added foperetta romanticism" to this not so well-defined term, and he found it harmful in
 
its old form, because "it stood for a pile of illusions behind which there was no content. It
 
consisted of false passions, behind which there was no heroism. It included gaiety behind
 which there was no humor.” (Ibid., 12-13) However, he found it acceptable in Free Wind in
 its new form, full of ideas and optimism.
 
L. J.: Szabad szel, 6. - What the article called the creation of “living and real” characters
 
was in fact the substitution of old stereotypical figures with new ones, who do not offer more
 
opportunity for acting than characters from other/previous operettas.
 
Cf. “The tale is not about the frivolous adventures of fatigued counts and grand duchesses in
 
love, but about the people of a port, brave sailors willing to fight. We care about their fate,
 
because they are like us, because they feel, think and love like ordinary people really do.”
 
The scenes where port people are hiding Marké from the police give “a magnificent picture
 
of folk humor and solidarity of workers ready to fight”. Ibid.
 
Cf. “Offenbach ridiculed French colonial exploitation in his ‘Perocola’ [i.e. La Périchole,
 
1868], Suppé’s ‘Donna Juanita’ [1880] aroused sympathy for the Spanish freedom fighters,
 
Lecoques [i.e. Charles Lecocq] depicted the ‘heroes’ of Thermidor satirically [in La Fille de
 
Madame Angot, 1873]. The classics of operetta were not afraid of politics, they did not put
 
their heads into the sand and their hits always came from feelings that everyone shared and
 
understood. They spotted the weakness in the structure of society and politics, and their best
 examples gave distorted mirrors of their time. [...] Dunayevsky does the same: his operetta is
 
an anti-imperialist play, a flag in today’s anti-war protests.” Fogarasi: Szabad szél, 484-485.
 
Banos: A színigazgató, 26.
 
16° Ibid.
 
Tibor Polgär is mentioned only by Margit Gaspar (Ibid.), his name cannot be found in any
 documents related to Free Wind. His first work was the re-orchestration of The Grand
 Duchess of Gerolstein in the nationalized Operetta Theatre. It was followed by the musical
 adaptation of Orpheus, another operetta by Offenbach. He also set Vernon Beste’s An
 American in London to music in 1956. The successful hit composer first worked with
 Margit Gaspar in 1946 on the production of her play, New God in Thebes at the Belvárosi
 Theatre. Cf. Tamas Gajdé: Théba vagy Verona? Gaspar Margit politikai reviije 1946-ban,
 Irodalomismeret 26:3 (2015), 40.