Copyright © 2020 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett
P. Dodd Ackerman’s name appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country in 1921. On March 27, 1921, Ackerman was featured in an article entitled “Modern Tendencies in Scenic Vesting of the Theater” (New York Tribune, 27 March 1921, page 48). The article announced, “‘The day of the trick scenic investiture of plays is over. The futurist, the cubist and other reactionary painters of scenery have had their day, short-lived though it was, and are passing,’ said P. Dodd Ackerman, one of the leading American scenic artists.” The article continued:
“Mr. Ackerman has served a long and interesting apprenticeship in the creation of scenery for plays that have made theatrical history during the last twenty-five years. He was educated in the Georgia School of Technology and had art instruction at the Julian School of Beaux Arts in Paris and in the Huffe School in Munich. Returning to this country he was first associated with the old Lyceum Theater, when Daniel Frohman was its guiding genius. Afterward he was employed at the Empire Theater during the regime of Charles Frohman’s immortal stock company.
“Branching out for himself, he forged to the front and to-day his work is being represented on Broadway by no less than five attractions, among them being ‘The Broken Wing,’ now running at the Forty-eight Street Theater.
Mr. Ackerman as early as 1912 saw the coming of the modern decorative art into the theater of this country, an art that had been in vogue for some time in Germany, Austria, Russia, and to a degree in France and Italy. Feeling that the time would come when scenic painting and theater decorations would respond to the modernist movement and, in order to be fully prepared when this movement came, he went abroad to study.
“The new method, which is a simple one, arrives at an effect that formerly required great quantities of scenery, but which could be done in more artistic and effective way with a few set pieces, some drapes and some new lighting effects,” says Mr. Ackerman.
“In the early days of the theater scenery was given no consideration in the production of plays. The ancient Greeks depended for their background on nothing other than what nature provided. Whether or not the audiences were satisfied with what the author provided through the medium of actors, leaving the scenic environment to be created through suggestion, has not been settled even to this day.
“In the course of time a backdrop, or a curtain, usually of a somber hue, was employed to keep the minds and eyes of the audience from straying further than the limits of the stage before them. From time to time a more adventuresome playwright and produces added a bit of decorative effect, and thus we trace the evolution of stage settings.
“Then came a period when great artists like Raphael, Watteau, Boucher, Servandoni and Stanfield were eager to accept commissions to execute theatrical scenery. Even so great an artist as Alma-Tadema in recent times contributed canvases to the theater that delighted the eye and helped materially in the successful production of plays.
“The interest in scenery became apparent and the desire for absolute fidelity of detail was made a condition precedent to the acceptance of a play by the public. The reaction gave rise to the freak movement in scenic decoration. The aesthetic in art has its admirers where the canvas is small and the galleries are frequented by those who are thoroughly conversant with its aims and are in sympathy with its effects. But not so in the theater, where the audience is a mixed one, recruited from every social stratum.
“The scenic painter’s art is as exact as that of a composer of music. There is harmony of color that is as punctilious as that of music. The jarring note in music offends the ear, the jarring note of color insults the eye. With music the interpreter is secondary to the work of the composer. The scenic artist providing the scenery for a play presents a product that is but a minor detail to the work of the playwright as interpreted by the actor. The scenic artist’s work, however, must lend itself and blend into the effects created by light manipulation, and any scheme of color or form that is not a mirrored reflection of nature falls short of the purpose for which the scenic artist was employed and detracts in consequence from the value of the play to the audience.
“What is the modern tendency in the theater so far as scenery is concerned? To my mind it is toward the modified background. The moment scenery gets beyond a background it becomes scenery, no more, no less – just painted canvas, Yet scenery can be colorful without offending the eye or detracting from the actor in his work in delineating the character he is called upon to play or interpreting the intent of the author by the intonation he gives the lines he is asked to speak.
“As regards the carrying to the extreme the perfection of detail, why not elect the spectator to become a part of the performance by permitting him to use his reasoning process in completing the detail mentally through the germ of suggestion of detail without carrying it out to the extreme? That has been the trouble with our reactionary scenic artists. They have made scenery and color the principle feature of the entertainment, leaving the story of the playwright and the acting as the background. In Europe the suggestion of effect, which is to mind the modern trend, has been held by the great stage directors and dramatists over there as more highly satisfactory and far better than a mass production. This has been created through the use of false prosceniums or, as they are termed in Europe, portals. Through this medium attention is centralized on the artist and not on the scenery.
“Another Modern tendency in the theater has been to delegate to the scenic artist authority to decorate the stage with the essential drapes, rugs, furniture, objects of art and other properties demanded by the play. This will result in a higher degree of the artistic in productions, eliminating the chance of offending those who have good taste.
“Another trend of the times is to improve the lighting of stage productions. Our present methods have made little or no advance from what was obtained when gas was the illuminant in the theater. Our modern footlights, even though electricity is employed, are scarcely one pace forward from what was used in the theaters fifty years ago. It may shock you to known that there is not a perfect theater in America to-day – that is, a theater that gives to such lighting the perfection it derives – and this is because the inadequate and antique appliances to be found therein. The only theaters in New York that in a way approach a proper equipment for lighting are the Booth, Century, New Amsterdam and Metropolitan Opera House. However, the new Sheridan Theater, which is soon to open, will be the first theater in New York where it will be possible to get any light effect desired. The system to be employed is obtained through a switchboard, where the light effects are all arranged beforehand and by merely touching a push button they automatically change as desired and thus colors will melt into each other, creating effects that heretofore have only been seen on the Continent of Europe.”
To be continued…