Vin Scully on giving voice to Abe Lincoln at the Bowl: 'One of the most thrilling moments of my life'
Leave it to longtime Dodgers announcer Vin Scully to invoke a baseball metaphor in describing one of his highest-profile public appearances since stepping away from the microphone for the Boys in Blue at the end of last season.
On Thursday he joined the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Music Director Gustavo Dudamel in the first of two performances at the Hollywood Bowl. As he will again do on Tuesday, Scully narrated powerful words from the nationâs 16th president that composer Aaron Copland incorporated into his 1942 work âLincoln Portrait.â
The jump from the baseball broadcast booth to the classical music stage gave the 89-year-old Hall of Famer pause when the invitation from L.A. Phil officials arrived.
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âThey invited me to do it, and my first thought was, âWhoa, thatâs kind of out of the ballpark for me,ââ Scully said Friday.
âThen they listed the various people who have been honored to do this piece, and all of a sudden I thought itâs such a great honor I canât turn it down,â he said. âI just pray that I donât mess it up.â
Although Scully eloquently spun out millions of words about all facets of the national pastime during his unprecedented 67-year tenure with the Dodgers, dating back before the team moved from Brooklyn to Los Angeles, only now does he join an imposing roster of people who have taken on âLincoln Portraitâ: actors Henry Fonda, Gregory Peck, Katharine Hepburn, Tom Hanks, James Earl Jones, Danny Glover, Melvyn Douglas and Charlton Heston; presidents Bill Clinton and Bar ack Obama, vice presidents Al Gore and Walter Mondale, Sens. Edward M. Kennedy and George S. McGovern, and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher; writers Carl Sandburg and Gore Vidal; musicians William Warfield (whose 1983 recording earned him a spoken world performance Grammy Award), folk-rocker James Taylor and folk singer Odetta; and athletes such as Philadelphia 76ers basketball star Julius Erving and Pittsburgh Pirates veteran first baseman Willie Stargell.
Not surprisingly, a common love for sports provided the initial common ground between Scully and Dudamel.
âHeâs a rabid baseball fan,â Scully said. âThat was an immediate bridge. The thing that was lucky is that I decided that if heâs relaxed enough, Iâm going to ask him for his autograph. So I brought the sheet music that I had studied with me and had a pen for him to sign it.
âAs soon as we shook hands, I said âWould you sign my copy of the score?â At that moment he pulled a copy of the score with his notes from behind his back and asked me to sign his copy,â Scully said. âWe just hit it off immediately, and it was because of him that it worked.â
Scully didnât consider the whole enterprise a home run even as the first performance approached.
âAbout two days before the first and only rehearsal, I did have thoughts of, âWhat have I gotten myself into?â Really and truly, my life has been wonderful, and Iâve always believed that everything thatâs happened to me has been God-given â" I never felt that I deserved it,â he said. âAnd I started to think, âAm I pressing things? Am I going to do something Iâm not equipped to do?â I will say Gustavo Dudamel was marvelous. He made me feel so comfortable.â
Far from simply reciting printed text, the narrator is called on to place Lincolnâs words â" which Copland pulled from various speeches â" in time and in character with the music he composed to frame those sentiments.
Scully said a single rehearsal Thursday morning, a few hours before the evening performance , focused on getting Scully comfortable with watching for Dudamelâs cues on when to move into each section of the narration.
They did not, he said, discuss the emotional tone he should strive for, or how to emphasize, or de-emphasize, particular words or phrases.
âThe music really affected me,â he said. âThe tone in my voice was affected and dictated by the music. I wasnât thinking âIâve got to draw this outâ or âI need to speed this up.â I went with the flow. I felt like the music was inside of me, and I was deeply touched.â
Most of the text centers on Lincolnâs thoughts about the Civil War and slavery, which Copland fashioned into his piece written in the midst of World War II.
REVIEW: Music critic Mark Swed on Night 1 of the Scully concert »
Three-quarters of a century after the piece was i ntroduced in 1942 by conductor Andre Kostelanetz, who commissioned it, and the Cincinnati Symphony, Scully noted that it remains a piece that feels both timeless and immediate.
Near the outset of the narrated section, for instance, Copland drew from Lincolnâs message to Congress on Dec. 1, 1862, when the President said: âFellow citizens, we cannot escape history. We of this Congress and this administration will be remembered in spite of ourselves. â¦The fiery trial through which we pass will light us down in honor or dishonor to the latest generation. We, even we here, hold the power and bear the responsibility.â
âImmediate indeed,â Scully said. âWith the country as divided as it is, this was a call for unity. I only had the difficulty of reacting. It just had me from the moment it begins.â
The biggest challenge for Scully may have been the prelude to his part in the piece, given that the narration begins after several minutes of orchestral music.
âYouâre just standing there, waiting,â he said. âI think the wait is close to nine minutes and you just stand there while the music is playing. The orchestra is behind you, and itâs like a gigantic tidal wave. It fills you and whisks you away. I was overwhelmed with that feeling. I told my wife, âThat was one of the most thrilling moments of my life.â My feeling was I was an amateur amongst Hall of Famers.â
During that instrumental portion, he added, âall kinds of thoughts are going through your mind: Donât mess up. Pay attention. And oh my gosh, the music. Your head is really whirling. But once Gustavo started me off, I was just swept along with the music and the words. I wouldnât say I would have cried, but I was glad I didnât.
âI just tried to stay within myself,â he said. âI didnât want to start bawling, but I could feel the music and how it builds to the war; the drums sound like cannons; his words that we are going to be judged and what he thought of democracy, the way the music played â" Iâve got goosebumps right now just talking about it.â
At Thursdayâs performance, an ovation erupted before the piece ended, following the final line of the text, when Scully recited Lincolnâs vow from the battlefield at Gettsyburg âthat government of the people, by the people and for the people shall not perish from the earth.â
That was the moment, Scully said, âthat brought me back to square one. I guess in one way I was in my own world, reading and listening to the music. I forgot there was an audience.â
The performance was recorded and is scheduled to be broadcast July 30 on KUSC-FM (91.5) along with the rest of the program, which opened with Co plandâs âFanfare for the Common Manâ and concluded with Beethovenâs Ninth Symphony.
Asked whether he felt any less jittery heading into Tuesdayâs final performance now that he had a standing ovation and a curtain call, Scully reverted to a sports analogy one more time.
âIn all honesty,â he said, âmaybe it was a rookie first-time, first-shot-good. Thereâs no rehearsal for Tuesday. Iâm just going to run through it in my head again and remember that thereâs Gustavo to help me.
âIn all capital letters,â he said, âHONORED.â
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