The United States was polarized, reeling from violence, its citizens protesting their leaders and questioning the very foundations of the country.
It was 1971.
That year, an audacious and wholly unique artwork debuted at the opening of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts; it was so controversial that President Richard Nixon stayed away from the performance.
“Mass: A Theater Piece for Singers, Players and Dancers” — which uses the Roman Catholic Mass as a framework to explore the cultural crisis of the late 1960s and early 1970s — was created by Leonard Bernstein, one of America’s greatest composers.
The piece included hundreds of performers, overlapping singing voices, cacophonous musical passages and moments of confusion. There had been nothing like it.
To mark the centennial of Bernstein’s birth, the School of Music gave “Mass” a rare, fully staged production in two shows at Arizona State University.
“Mass” included nearly 300 people on stage at ASU Gammage, including four dance groups, the Phoenix Boys Choir, a rock band, a blues band, a marching band and renowned baritone and guest artist Jubilant Sykes in the lead role of the Celebrant. Sykes was a Projecting All Voices visiting artist and his appearance was funded in part by Mellon Foundation grant. Another 100 designers, artists and crew members helped bring the show to life.
“Mass” has been performed many times this year, but even big-city productions have not been fully staged, according to David Lefkowich, the stage director.
“With this piece, we have an obligation to make it as spectacular as possible,” he said. “I’ve worked at a lot of universities and I don’t know any university that could even attempt something like this, let alone pull it off the way ASU is doing,” said Lefkowich, a New York-based stage director and choreographer.
The performers will include the ASU Symphony Orchestra and Choirs, ASU Music Theatre and Opera and dancers and designers from the School of Film, Dance and Theatre.
“The scope and scale of ‘Mass’ can best be realized in a setting like the Herberger Institute, given the culture of collaboration and the broad talents of the faculty and students,” said Brian DeMaris, artistic director of ASU’s Music Theatre and Opera program. “It is a work that showcases all we do and how we, as artists, intersect with current issues.”