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Re: RAT SUPERBOWL INTERVAL HIJINKS
Here here, Chris.
I would also add that for the playwright, watching
opera (I stress WATCHING) is a fascinating, deeply
inspiring endeavor. It's one thing to study the
dramaturgy (God that word never ceases to make me
cringe) of Shakespeare or Mamet-- a very necessary
thing, I think. But to see how Mozart tells a story,
builds characters, shapes relationships with music...
well, it's like watching Picasso create architecture:
not terribly practical, but amazingly beautiful and
eye-opening.
(BTW: I have no idea if Picasso ever created any
architecture, though I'm pretty sure our ol' buddy
Marcel Duchamp is responsible for the ubiquitous IHOP
design.)
--- Chris Jeffries <cjeffries@seanet.com> wrote:
> I too must leap in. First, there is indeed a huge
> resurgence in opera
> attendance. We don't hear about it because in
> America, the opera houses
> are nonprofits, and therefore Entertainment Weekly
> and the conglomerate
> newspapers, who are owned by corporate interests
> directly competing for
> those entertainment dollars, naturally sweep it
> under the rug since they
> themselves don't get to cash in on the extra
> publicity (sound familiar?).
>
>
> Opera "elitist?" Maybe it seems that way in the
> always-gets-it-wrong
> U.S. So what. Go almost anywhere in Europe and see
> if you can hurl
> without some of it splashing against a busy,
> thriving, fun, popular opera
> house. There are tons of places in the world where
> fights break out in
> the pubs over this week's opera (I saw this in
> Sydney, a jock town if
> ever there was one). Not a sign of "out of touch"
> to be seen. Leave it
> to us to turn a fabulous art form into a snobs-only
> furfest -- but as
> Allison points out, even that ground is shifting
> radically as we speak.
> As is the nature of opera itself -- it pops up in
> many guises besides the
> one we think of.
>
> Opera "high art?" Heavens. Nearly all operas,
> famous and forgotten,
> are potboilers written for a mass audience. Most
> are claptrap. Most are
> glorious. Opera is the Evel Knievel of concert
> music. The singers,
> players, and conductors are all performing awesome
> feats of athletic
> prowess, or failing spectacularly at same. Some
> operas go the
> Shakespeare route and manage to also be high art,
> and some are hermetic
> and only try to appeal to connoisseurs. But most
> were written to be
> nothing more or less than rip-roaring crowd
> pleasers, and they still
> would be if we didn't all settle for the party line
> that what we're
> watching or performing is important, and serious,
> and boring.
>
> By the way, what Peter Sellars does with opera is
> the tip of the iceberg
> if you ask me. His takes are fresh, and funny, and
> sometimes big eye
> openers -- and he does long rehearsal periods, which
> is refreshing -- but
> it's still the same package, with all the same
> trappings. It only looks
> like the cutting edge if your reference point is
> creaky old Met stagings.
> The real advance guard is taking it out of the Met,
> way out. But that
> aside, I'd rather see even a same-old-same-old opera
> production than most
> "theatre." As the kids say.
> C
>
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> >
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