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Speak Low (When You Speak Love): The Letters of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya
 
 
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Speak Low (When You Speak Love): The Letters of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya [Hardcover]

Kurt Weill (Author), Lotte Lenya (Author), Lys Symonette (Editor), Kim H. Kowalke (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 5, 1996
They were an unlikely couple. Kurt Weill was a German cantor's son, cerebral, well-educated. Lotte Lenya was two years older, an Austrian Catholic coachman's daughter, waif-like, less than beautiful but always appealing to men. She survived the abuse of an alcoholic father, escaping to Zurich and finally Berlin, working as a would-be dancer turned actress. When they met, she was a domestic worker in the home of the playwright he had come to recruit as a librettist. Much to his family's dismay, they married in 1926.
Fiercely independent and yet codependent, Weill and Lenya spent twenty-five years discovering a way to live together after realizing that they couldn't live apart. Weill gave music to her voice, Lenya gave voice to his music. Their correspondence--first in German and later, after their move to America, in highly flavored English--is uninhibited, intimate, and irreverent. It offers a backstage view of German music and theater, the American musical theater in the late thirties and forties, and Hollywood. The letters are candid, vivid commentaries on world events, the creative process, and the experience of exile.
Never before published, this collection reflects the vibrancy of Weimar culture in the Golden Twenties and the vitality that èmigrès brought to American culture. Lenya's unfinished autobiographical account of her life before Weill is also included, along with a prologue, epilogue, and connective commentary. Immensely touching as well as informative, Weill and Lenya's letters preserve a portrait of a memorable love that somehow survived its turbulent surroundings.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Different workplaces often kept Austrian singer Lotte Lenya and her husband, composer and conductor Kurt Weill apart, but the two shortened the distance through lively, often humorous correspondence. An unlikely couple, Weill came from an upper-class family and long line of German rabbis, while Lenya was the daughter of a washerwoman and an abusive cabby father. He studied with such masters as Ferruccio Busoni and Arnold Schoenberg; she worked as a child prostitute, dancer; and then singer, without any formal training. Despite their differences and numerous affairs they had profound affection and devotion for one another as this collection of letters, with annotations, explanations, and references by the editors, attests.

