when money grew on trees: the rubber boom and the creation of an

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When Money Grew on Trees: The Rubber Boom and the Creation of an Opera House in the Jungle By Rex Fuller "F lorencia Grimaldi's brilliant voice will reopen a theater's dormant lock," declares Riolobo as the EI Dorado departs th e d ocks in Leticia, Colombia. In Daniel Catan 's opera, Florencia is headed downstream to one of the most re mote urban locations on earth, a frontier city built a thousand miles inland in the center of th e A mazonian J ungle, to sing on the stage of a glorious opera house built at the peak of Brazil's rubber b oom In t ile late 19th century. Rubber was initially viewed as an amusi ng if useless novelty. However, natural rubber would ultimately come to drive the world economy for a time and still plays a major role in manufacturing. Money from fortunes built by the rubber industry would also come to playa major role in the cultural life of South America . Rubber was first introduced to Europeans in 1526 in the form of a game . Andrea Navagero, a Venetian ambassador to Spain , was fascin ated by a game called ullamaliztili, a team sport played by native people in the new world. More interesting than tile ball game being played was the ball itself, made of a substance no European was familiar with. T he curious elastic material was made by boiling the sap of a tree native to the equatorial jungles of Sou th Ame rica . Though the properties of ru bber were fascinating, they were seen as being of little practical use for centuries . In the 1820s, there was an attempt to make waterproof shoes and other garments out of rubber, but the material was too unstable. In cold weather, it would seize up and crack; in hot weather it would melt. It wasn't until 1844 when Cha rles Goodyear discovered a process to "vulcanize" rubber by adding sulfur to the natural sap that tile commercial world would see the value of this remarkable material. (incidentally, Goodyear died in povert y. Another entrepreneur created the Goodyear Rubber Company and named it in Goodyear's honor. His family never saw a penny of the fortune.) Once rubber could be stabilized, the rubber market exploded. Maverick businessmen rushed to the rainforest where money seemed to grow on trees . As the home of the only rubber plants in the world, South America had a monopoly on all rubber production and the demand was high . The Port of Manaus blossomed in the tropical forest at the confluence of the Negro and Amazon Rivers and became a regional powerhouse . It is frequently said that at the time it was more expensive to live in Manaus than to live in Paris. Since there were few accessible st on es in the Amazon basin, the citizens of Manaus imported cobblestones from Portugal to pave their streets. No excess was too great. The wealthy would even send their shirts to Europe to be laundered . This is an astounding fact wilen you realize the only possible way to reach the city was by ship. Even today, the only options to reach Manaus are by boat or by air; there are no roads that reach the city. FlORENCIA EN El AMAZONAS I Page 10

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Page 1: When Money Grew on Trees: The Rubber Boom and the Creation of an

When Money Grew on Trees: The Rubber Boom and the Creation of an Opera House in the Jungle

By Rex Fuller"Florencia Grimaldi's brilliant voice will reopen a theater's dormant lock," declares Riolobo as the EI Dorado departs the docks in Leticia, Colombia. In Daniel Catan 's opera, Florencia is headed downstream to one of the most remote urban locations on earth, a frontier city built a thousand

miles inland in the center of the Amazonian Jungle, to sing on the stage of a glorious opera house built at the peak of Brazil's rubber boom In tile late 19th century.

Rubber was initially viewed as an amusing if useless novelty. However, natural rubber would ultimately come to drive the world economy for a time and still plays a major role in manufacturing. Money from fortunes built by the rubber industry would also come to playa major role in the cultural life of South America.

Rubber was first introduced to Europeans in 1526 in the form of a game.Andrea Navagero, aVenetian ambassador to Spain , was fascinated by a game called ullamaliztili, a team sport played by native people in the new world. More interesting than tile ball game being played was the ball itself, made of asubstance no European was familiar with. The curious elastic material was made by boiling the sap of a tree native to the equatorial jungles of South America.

Though the properties of rubber were fascinating, they were seen as being of little practical use for centuries. In the 1820s, there was an attempt to make waterproof shoes and other garments out of rubber, but the material was too unstable. In cold weather, it would seize up and crack; in hot weather it would melt. It wasn't until 1844 when Charles Goodyear discovered a process to "vulcanize" rubber by adding sulfur to the natural sap that tile commercial world would see the value of this remarkable material. (incidentally, Goodyear died in poverty. Another entrepreneur created the Goodyear Rubber Company and named it in Goodyear's honor. His family never saw a penny of the fortune.)

