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Lotta Dames, No Horses-The Life, Death, and Legacy of John Latouche

May 28 @ 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm

Step into a world of creativity and exploration with our thought-provoking series:

Image, Invention, and Imagination: A Series on Art & Community Through the Ages.

Monday, May 6, 13, 20 & Tuesday, May 28th
7:00 pm to 8:30 pm. Doors open at 6:45 pm
Admission: $15 per presentation / $50 for series.
Member savings apply.

 

Join us on a captivating journey through history as we explore the profound connections between art, innovation, and the human imagination. Delve into the fascinating intersection of artistic expression and community dynamics, from the medieval world to the present day. Discover how art has shaped our collective identity and inspired generations to push the boundaries of creativity. Don’t miss this enriching series that celebrates the power of imagination to transform the world around us. Join the conversation and be inspired!

Tuesday, May 28: Lotta Dames, No HorsesThe Life, Death, and Legacy of John Latouche

On July 7, 1956, the librettist John Treville Latouche’s seminal American Opera The Ballad of Baby Doe premiered in Central City, Colorado. “It’s about love and It’s about money,” Latouche had joked, in predicting the public’s response to the Opera, “And there’s no combination an American audience likes more!” Today, The Ballad of Baby Doe is often cited as one of the most significant Operas in the American canon, but Latouche would never know just how right he had been. One month later, John Latouche was dead. He was 41.

Over the course of his short years, Latouche lived a remarkably dynamic life; like a brilliant star, he pulled some of the most important artistic figures of 20th-century American culture into his brief orbit. The story of the community that Latouche anchored features well-known characters such as composer Leonard Bernstein and artist Marcel Duchamp and local figures like Margarett McKean and Hammond Castle Museum’s own John Hays Hammond Jr.

In fact, through Latouche’s legacy, a curious assembly of artists, poets, and occultists, many of them Queer, came to assemble at Hammond Castle Museum in its founder’s final years. This is a story about the life of John Latouche, but it is also a story about love. About money. About art. About magick. About false accusations of murder, and more. This lecture, the final in Hammond Castle Museum’s May Series on Art & Community Through the Ages, will also serve as an introduction to Hammond Castle Museum’s June Pride Month programming.

Caleb McMurphy is originally from Corvallis, Oregon. Caleb holds undergraduate degrees from Lyndon State College of Lyndonville, Vermont, and an MA in American Cultural Studies from Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, OH. In 2022 Caleb was appointed Hammond Castle Museum’s Director of Visitor Services and Education and moved to Gloucester, where he currently resides. In 2023, Caleb was awarded the North of Boston Convention and Visitors Bureau’s Tourism Industry Award for Frontline Hospitality.

 


Each hour-and-a-half presentation will include a Q&A session with light refreshments available for purchase.

The series includes:

Reserve your tickets for one or all the presentations.

Details

Date:
May 28
Time:
7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Event Categories:
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Venue

Hammond Castle Museum
80 Hesperus Avenue
Gloucester, MA 01930 United States
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Phone
978-283-2080
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