Before Bob Dylan, Joan Baez or Bruce Springsteen, there was Woody Guthrie.
Guthrie, a pioneering folk singer and activist, was pro-union, anti-war and he "cussed out high rents ... and punk politicians." His songs include the classic, "This Land is Your Land," and often reflected themes of American socialism and anti-fascism, while influencing countless generations both politically and musically.
The show Woody Sez explores the life and music of Guthrie, and it is returning to Hartford for the first time in a decade. David Lutkin, who was a creator and previously performed as Guthrie in the show, returns to offer music direction for 16 performances, plus three hootenannies from July 13-28.
Lutken joined 窪蹋勛圖厙s Morning Edition to talk about the evolution of this production and the enduring impact of Guthrie's iconic music.
The more things change, the more they stay the same, Lutkin said. The music still resonates a good deal, just in little bit different ways. And that's one of the reasons I think that everybody at TheaterWorks Hartford wanted to do the show again.
From Woody Guthrie to Woody Sez
Born in Oklahoma, Guthrie wrote more than 1,000 songs ranging from the plight of families during the Dust Bowl and Great Depression to songs written from the point of view of children. In fact, children became part of the origin story for Lutkins production.
The evolution of the show really started with a children's show that I did, that we have done many times at TheatreWorks Hartford, actually, for the Hartford school system, Lutkin said.
Harold Leventhal, who was then Guthries former manager, as well as Guthrie's little sister, got involved to help expand on the program, which eventually became Woody Sez.
They were instrumental," Lutkin said they allowed him to become "chief cook and bottle washer of the whole thing. And I guess to me, that's the same kind of thing that Woody did in his day. Was just to do whatever you had to do to get the message out there."
Guthries greatest protest song
One of the messages Lutkin thought was important for Guthrie to get out there was his song Pastures of Plenty. It describes the lives of workers during The Great Depression.
I think it probably is Woody Guthrie's greatest political protest, patriotic song, Lutkin said. He wrote it in 1941 during a period when he was actually commissioned to write songs for a documentary film.
The film was meant to highlight federal efforts to get Americans back to work.
Pastures of Plenty, in its own way, is a song to me about the victimization of the workers, Lutkin said.
Guthrie took the melody from an old murder ballad called Pretty Polly, he said, which is a song about the victimization of a woman.
But unlike Pretty Polly, which ends with her murder, Pastures of Plenty ends with a very defiant and triumphant verse that says, We rambled, that river and I all along your green valleys, I'll work till I die. My land, I'll defend with my life if need be. Cause my pastures of plenty must always be free.
Even though the narrator is toiling under the strain of an awful lot, he comes out with a great statement at the end, Lutkin said.
On inclusion and inspiration for This Land is Your Land
Pastures of Plenty was not the only time Guthrie borrowed a melody from songs of significance throughout history.
Woody was a big consumer of all kinds of literature. He read the Quran, he read the Bible, he read the Bhagavad Gita. He read all these things, and a lot of his songs and a lot of his poetry have little bits of it in and out, Lutkin said.
This Land is Your Land, for example, is written to the tune of an old hymn called When The World's On Fire.
Lutkin said Guthrie often chose melodies and lyrics that related to what he was studying or experiencing at the time. At one point, when he was reading about religions, Lutkin recalls Guthrie said he was going to start his own religion.
He says, it's a one man religion, but it's big enough for everybody. And no matter who you are, you're in it, and no matter what you do, you can't get out of it.
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