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Al Carmines
Al Carmines
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Reverend Alvin Allison "Al" Carmines Jr. (July 25, 1936 – August 9, 2005) was a key figure in the expansion of off-off-Broadway theatre in the 1960s.

Carmines was born in Hampton, Virginia. Although his musical talent appeared early, he decided to enter the ministry, attending Swarthmore College, majoring in English and philosophy, and then Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York, earning a bachelor of divinity in 1961 and a master of sacred theology in 1963.

Carmines was hired by Howard Moody as an assistant minister at Judson Memorial Church on Washington Square Park, New York, to found a theater in the sanctuary of the Greenwich Village church in conjunction with playwright Robert Nichols. He began composing in 1962 and acted as well. His Bible study group grew into the Rauschenbusch Memorial United Church of Christ, with Carmines as pastor.

Carmines taught at Union Theological Seminary and received the Vernon Rice Award for his performance and the Drama Desk Award for Lyrics and Music and was awarded the Obie award for Life Time Achievements.

Carmines is perhaps best remembered in the church for the hymn "Many Gifts, One Spirit" #114 in the United Methodist Hymnal. He was commissioned by the United Methodist Women to write this hymn for their General Assembly in 1974.

Carmines' musicals reflected his eclectic interests, including:

Carmines' Judson Poets' Theater, with other burgeoning theatres Café Cino, La MaMa E.T.C. and Theatre Genesis were experimental and vibrant challenges to the commercialization and conformity of Off Broadway and Broadway houses.

His 1973 musical The Faggot was a succès d'estime which transferred from the Judson Memorial Church to the Truck and Warehouse Theatre and ran for 203 performances.

In 1977, he had a cerebral aneurysm that required months of therapy. He underwent surgery a second time in 1985, which only then cured his crippling headaches. He died in St. Vincent's Hospital in New York.

Carmines found as much spiritual meaning in the theater as the church: "If you want to know how to live, go to church. If you want to know how your life is in its deepest roots, go to the theater."

Theatre credits

[edit]
  • What Happened (1963) - composer; a setting for the works of Gertrude Stein
  • Home Movies/Softly Consider the Nearness (1964) - composer, actor
  • Patter for a Soft Shoe Dance (1964) - composer
  • Sing Ho for a Bear (1964) - composer, actor (as Winnie the Pooh)
  • Gorilla Queen (1967) - composer, lyricist
  • San Francisco's Burning (1967) - composer
  • Song of Songs - composer; a cantata based on the Bible
  • The Sayings of Mao Tse-tung (1968) - composer; another cantata
  • In Circles (1968) - composer, actor
  • Peace (1969) - composer; an adaptation from Aristophanes
  • Christmas Rappings (from 1969) - lyrics, music, actor, director; annual Xmas show held at Judson Memorial Church, and eventually taped for a television special
  • Promenade (1969) - composer, musical director
  • The Urban Crisis (1969) - composer, lyricist; a "secular oratorio"
  • About Time (1970) - composer; another oratorio
  • W.C. (1971) - composer, lyricist; a musical based on the life of W. C. Fields, which starred Mickey Rooney and Bernadette Peters but closed out-of-town
  • The Journey of Snow White (1971) - composer, lyricist
  • The Duel (1972); composer, lyricist; an opera based on the lives of Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr
  • Joan (1972) - librettist, composer, lyricist, actor, director
  • A Look at the Fifties (1972) - composer, lyricist;
  • Wanted (1972) - composer;
  • "The Making of Americans" (1972 - composer and performer, text by Gertrude Stein adapted by Leon Katz, Directed by Lawrence Kornfeld
  • The Faggot (1973) - composer, lyricist, director, actor
  • Listen to me (1974) - composer; another Gertrude Stein adaptation
  • "A Manoir" (1977) composer, text by Gertrude Stein, directed by Lawrence Kornfeld
  • "Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights" (1979) composer, text by Gertrude Stein, directed by Lawrence Kornfeld, starring Jeff Weiss
  • T.S. Eliot: Midwinter Vigil(ante) (1981) - composer, lyricist, director; last show at Judson Church
  • Romance Language (1984) - actor (as Walt Whitman)
  • The Making of Americans (1985) - composer & lyricist, libretto by Leon Katz
  • The Comedy of Errors (1992) - actor (as Duke/Balthazar)
  • Máslova (1989) - inspired by the Leo Tolstoy novel, Resurrection—composer, co-lyricist with David Boles, book by David Boles[1]
  • Martyrs and Lullabies (1996) - an opera featuring Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Gertrude Stein, and Bessie Smith.

