[p. 108]
Christopher J. Anderson
The Wayfarer: Early
20th Century Foreign Missions Pageantry
In
1919, over one million people visited the State Fairgrounds in Columbus,
Ohio to attend the Centenary Celebration of American Methodist Missions.
This twenty-four day Methodist world's fair and Protestant missionary
exposition featured international pavilions, live ethnographic exhibits,
the latest technology for the local church, and a miniature Midway complete
with a Ferris wheel, lemonade stands, and Methodist restaurants. The
exposition also included recreated battles between World War One airplanes
in the skies above Columbus and the first 'sermon in the air' preached
by a Methodist seminary professor from the gondola of a military dirigible
hundreds of feet above the racetrack grandstands. Entertainment was
a significant component of the missionary exposition as Methodist cowboys
rode bucking broncos in the Wild West exhibit, audiences watched silent
films on a ten-story motion picture screen, and thousands of Protestants
packed the coliseum to attend a theatrical performance called The
Wayfarer: A Pageant of the Kingdom.
The
use of pageantry as religious theater at the Centenary Celebration connected
American Methodists with Christian missionaries and political heroes
from history. My essay explores The Wayfarer as an example of
early twentieth-century foreign missions pageantry which closely linked
historic Christianity with American Methodist fairgoers in an effort
to propagate the spread of foreign missions around the world. When viewed
at the missionary festival The Wayfarer served as a visual springboard
to enhance interconnectedness within the American Methodist community,
to motivate audiences toward careers in missionary service, and to garner
financial support to assist foreign missionary forces with the spread
of Christianity to distant lands.
Early 20th Century US Pageantry
In
1905, historical pageantry as a form of popular entertainment and community
involvement appeared in the United States with the production and presentation
of The Gods [p. 109] and
the Golden Bowl in Cornish, New Hampshire.(1) For over twenty years
this type of American theater attempted to instill a sense of community
participation and societal reform through the creation of interactive
spaces for all classes of society to collaborate together toward social
transformation. Everyone in a city or borough could participate in a
pageant and local townspeople would often meet together for months to
rehearse lines, choreograph dance selections, and practice hymns in
preparation for an opening performance. Pageants during this era provided
audiences with rousing renditions of American patriotism, community
pride, religious duty and inexpensive entertainment. These performances
presented audiences with a snapshot of history 'live' on stage
albeit a largely constructed and carefully crafted 'history' based upon
who authored a particular pageant.
David
Glassberg in American Historical Pageantry suggests the use of
public orations and pageantry was an attempt to transfer history into
a staged "dramatic public ritual" whereby local townspeople
or organizations through performance of a particular show helped shape
historical narratives into "future social and political transformations"
for their contemporary audiences.(2) For Glassberg, early twentieth-century
pageants were public celebrations and pageant directors often incorporated
material objects and imagery from history to link ideals from the past
in order to provide meaning for those watching the performance in the
present.(3) When actors reinforced these notions onstage producers and
directors of pageants hoped audience members watching historical events
unfold before their eyes would replicate these ideals in their own neighborhoods
and towns.
The
production and performance of pageantry required the creative genius
of many people within a local community or national organization. Pageants
would range in cost of production from a few thousand dollars to over
one hundred thousand dollars and pageant directors or 'masters' often
received salaries ranging from $1000 to $2000 per event.(4) The ultimate
quest of many pageant masters was to use pageantry as a medium to improve
societal [p. 110] conditions and
to connect rural and urban communities with various organizations at
a national level.(5) Agencies such as the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People, the National Women's Party, and the Playground
Association of America sponsored pageants across the country in such
locations as Grand Forks, North Dakota and Boston, Massachusetts. Thus
pageant masters, national organizations, and local communities worked
together to improve towns and cities by staging pageants on contemporary
issues including racial discrimination, women's rights, and the construction
of local playgrounds and recreation centers.
Naima
Prevots in American Pageantry suggests the citizens of local
communities played important roles in the planning, production and performance
of pageants. These staged events developed as a "response to the
country's problems" and united communities together as one - driven
toward social reform and the elimination of "ideological differences
and barriers of race and class."(6) While the reduction of racial
discrimination certainly did not take place in every community across
America, pageantry provoked people toward the betterment of self and
society and with the founding of the American Pageant Association in
1913 many hoped these art forms would not only entertain but promote
educational awareness which in turn might help reduce the racial and
class barriers in place throughout the United States.(7)
During
the late nineteenth-century earlier versions of what would become pageantry
emerged with tableaux vivants, self-contained staged episodes in which
costumed actors posed without movement to recreate a famous painting
or moment from history.(8) By the second decade of the twentieth-century
American pageants were sweeping in scope, often performed in large open
arenas or fields with hundreds of participants reenacting a particular
moment or ideal from history. As spectators viewed these performances
they better understood the history and current needs of the performers
and the organization which produced and presented the [p.