Once rubber could be stabilized, the rubber market exploded. Maverick businessmen rushed to the rainforest where money seemed to grow on trees.As the home of the only rubber plants in the world, South America had a monopoly on all rubber production and the demand was high. The Port of Manaus blossomed in the tropical forest at the confluence of the Negro and Amazon Rivers and became a regional powerhouse.

It is frequently said that at the time it was more expensive to live in Manaus than to live in Paris. Since there were few accessible stones in the Amazon basin, the citizens of Manaus imported cobblestones from Portugal to pave their streets. No excess was too great. The wealthy would even send their shirts to Europe to be laundered. This is an astounding fact wilen you realize the only possible way to reach the city was by ship. Even today, the only options to reach Manaus are by boat or by air; there are no roads that reach the city.

FlORENCIA EN El AMAZONAS I Page 10

Page 2: When Money Grew on Trees: The Rubber Boom and the Creation of an

Much like the citizens of gold rush-era Central City, Colorado, who wanted to prove their sophistication to the world by building an opera house in their frontier town, the Brazilians built the Teatro Amazonas at the top of one of the four hills that dominate their city. "Teeming bordellos, liquor­soaked cafes, cowboy-style barroom brawls -Manaus was the very model of a turn-of-the­century boomtown ," wrote Charles C. Mann in his recent book 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created.

The opera house was a monument to cultural refinement. Mann described it as "a preposterous fantasia of Carrara marble, Venetian chandeliers, Strasbourg tiles, Parisian mirrors, and Glasgow ironwork. Finished in 1897 and intended as an opera house, it was a financial folly: the auditorium had only 658 seats, not enough to offset the cost of importing musicians, let alone the expense of construction. Wide stone sidewalks with undulating to 1920. Areas of rubber productionalong the Amazon are indicated in green.

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Florencia journeys from Leticia, Colombia to Manaus, Brazil, the center of the rubber trade from 1880

black-and-white patterns led downhill from the theater through a jumble of brothels, rubber warehouses, and nouveau­riche mansions to the docks: two enormous platforms that rode up and down with the river on hundreds of wooden pillars."

The fortunes of Manaus rose and fell with the rubber trade. By 1910, the industry was finished when rubber seeds were smuggled out of the country and rubber plantations began to spring up in Malaysia at tile same time that a deadly fungus infected the rubber trees of Brazil. What was once a boom town fell on hard times and the opera house closed. According to reporter Christina Lamb in the London Daily Telegraph, there was no opera in Manaus for nearly 90 years. "The rubber barons went back to Europe and for years the theatre sat rotting in the tropical heat. Sporadic attempts to renovate and reopen it sputtered out. The stage was used as a football pitch, the auditorium as storage for petrol. "

In the late 90s, a new governor was elected and decided to reopen the grand opera house. A new opera festival was created as well as an annual film festival. The festival has continued for fifteen seasons every April

a patina of legend, playing a part in popular culture. The opera house appears In the first scene of the 1982 Werner Herzog film Fitzcarraldo where a would-be rubber baron dreams of building a fortune so he can bring opera to the Amazon. Played by a manic Klaus Kinskey, the scene features him desperately paddling a canoe into Manaus so he can see his idol Enrico Caruso perform at the opera house in the jungle.

Apivotal scene In Ann Patchett's recent novel State of Wonder takes place at the Teatro Amazonas. "The point of an evening at Teatro Amazonas was not so much to see the opera as it was to see an opera house," she wrote. "Tile building itself vvas the performance, the two long marble staircases curving up in front, the high blue walls piped with crisp white embell ishments, tile great tiled dome that must have been torn from a Russian palace by a monstrous storm and blown all the way to South America." Patchett goes on to describe the inside of the opera house as "a wedding cake, every intricately decorated layer balanced delicately on the shoulders of the one beneath it, riSing up and up to a

ceiling where frescoed angels parted the wandering clouds with

and May. Many performers their hands." have migrated from To some visitors, the Bulgaria, Belarus and Teatro Amazonas is so Russia to perform in unlikely, it must appear Manaus - often a difficult to be a mirage brought transition as singers need on by a tropical fever. to adjust to the climate and As Patchett's character musicians must prevent observed, "There was no their instruments from real explanation for how splitting open in the such a building was oppressive humidity and conceived for such a tropical heat. Creating an place. Marina thought of it opera festival in Manaus is as the line of civilization a challenge where more that held the jungle back." than half the population lives in grinding poverty. Rex Fuller is director of

Over the years, the marketing for OperaExterior of the Teatro Amazonas. opera house has taken on Colorado.

FLORENCIA EN El AMAZONAS I Page 11