Last night, Stella and I caught the final performance of Puccini's El Trittico at the Chandler Pavilion. The show has had a lot of press because of its directors - the first two one-acts were directed by William Friedkin (of The Exorcist, and The French Connection fame), and the final one was directed by none other than Woody Allen. It was my first time sitting in the audience of a professional opera, and it will most definitely not be my last.
The three stories are very different from each other. The first act, Il Tabarro, deals with a love triangle that ends, not surprisingly, with the cuckold husband taking revenge on his wife's lover. Then, in Suor Angelica, the evening's most powerful hour, a banished woman in a convent takes her own life after discovering her young illegitimate son has died. The final act, Gianni Schicchi, is a comic farce about a greedy family pursuing their patriarch's fortune.
The sets were also extremely different, but each one equally lavish and detailed. I was once an opera stagehand at the MAC at Indiana University, so I understand a little about what goes into a scene change with sets on such a scale. I wish I could have had a backstage view to watch the crew change out these gigantic three dimensional paintings.
All three acts were strong, although Friedkin demonstrated a more thorough understanding of the medium from the point of view of the last row in the house. This is especially clear in Suor Angelica, where every character wears the same costume (except for a few nuns and the wicked aunt who comes to tell Angelica the bad news.) When it began I was worried that I wouldn't be able to keep track of the main character! But the direction and choreography were deft; once Angelica rises out of the group after the beautiful introduction, not once was I left confused. This demonstrates to me that Friedkin had everyone in the theater in mind.
Allen's offering, which was entertaining, light, and joyous, was harder to follow. The set was magnificent (I think its reveal caused the biggest gasp of the evening), but is was cluttered and the choreography was busy. There was so much movement on the stage at moments, it was difficult to know what to look at. I'm certain that several jokes only played to the people on the lower levels; you could hear guffaws and chuckles rising up through the house. In some ways, the first act of the evening was funnier, not because Friedkin has a better handle on comedy, but because he has a better handle on how to play an opera to everyone in the theater.
With that said, my mixed response to the last act wasn't necessarily to its execution. The second act, Suor Angelica, was so powerful and exhausting, that the light farce afterward full of caricature and goofiness didn't resonate as well. I think that perhaps they should have ended the evening with the tragedy, although that's not how Puccini intended it. Watching the second piece was unlike anything I have experienced in live musical performance. The moments where tragedy and beauty reached their pinnacle had me weeping for a very long time during the show. Puccini's music is extraordinary, and when put into dramatic context, it has the capability to overwhelm the senses. The whole evening was a grand surprise. I went for a good time, and I came away challenged (its almost 4 hours long with two intermissions), and rewarded beyond all expectation.
The most important aspect of opera I learned last night is that you can give a paragraph synopsis to tell what happens in an opera, but that synopsis rarely describes what the opera is about. The subtleties of meaning have to be experienced first hand to gain the most from the work. Puccini's sympathies for the working class are lost in a paragraph about Il Tabarro. His careful rendering of a despairing mother in Suor Angelica does not translate fully if you listen to the music alone. You have to watch it live for all the nuances to breathe, and meanwhile, the virtuoso singers take you to places you didn't know existed.
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Sunday, September 21, 2008
Letter to a Despairing Friend
Hey there Liz,
Thanks for the article! Great read. I think that Letham makes a lot of heady and fascinating points about The Dark Knight. But I also think the movie doesn't hold up entirely to the model he puts forth. I am not smart enough to answer Letham's analysis point by point. I think he is definitely on to something, but its not all hopeless.
I think The Dark Knight is a reflection of the times at hand, not necessarily a propaganda piece for the administration. (That partisan hack, Andrew Klavan, who interpreted the movie as a defense of W is an idiot, and his op-ed doesn't hold a candle to Letham's thoughtful analysis.) I think its funny that I had an allergic reaction to Iron Man, and you to the Dark Knight. I'm not sure what it says about us, maybe that at the times we saw each movie, we saw the real evils that haunt us and thus, were horrified.
My only criticism of Letham's article is that he sounds beyond pessimistic. Granted, it may be a time to despair, but you cannot allow your despair to totally paralyze you because when you do that, you give your enemies power over you. I'm not about to do that anymore. Pessimism is a poison. McCain/Palin will not stop us. They may make it harder, but they will not stop me from living a free life or doing what I can to help others live free lives. It may be small consolation in a world where even Amy Goodman gets forcibly arrested in the United States, but she isn't giving up and neither should we.
Don't lose hope! I realize its hard living in Oklahoma with two fascist idiots as your senators. But the tide is turning. Obama isn't the end all be all, but his election will demonstrate a shift. And he has a great chance -
www.fivethirtyeight.com
Stella's mom volunteers for Andrew Rice in Oklahoma. Sure, he has a very small chance at beating Inhofe, but he has a better chance than a Democrat has had in OK for a long time. That's big! And a sign of a shift. Keep the hope alive Liz! Don't despair (too much). You're a bright shining beacon in that state of yours, and even if you don't feel like you are penetrating the haze and apathy created by No Child Left Behind and video game binges, I guarantee that you are reaching some of your students in ways you can't possibly imagine. And the effects of your teaching will live on long after we are all gone.
God, I sound maudlin and I'm not even drunk. Yet.
Thanks for the article! Great read. I think that Letham makes a lot of heady and fascinating points about The Dark Knight. But I also think the movie doesn't hold up entirely to the model he puts forth. I am not smart enough to answer Letham's analysis point by point. I think he is definitely on to something, but its not all hopeless.
I think The Dark Knight is a reflection of the times at hand, not necessarily a propaganda piece for the administration. (That partisan hack, Andrew Klavan, who interpreted the movie as a defense of W is an idiot, and his op-ed doesn't hold a candle to Letham's thoughtful analysis.) I think its funny that I had an allergic reaction to Iron Man, and you to the Dark Knight. I'm not sure what it says about us, maybe that at the times we saw each movie, we saw the real evils that haunt us and thus, were horrified.
My only criticism of Letham's article is that he sounds beyond pessimistic. Granted, it may be a time to despair, but you cannot allow your despair to totally paralyze you because when you do that, you give your enemies power over you. I'm not about to do that anymore. Pessimism is a poison. McCain/Palin will not stop us. They may make it harder, but they will not stop me from living a free life or doing what I can to help others live free lives. It may be small consolation in a world where even Amy Goodman gets forcibly arrested in the United States, but she isn't giving up and neither should we.
Don't lose hope! I realize its hard living in Oklahoma with two fascist idiots as your senators. But the tide is turning. Obama isn't the end all be all, but his election will demonstrate a shift. And he has a great chance -
www.fivethirtyeight.com
Stella's mom volunteers for Andrew Rice in Oklahoma. Sure, he has a very small chance at beating Inhofe, but he has a better chance than a Democrat has had in OK for a long time. That's big! And a sign of a shift. Keep the hope alive Liz! Don't despair (too much). You're a bright shining beacon in that state of yours, and even if you don't feel like you are penetrating the haze and apathy created by No Child Left Behind and video game binges, I guarantee that you are reaching some of your students in ways you can't possibly imagine. And the effects of your teaching will live on long after we are all gone.
God, I sound maudlin and I'm not even drunk. Yet.
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