Paul Tietjens, Date of Birth, Date of Death

    

Paul Tietjens

American composer

Date of Birth: 22-May-1877

Date of Death: 25-Nov-1943

Profession: composer, songwriter

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Gemini


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About Paul Tietjens

  • Paul Tietjens (; May 22, 1877 – November 25, 1943) was an American composer of the early twentieth century.
  • He is best known for composing music for The Wizard of Oz, the 1902 stage adaptation of L.
  • Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, one of the great popular hits of its era. Tietjens was born and raised in St.
  • Louis, Missouri.
  • At age 14 he appeared as a piano soloist with the St.
  • Louis Symphony.
  • He later studied in Europe with Hugo Kaun, Harold Bauer, and Theodor Leschetizky. Early in his career, Tietjens's ambition was to establish himself as a successful composer of comic operas and operettas.
  • He approached L.
  • Frank Baum in March 1901, not long after the publication and success of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
  • According to Baum's later recollection, "The thought of making my fairy tale into a play had never even occurred to me when, one evening, my doorbell rang and I found a spectacled young man standing on the mat."By another report, though, they met through Ike Morgan, a Chicago artist who worked on Baum's American Fairy Tales (1901).
  • Baum and Tietjens agreed to develop stage projects together.
  • Curiously, their first attempts had nothing to do with Oz.
  • They wrote a show titled The Octopus, or The Title Trust, which was rejected by producers in Chicago and New York.
  • Their next venture was a musical called King Midas, which was never completed. It was illustrator W.
  • W.
  • Denslow who suggested a Wizard of Oz stage adaptation.
  • Though Baum was at first cool to the idea, Tietjens was enthusiastic.
  • Baum prepared a libretto, and the project went forward.
  • Tietjens included two songs from The Octopus ("Love Is Love" and "The Traveler and the Pie").
  • The show went through many script revisions and changes; Tietjens's score was supplemented with music composed by A.
  • Baldwin Sloane and others.
  • Quarrels over the partitioning of the royalties (Denslow was co-copyright holder of the book, and designed the sets and costumes for the musical) led to a permanent rupture between Baum and Denslow.
  • Yet the show premiered in Chicago on 16 June 1902, and moved to Broadway in January 1903.
  • It was an enormous hit.
  • It ran through 1907 and then toured widely.
  • The income from the show made Tietjens financially independent at a relatively early age. Tietjens, however, never equalled that early popular success in subsequent shows.
  • He wrote The Sacred Serpent (1904), a three-act musical comedy.
  • He composed incidental music for J.
  • M.
  • Barrie's play A Kiss for Cinderella.
  • He worked with Baum on another project, called The Pipes o' Pan (which might have been a revised version of King Midas); it was never produced, and survives only in a fragment.In 1904 he married the poet Eunice Strong Hammond, who became known under her married name, Eunice Tietjens.
  • They had two daughters, Idea and Janet.
  • The death of their elder daughter Idea at the age of four contributed to the break-up of the marriage; the couple divorced in 1914.In addition to his works for popular theater, Tietjens composed symphonies, a concerto, sonatas, and chamber works.
  • His most significant serious work is arguably his opera The Tents of the Arabs. Tietjens spent much of his life in Europe.
  • When his health failed in 1942, he returned to St.
  • Louis to live with his sister, and died there the following year.
  • His manuscripts are in the Gaylord Musical Library at Washington University; the University's Tietjens Hall is named in his honor.

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