111] pageant.(9) In this way, American Methodists who gathered
in the Columbus coliseum were also informed of the historical connection
of the Methodist Episcopal Church with missionary movements from history
while at the same time the pageant moved persons toward pressing needs
concerning foreign missions and the quest to Christianize the world.
As a result, The Wayfarer provided audiences with a pageant designed
and performed as a theatrical performance on American Methodist foreign
missions.
American Methodist Theater
In
1919, The Book of Discipline, the official rulebook of
the Methodist Episcopal Church, strongly restricted American Methodists
from attending performances at a theater. These forms of entertainment
were considered "imprudent conduct" and unbefitting Methodist
churchgoers supposedly more interested in things not of this world.
Yet, a slippage of language in the Discipline gave Methodists
permission to use such "diversions" as the theater for their
own work as long as the performance was used for purposes of honoring
"the name of the Lord Jesus."(10) Thus, plays or pageants
held within the confines of a Methodist sanctuary, church auditorium,
or any public space which had been transformed into a 'church' were
often supported by denominational executives. These pageants and plays
with a spiritual or religious purpose differed from the shows held at
local town theaters and thus found acceptance in Methodist circles.
Officials
of the Methodist Episcopal Church believed it was important to use pageants
in order to educate and entertain visitors at the Columbus exposition.
Throughout the duration of the fair dozens of pageants, from W.E.B.
DuBois' celebration of African American heritage The [p.
112] Star of Ethiopia to The Wayfarer by Seattle
minister James E. Crowther, provided audiences with a form of theater
created to connect historical narrative and imagery with contemporary
stage performance.(11) Crowther's work was representative of the desire
of Methodist exposition organizers to not only entertain fair visitors
through pageantry but also to impress upon the minds of those in attendance
the current need for American Methodists interested in foreign missions.
Through a series of historical scenes, stunning backdrops, and rousing
hymns set to Handel's Messiah the pageant sought to garner support for
the future expansion of Christianity through world missions.
Nancye
Van Brunt's essay, "Pageantry at the Methodist Centenary"
analyzes the use of The Wayfarer in Columbus and suggests that
by 1919 leadership within the Methodist Episcopal Church realized the
popularity of pageantry in the United States and decided to incorporate
these art forms at Columbus as venues of entertainment with a purpose.(12)
Van Brunt notes the use of pageantry by Methodists at the exposition
was a "fitting means of observing both their hundred years of missions
work and a motivating force for future work" in global missionary
outreach.(13) In this way Methodists used The Wayfarer as a memorial
and recruitment tool to present usable ideas from the past and to give
certain meanings for those in the present in order to motivate people
to act in progressive ways for world missions in the future. Thus it
was [p. 113] thought the incorporation
of a professionally written, produced, and performed pageant within
the larger missionary exposition might promote an understanding of denominational
heritage and historical continuity from early Christian history to the
contemporary Methodist Church.
The
production and performance of The Wayfarer required three thousand
professional and volunteer participants including fifteen-hundred actors,
one thousand chorus members and seventy-five instrumentalists from the
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra.(14) George A. McCurdy, a chief electrical
technician with Broadway experience from New York City, provided illumination
for the pageant by choreographing over three hundred spot lights and
backlights which showcased scenes of World War One, the crucifixion
of Jesus, and the visit by angelic messengers in dazzling shades of
blue, red and purple. McCurdy, at times overwhelmed with the scope of
the Methodist project, exclaimed to a reporter from a local newspaper
that the pageant was "the biggest job he has ever tackled"
and compared his experience with The Wayfarer to his Broadway
work in New York.(15) The scenery for the pageant included hundreds
of interconnecting sections which required the original stage to be
built in the auditorium of the New York Metropolitan Opera House and
later shipped in ten railroad cars to Columbus.(16) Unfortunately for
those involved in constructing the stage and scenery at the coliseum
many of the props and some of the costumes did not arrive from New York
in time for the June 20th opening performance.