Awards and nominations

[edit]
  • 1964 Obie Award for Best Music - for Home Movies/Softly Consider the Nearness
  • 1968 Drama Desk Award (Vernon Rice-Drama Desk Award) - the music from In Circles
  • 1968 Obie Award for Best Musical - for In Circles
  • 1969 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music - for Peace
  • 1974 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lyrics - for The Faggot
  • 1974 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music - for The Faggot
  • 2003 Robert Chesley Award for gay and lesbian Playwriting

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Al Carmines is an American composer, lyricist, singer, actor, director, and ordained minister known for his pioneering role in the development of off-off-Broadway theater during the 1960s and 1970s. He transformed the sanctuary of Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village into a vibrant hub for experimental performances, co-founding the Judson Poets' Theater and producing a wide range of innovative musicals that blended music, literature, social commentary, and avant-garde aesthetics. His prolific output—comprising dozens of musicals, operas, and oratorios—often drew from eclectic sources such as Gertrude Stein, Aristophanes, Abraham Lincoln, and contemporary issues including homosexuality, helping to define the irreverent and boundary-pushing spirit of the off-off-Broadway movement alongside venues like Café Cino and La MaMa. Born Alvin Allison Carmines Jr. in Hampton, Virginia, Carmines studied at Swarthmore College and Union Theological Seminary before joining Judson Memorial Church as assistant minister in 1961, where he began composing theater music the following year and made his acting debut in his own work Home Movies. Notable productions for which he provided music and lyrics include In Circles, Peace, Promenade, and The Faggot, several of which transferred to Off-Broadway runs and earned him five Obie Awards, including one for lifetime achievement. His career was interrupted by a severe cerebral aneurysm in 1977 that required extensive surgery and recovery, leading him to resign from his church position in 1981, though he continued to perform cabaret acts and contribute to theater in later years. Carmines' work embodied a unique fusion of ministry and art, emphasizing human complexity over ideological rigidity and leaving a lasting impact on experimental American theater through his encouragement of uncensored, diverse voices and unconventional storytelling. He died in New York City in 2005.

Early life and education

Birth and family background

Alvin Allison Carmines Jr., known as Al Carmines, was born on July 25, 1936, in Hampton, Virginia. His father, Alvin Allison Carmines Sr., was a fishing trawler captain on Chesapeake Bay, while his mother, Katherine Graham Carmines, worked as a substitute teacher and school secretary. Carmines grew up in a coastal Virginia setting shaped by his family's ties to the region's maritime industry and local education. His mother was a strict Protestant who instilled her faith in him from an early age. This upbringing in Hampton provided the foundation for his later pursuits in ministry and the arts.

Education and theological training

Al Carmines attended Swarthmore College, where he majored in English and philosophy. Experiences at Swarthmore, including influences that encouraged a focus on religious life, led him to pursue theological studies. He moved to New York City to attend Union Theological Seminary, earning a Bachelor of Divinity in 1961 and a Master of Sacred Theology in 1963. This theological training provided the foundation for his ministry career in the city.

Ministry career

Appointment at Judson Memorial Church

In 1961, Al Carmines was hired by Rev. Howard Moody as assistant minister at Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village, New York City. Moody specifically tasked him with establishing a theater program in the church sanctuary, enlisting Carmines to collaborate with playwright and architect Robert Nichols on the initiative. The progressive congregation accepted the conditions proposed by Carmines and Nichols that productions would involve no religious drama and no form of censorship. This appointment marked the beginning of Carmines' integration of the arts into the church's ministry. He served in ministerial roles focused on the arts from 1961 onward, initially as assistant minister and subsequently as associate minister.

Later pastoral roles

After resigning from his position at Judson Memorial Church in 1981 due to persistent headaches and other complications following a major brain aneurysm in 1977, Al Carmines founded the Rauschenbusch Memorial United Church of Christ in 1982. The congregation developed from a Bible study and worship group that initially met in his apartment and became formally affiliated with the United Church of Christ that same year. Named after the social gospel theologian Walter Rauschenbusch, the church began at locations including the West Side Arts Theater before federating programs with Trinity Presbyterian Church, where it shared space at 422 West 57th Street. Carmines served as the founding pastor and senior minister of Rauschenbusch Memorial, leading its ministry through the 1980s and 1990s despite ongoing health limitations from his earlier aneurysm and surgeries. A second operation in 1981 alleviated the most severe headaches and enabled him to continue pastoral work. He remained active in this role until his death in 2005, after which the small congregation chose to sustain its ministry by sharing leadership and participating in joint programs with Trinity Presbyterian Church. During this later phase of ministry, Carmines continued to engage in hymn writing and arts-related activities.

Founding and leadership of Judson Poets' Theater

Establishment of the theater program

Al Carmines co-founded the Judson Poets' Theater in 1961–1962 alongside playwright Robert Nichols at Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village. The program was established as an experimental, non-commercial venture that utilized the church's sanctuary as a performance space for avant-garde and original works, reflecting the church's progressive openness to the arts under guidelines prohibiting religious drama and censorship. The theater presented a range of original musicals and innovative productions over nearly two decades, continuing until its final show, T.S. Eliot: Midwinter Vigil(ante), in 1981. In 1969, Carmines originated the annual Christmas Rappings series, which became a recurring tradition featuring seasonal musical performances. As part of the emerging off-off-Broadway scene, Judson Poets' Theater shared a similar spirit of experimentation with venues like Café Cino and La MaMa E.T.C., though it remained distinctly rooted in the church setting.

