancient
Greece. Her audience chewed on its cigars.
They found it all a little uncomfortable.
This certainly wasn't what they'd come
to see! In short, they wished she'd get
through so the next act could appear.
But in the audience one night sat a dreamer
like herself. He was Augustin Daly, the
theatrical producer. He saw what none
of the others had seen– the vision,
the ideal, and the dream behind the dancing
of the girl. He cast her as one of Titania's
dancing fairies in his production of A
Midsummer Night's Dream. He gave her small
part in pantomimes. Perhaps she couldn't
force her audience to understand the beauty
of simplicity, but at least this gave
her the opportunity to dance, and to eat.
Her brothers and sisters were sent for,
and the family settled to New York. One
night Isadora danced to the music of Ethelbert
Nevin; Nevin was in the audience, entranced.
He arranged for concerts for her and suddenly
blasé New York. hailed a new star,
a child with the wisdom of the ages and
the simple innocence of the sheep that
grazed on the Athenian hills. Society
accepted her. She danced for the four
hundred in Newport's exclusive salons.
They made much of her, but just as swiftly
they dropped her. And again the family
purse was empty.
Once again the lodestone of distant horizons
beckoned. What did it matter that the
family had no money? They would go to
London. After Isadora had borrowed right
and left from her former friends of Newport
society, the Duncans sailed.
In London, a few engagements brought a
few dollars, but the few dollars weren't
enough to fill the young hungry stomachs.
| Then
one night Isadora and one of her brothers
were dancing in their Grecian veils
in the small garden of a tiny house
in Kensington Gardens. They danced
by the light of the stars and their
only audience was their own shadows.
Quite unexpectedly, a beautiful lady
came and stood watching them and was
amazed. When they had finished their
dance she swooped down upon them and
took them to her own home. She was
Mrs. Patrick Campbell, the idol of
the London stage. She played for them
and they danced for her; she. sobbed
dramatic tears, and introduced them
to London society.The meeting with
Mrs. Pat Campbell was the turning
point in the story of Isadora Duncan. |
|
Mrs.
Campbell introduced them to London society
acclaimed them, and British royalty honored
them. Life became busy, hectic, and full
to overflowing with triumphs– and
setbacks, Duncan, the dancer, had arrived,
but the girl, Isadora, was still a rebel
against customs and traditions–
and marriage.
She danced in Paris and was cheered. she
danced in Berlin, and the art- loving
Germans went mad with enthusiasm. The
artists and students of Munich idolized
her. The story is told of the night that,
unharnessing her horses, they dragged
her carriage through the streets of Munich
in a rain of flowers. They carried her
into their cafe, lifted her onto a table,
and she danced for them. Life was gorgeous.
But always at the back of her persistent
mind was her dream, Some day she would
dance in the land of ancient culture where
the Athenian maidens had made the dance
a religion. Some day she would bring back
the beauty of classical simplicity to
the people of the nineteenth century.
What if she did dance in scant veils that
showed the honest beauty of her form?
There could be no evil in honest beauty.
Europe cheered her and virtuous old wives
condemned her. Isadora went to Athens
and took her mother, brothers, and sister
with her. And on a green hill that faced
the Acropolis, she made a solemn vow that
here she would build a temple to art.
In the Athenian hills Isadora gathered
a class of small Grecian boys about her.
She taught them the dances of ancient
Byzantium, as well as Greek choruses and
songs. bare- legged, with sandaled feet
and flowing draperies, the Duncans danced
from village to village, and the world
called them mad. A year passed, and their
purse was empty. Bidding a tearful farewell
to the peasants who had learned to love
the lady on Kopanos Hill, Isadora and
her kin returned to modern civilization
and Vienna.
Vienna took her to its gay heart, and
success and wealth returned. But now Isadora
Duncan learned that life without the fullness
of love was incomplete. Then, in Berlin,
in 1905, she met Gordon Craig, the colorful,
handsome, glamorous son of Ellen Terry.
This was the great love; this was life
at its highest. The world sighed, and
giggled, and was delighted. Isadora was
perfectly happy. A baby was born, and
they named her Deirdre. Isadora adored
her.
New friends came to join the strange household.
Eleanor Duse, her life shattered by the
tragedy of her romance with D'Annunzio,
took them to Italy to aid her in the production
of an Ibsen drama. Isadora danced her
dances of the Athenian hills in Rome.
But now a new ambition and dream was born.
She would train choruses, and build her
greatest ballet around the music of Beethoven's
immortal Ninth Symphony.
She came to the United States and danced
to the music of Walter Damrosch's orchestra.
America was shocked, and delighted. Of
course, everyone had a body, but one didn't
acknowledge the fact.
Even modest ankles weren't to be exposed.
That nonsense was ended by an edict from
no less a wielder of strong opinion than
Teddy Roosevelt. "Isadora Duncan,"
he proclaimed, "seems to me as innocent
as a child dancing through the garden
in the morning sunshine and picking the
beautiful flowers of her fantasy."
So the master politician became poet,
and Isadora danced and was forgiven her
sins.
She built a school where she taught young
girls the beauty of the dance. She was
the priestess of the dance, and in that
role did more to return it to its ancient
glory than any other single man or woman
in the world's history of terpsichore.
Then, one night in Paris, Isadora Duncan
danced to the haunting melody of Chopin's
"Funeral March," and a vision
of tragedy came to her. She danced with
eyes closed and saw her two children threatened
by evil. She danced as though in a trance,
and her audience sat, thrilled, chilled,
and breathless. It was terrible and it
was beautiful. A few days passed and the
father of her son stood before her. His
lips were dry and his eyes were haggard.
He told of the death of her two children.
Life was dead; dreams were dead; the world
was empty. Isadora Duncan, the rebel,
had won her rebellion and lost all that
was worth the fight. She felt she would
never dance again. But she did dance.
In her tragedy she had become a giantess,
and life does not or cannot stand still.
She won new triumphs, found new loves,
and achieved new furors. She faced new
tragedy in 1914 when, under the shadow
of the dawn of the first World War, another
baby was born—dead. Still she danced,
and still she continued to teach her girls.
She danced her Ninth Symphony to an audience
that sat as though in the presence of
a creature divine. Her greatest creative
dream had become a reality.
Isadora Duncan, the little girl of Geary
and Taylor Streets in San Francisco, died
in 1927. A veil caught in the wheel of
her automobile. There was the grinding
of brakes—and then darkness. She
died tragically, horribly, and the world
was upset for a few hours and then went
about its business. But those who had
loved her and who knew her dream of beauty
mourned her passing of a human creature
who had been an honest builder of dreams.
She had done more for the art of the dance
than any other man or woman in history.
And above all else, she had been the honest
daughter of her poet father.
Isadora Duncan photograph by Arnold Genthe
© October 21, 2011
Share
|