At
the exposition The Wayfarer was both very popular and highly
controversial. Local newspapers proclaimed the success of the pageant
as reported by those who attended opening night at the fairgrounds.
R. C. Saunders, a reporter for The Columbus Citizen acknowledged,
"The first nighters fairly gasped with astonishment at the magnitude
of the production" and later noted "the spectacular religious
drama cannot be compared to anything ever presented in Columbus - or
for that matter in any other city in the United States."(17) Based
on the reaction of this visitor, Methodists viewed The Wayfarer
with intrigue - as one of the most impressive religious spectacles ever
created for members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
[p.
114] While The Wayfarer received accolades from persons
able to get tickets into the pageant some disgruntled theatergoers expressed
dissatisfaction with the circus style accommodations, the seemingly
unethical approach to the distribution of coliseum tickets, and the
pompous attitudes of the personnel. On more than one occasion Centenary
Cadets, the local Methodist militia unit in charge of providing security
for the exposition, were called to break up arguments between brawling
Methodists or arrest scalpers attempting to sell tickets at twice the
face value. Scathing editorials in Columbus newspapers gave voice to
frustrated exposition visitors. A man from Delaware, Ohio wrote a letter
to the editor of The Ohio State Journal and complained, "My
memory of the centenary pageant is tainted with the smell of peanuts,
ice cream cones, pop and 'whistle,' and the inspired music of 'The Messiah'
rings in my ears, accompanied by the crack of pop bottles, rattle of
program salesboys and conversation among the disturbed auditors."(18)
The
pageant became such a popular draw at the exposition that many Methodists
stood in line as early as five in the morning in order to secure a coliseum
ticket to the evening performance.(19) This riled many visitors who
needed to return to their jobs before the evening show. One Methodist
declared to a reporter from The Columbus Citizen that
he objected having to pay the fifty cent entrance fee to get into the
fairgrounds to stand in line to buy a ticket only to have to pay another
half dollar to get back into the exposition later in the day for the
evening performance.(20) Another dissatisfied Methodist complained to
the editor of the Columbus Evening Dispatch concerning persons
in charge, "The chief usher at the Grand Stand seems to think well
of himself. The writer heard him giving orders to his sub-ushers not
to permit this or that. It is simply silly. It would be a much better
fitness of things if he could only drop that [p.
115] unnecessary job and help some farmer make hay."(21)
Yet even though some Methodists complained about the circus atmosphere
of the coliseum setting, the lack of financial ethics by exposition
organizers, and the dozens of ticket scalpers buying up available tickets
only to resell them at prices above cost, the pageant received excellent
reviews and played for six weeks from December 1919 to January 1920
at New York's Madison Square Garden.
The
souvenir program for The Wayfarer included a preface written
by pageant director James E. Crowther indicating he created the show
for "pageant-loving folks" with the purpose to "exalt
Christ, foster the love for great music, and further the presentation
of truth in dramatic form."(22) Crowther hoped his pageant would
encourage more Methodists to embrace forms of pageantry by opening wide
the doors of the church for future theatrical productions. To make this
a reality Crowther wrapped the entertainment element of the pageant
with a distinctly progressive "heart-gripping" and "soul-refining"
Christian and Protestant expansionist message.(23) The world was emerging
out of the chaos and destruction of the Great War and many Protestant
Americans, including Reverend Crowther, believed distant nations affected
by global turmoil needed the assistance of Christians and more specifically
the Methodist Episcopal Church to help reconstruct the destroyed landscapes
of the world and offer a sense of hope and direction for humanity. For
Crowther and Methodist executives The Wayfarer demonstrated this
approach through the use of significant characters from the history
of Christianity and by informing Methodists how they might help reconstruct
the world and bring order from chaos through the spread of Christianity
and American democracy to foreign nations.
Crowther
grouped the individual scenes of The Wayfarer into three larger
episodes. Van Brunt indicates the first scene of The Wayfarer
was set during World War One and included a bombed-out landscape scene
of Flanders which emphasized for audiences the destruction and futility
of war. By the end of the three hour pageant audiences witnessed a final
scene of jubilee as children from countries impacted by Methodist missionaries,
U.S. military soldiers, and [p. 116]
actors playing the parts of ex-U.S. presidents including George Washington
and Abraham Lincoln gathered onstage in a climactic interweaving of
nation, military and Christian missions.(24) To help us better understand
what The Wayfarer might have meant for early twentieth-century
exposition visitors an assessment of the pageant is necessary at this
juncture.
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