Arts Outside the Bubble: Philip Glass and
Dracula
by Tom Shortliffe
The Allen Theater, built in 1921 as a 3,000 seat movie theater, joins the State,
Ohio and Palace theaters to make up Clevelands Playhouse Square. The city
had big dreams for cinema, but tough times forced the theaters to abandon cinema
in the late sixties and the Allen remade itself as performance space. Throughout
the 70s, the Allen featured such star-studded acts as The Budapest Symphony
Orchestra, The Sierra Leone National Dance Company and The Boss, Bruce Springsteen.
Even after hosting New Jerseys Prince Springsteen, the Allen almost came
down again in the 1980s. The hall was saved, though, and renovated to become
part of Playhouse Square, the nations second largest performing arts center.
It wasnt out of character for the Allen when, two weeks ago, avant-garde
composer Philip Glass came to perform, attracting a brood of black-cladden artists
as well as popcorn munching grandparents. Not to mention several city-struck
Obies. The Glass Ensemble performed the most recent score to the movie Todd
Brownings Dracula as the 1937 film played. With this performance of the
Cuyahoga Community Colleges Contemporary Visions Evening Series, the Allen
merged its cinema roots with its modern mission of performing arts.
This blend was echoed within the audience. While some patrons wore slick clothes
and talked of Glasss prolific career, others wore capes in homage to the
Transylvanian count. Under the Allens corinthian columns the audience
mingled together, appreciating Glasss music, Budweiser in plastic cups
and of course, $2 boxes of Junior Mints.
Although eclectic, the audience was not so large. Of the 2,800 seats in the
theater, it seemed that over half were empty. And while the space felt as barren
as Draculas home, the seats were still nearly as tight as his coffin.
Regardless of empty seats, the Allen ushers, in shockingly red sport coats,
were difficult to ignore. They were persistent with ticket stubs and gradually
a three-row section of empty seats grew in front of a full capacity section
of another three rows. Soon after the show began, an usher in her sun-bright
blazer forced a man out of his seat to aid a couple to their seats, though there
was an entire section of empty seats directly across the aisle.
The performance itself kept the crowd on its beer-tipsy toes. The audience watched,
rapt, as the five-piece ensemble and conductor performed and the film played.
At times, the music was too loud, drowning out the dialogue and sound effects.
Beyond these technicalities, the music worked with the film. I was even half-spooked.
The shows weaknesses came at times when the musics repetitive hypnotic
nature clashed with the suspenseful jolts of the film. That hypnotic feel, however,
worked well in the moments when Dracula was hypnotizing his victims. Over all,
the gradual somberness of the score jibed with Draculas strong emotional
elements. We felt the love, we chewed extra hard on our Junior Mints when things
got scary.
For me, it felt odd to listen to Glass play over a chorus of candy-munchers
and beer gulpers, but thats Glass. All different folks in the crowd holding
on to brass hand rails and shaking their head at a choppy Orchestra, more black
clothes than even Oberlin accommodates, a few smiles and some tepid beer.