From Publishers Weekly

He was a well-educated cantor's son and important German composer who made a successful transition to pre-WWII Broadway and Hollywood. She was a dancer and actress who had once supported herself as a prostitute like Jenny in his Threepenny Opera. Married in 1926, they weathered separation, divorce and emigration to the U.S., ultimately remarrying in 1937 and living together until Weill's sudden death in 1950. Their relationship was by turns peaceful and tumultuous. But, during their time apart (on theatrical tours, sometimes with other lovers), they wrote each other at least weekly. The editors have gathered 410 missives, the vast majority (296) from Weill to Lenya. The writing is peppered, as one might expect, with references to theater associates such as Helen Hayes, Alan Jay Lerner, Maxwell Anderson, Marlene Dietrich (very stupid and superficial), Andre Malraux and Bertolt Brecht (whom Lenya disliked and distrusted). But the letters are equally full of domestic arrangements, endearments, naughty sketches, risque lyrics and pet names. Roughly half were written in German, but all have been smoothly translated to blend with later English letters. Symonette, who served as Weill's musical assistant starting in 1945, and musicologist Kowalke have wisely chosen to retain the original, at times highly idiosyncratic, spelling and grammar. While there is often something vaguely prurient about reading letters never intended for publication, the correspondence between Blumchen and her Weilili is unexpectedly charming and adds an informative and touching dimension to two well-known lives.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 554 pages
  • Publisher: University of California Press; annotated edition edition (May 5, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0520078535
  • ISBN-13: 978-0520078536
  • Product Dimensions: 10.1 x 7.1 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,168,047 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Remember Letters?, April 2, 2007
This review is from: Speak Low (When You Speak Love): The Letters of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya (Hardcover)
Can you imagine a book subtitled: "The Email and SMS Exchanges of ____and ____?"
Remember letters? Actual pieces of paper held in and written by the hand of the sender? Remember the thrill of seeing the return address in the upper left hand corner, the familiar writing of a loved one on the front?
Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya wrote each other almost every day they were apart. They are a veritable clearinghouse of the first half of 20th century history, having lived in Berlin of the 20's, Weill in French exile in the 30's then New York after that. It is a fascinating account--their impressions of Broadway and Hollywood are insightful (Weill) and hilarious(Lenya). Buy it. And write a letter to someone you love.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superbly Interesting Correspondence. Read it!, August 29, 2007
`Speak Low (When You Speak Love) The Letters of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya' edited and translated by Lys Symonette and Kim H. Kowalke is the very first book of letters I have actually been able to read from cover to cover, and that includes attempts to read letters by some of my very favorite authors, such as H. L. Menchen, J. R. R. Tolkien, Ernest Hemingway, and Harold Ross (founder of `The New Yorker'), and all of these people, especially Menchen and Ross were no slouches when it came to writing correspondence.
Like Menchen and Ross, much of my interest in these two correspondents lies in their not being well known in the modern American pantheon of cultural heroes. I get a certain pleasure in `having them to myself', just as I felt some loss when Tolkien was elevated to that pantheon in the mid-1960's, when `The Hobbit' and `The Lord of the Rings' came out in mass market paperback.
Weill and Lenya was the model of a successful show business marriage, similar to that of singer Kitty Carlyle and playwright George S. Kaufmann, long before such pairings became staples of gossip columns and pop magazines and TV shows. To remind us of their background, Weill was the composer half of the team of Weill and Berthold Brecht who wrote three major hits for the Berlin musical stage in the late 1920's. The most famous became known to American audiences as `The Threepenny Opera'. Lenya, at this time, was a rising star actress and singer on the Berlin musical stage, and they were married on 26 January 1926, before Weill's first successes.
The book's subtitle does not make this clear, but all the letters in the book are between the two principals. There are no other correspondents. They run from 1924, when they first met, to about 15 months before Weill's death, dated 25 November 1948.
One may wonder how a correspondence between husband and wife could be so voluminous. Of course, their professions had a lot to do with it, since Lenya was often away from Berlin doing stage performances. Later, when the couple moved to the United States, the same condition held, as both were involved in different projects in different places.
What is surprising is that for all the parts Weill wrote for Lenya in Germany, he wrote no similar parts for her in his English musical plays such as `Lost in the Stars', `One Touch of Venus', and `Johnny Johnson'. I suspect the libretto writers such as Maxwell Anderson and S. J. Perelman had a far greater say in character development.
The editors have done a terrific job of assembling, annotating, and indexing all this material. The contents give a truly superb look at a major piece of the cultural history of both German and American musical stages in the first half of the 20th century. One envies their relationship and, like H. L. Menchen, who lost the love of his life, one is just a bit jealous of the fact that one can only live this relation vicariously.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Tenderness, Ego, Passion, May 15, 2010
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The letters of "Speak Low," between Kurt Weill & Lotte Lenya, reveal the private side of the couple's successes first in Germany, Austria and France, then during their years as refugees in the U.S. Determination, pluck and the enormous gifts of both raised their reputations to the top of U.S. musical theatre during the war and postwar periods.

Tenderness, passion and creativity flow through the letters dating from the pair's meeting in Germany in the 1920s until Weill's premature death a quarter century later. Both major talents, this great theatrical couple lived richly, if often stormily, from their first rise to success in the burgeoning efflorescence of post-World War I German music & theatre, through dark and threatening intolerance brought by National Socialism. Weill emerges as a preoccupied genius, truly "lost in the stars" of his own talent and obsession to create, whereas Lenya reveals herself deeper and broader, yet still a genuine manifestation of her stage persona: the vamp whose bawdy bravura hides a child-woman's fragile and yearning heart. Both cannily manipulate each other and those around them into recognizing and appreciating their rich talents, especially as they gain entree and climb a path to the top of U.S. musical theater.

Always lively and at times moving, these letters create a sense of the passionate engagement of Lenya's and Weill's minds as well as their emotions. Lively insights into other giants of American music, theatre and film of the time are no small embellishments to the correspondence. Well worth the read!
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