Role in off-off-Broadway movement

Al Carmines emerged as a pivotal figure in the off-off-Broadway movement of the 1960s through his leadership of the Judson Poets' Theater at Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village. The theater stood as one of the four core venues—alongside Caffe Cino, La MaMa E.T.C., and Theatre Genesis—that defined and expanded the movement by offering alternatives to the increasing commercialization and conformity of Broadway and off-Broadway productions. Judson Poets' Theater provided a welcoming space for avant-garde artists and non-traditional musical theater, fostering highly experimental work in the sanctuary of Judson Memorial Church that deliberately rejected conventional theatrical realism and commercial constraints. Productions emphasized low-cost, collaborative approaches, often relying on minimal budgets, unpaid performers, and free admission to audiences to prioritize creative freedom and anti-establishment experimentation over profit or external interference. Carmines composed approximately 80 musicals, operas, and oratorios during his career, with about 10 transferring to off-Broadway houses. His work at Judson helped establish the movement's ethos of adventurous, underground theater that embraced diverse artists and challenged mainstream norms.

Theatrical works and compositions

Early works and initial recognition (1960s)

Al Carmines emerged as a significant figure in the off-off-Broadway scene during the 1960s through his innovative compositions and performances at Judson Poets' Theater. He composed the music for Home Movies and Softly Consider the Nearness in 1964, also serving as an actor in these productions, which earned him an Obie Award for Best Music. In 1968, Carmines composed and acted in In Circles, a musical adaptation of texts by Gertrude Stein, receiving an Obie Award for Best Musical and the Drama Desk Vernon Rice Award for his music. His productivity continued into 1969 with several notable contributions. Carmines composed the music for Peace in collaboration with librettist Tim Reynolds, winning a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music. That same year, he served as composer and musical director for Promenade, with book and lyrics by María Irene Fornés. Also beginning in 1969, Carmines created Christmas Rappings, an annual holiday production series for which he wrote the lyrics and music, performed, and directed. Carmines frequently performed as an actor and singer in his own compositions during this period, contributing to the distinctive collaborative spirit of the Judson Poets' Theater. These early works established his reputation for blending experimental theater with accessible, melodic music, garnering critical recognition through prestigious awards.

Major productions and collaborations (1970s onward)

In the 1970s and subsequent decades, Al Carmines remained a prolific creator at Judson Poets' Theater and beyond, composing approximately 80 musicals, operas, and oratorios throughout his career, with several notable productions advancing to off-Broadway stages. His 1972 work Joan featured Carmines in multiple roles as librettist, composer, lyricist, actor, and director. The following year, The Faggot—for which he served as composer, lyricist, director, and actor—enjoyed a successful off-Broadway run and received Drama Desk Awards for Outstanding Lyrics and Outstanding Music. In 1974, Carmines adapted Gertrude Stein's writings for the production Listen to Me. He composed the hymn "Many Gifts, One Spirit" in 1973, commissioned by United Methodist Women. Carmines' later output included T.S. Eliot: Midwinter Vigil(ante) (1981), where he acted as composer, lyricist, and director, as well as Máslova (1989), inspired by Tolstoy's Resurrection, and the 1996 opera Martyrs and Lullabies, which incorporated figures such as Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Gertrude Stein, and Bessie Smith. In 1979, he received an Obie Award for Sustained Excellence.

Musical style and themes

Al Carmines developed a highly eclectic musical style that freely blended diverse genres, including vaudeville, burlesque, blues, operatic forms, Broadway idioms, and experimental techniques. He drew influences from classical composers such as Bach and Mozart, blues and gospel traditions exemplified by Bessie Smith, Kurt Weill's theatrical sharpness, and a wide range of other sources including ragtime, spirituals, and jazz, often shifting abruptly between styles within a single score to match textual demands. This approach frequently set ordinary, conversational language or pedestrian dialogue to music, lending it unexpected satirical, nostalgic, or poignant edges while allowing songs to flow continuously without the rigid separations typical of mid-century Broadway musicals. His compositions regularly incorporated social critique, surrealism, and pointed commentary on issues of class, sexuality, and spirituality, often through ironic juxtapositions, absurdism, or phantasmagoric imagery that entertained while subtly stinging. Works featured bitter reflections on class divisions, explorations of sexual themes with camp or travesty elements, and spiritual motifs that ranged from religious ridicule to metaphysical inquiry, all presented in a secular yet impudent manner that prioritized artistic freedom over ideological messaging. Carmines frequently wrote music for adaptations of literary texts by writers such as Gertrude Stein and Aristophanes, alongside original libretti, and he often performed as singer, actor, or pianist in his own productions to bring the works to life. This creative practice was nurtured by the inclusive, non-commercial environment of Judson Memorial Church, which emphasized artistic liberty without commercial pressures or evangelistic intent.

Awards and recognition

Personal life and health challenges

Death and legacy

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