So the end justifies the means?
Blood, guts, sex, bulls and smugglers
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Look, this is a pantomime. It might have splendid music and lofty ideals, but it's still a pantomime. Do you complain when the Ugly Sisters are humiliated, the Giant killed, Snow White's evil stepmother destroyed, the Witch burned in her own oven and all the rest, all in the name of good triumphing over evil? Of course the villain must be defeated. Of course the end justifies the means.
The Queen of the Night urges Pamina to stab Sarastro to death. If the show had been intended the way Flosshilde suggests, if the Queen had been a good character, if the scheme had been successful, would you have cheered? Of course you would.Last edited by Bert Coules; 29-12-10, 19:14.
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostLook, this is a pantomime. It might have splendid music and lofty ideals, but it's still a pantomime. Do you complain when the Ugly Sisters are humiliated, the Giant killed, Snow White's evil stepmother destroyed, the Witch burned in her own oven and all the rest, all in the name of good triumphing over evil? Of course the villain must be defeated. Of course the end justifies the means.
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostLook, this is a pantomime.
Originally posted by Bert Coules View Postthe villain must be defeated.
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That's strange - when I clicked on 'reply with quote' on Bert's message, the quote includes the following -
"The Queen of the Night urges Pamina to stab Sarastro to death. If the show had been intended the way Flosshilde suggests, if the Queen had been a good character, if the scheme had been successful, would you have cheered? Of course you would."
which doesn't appear in the original message.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post...which doesn't appear in the original message.
I reckon you can skew any number of dramas by reversing the good and bad characters. I've seen that contented married couple Hunding and Sieglinde have their lives absolutely ruined when a wildly-dressed raving maniac forces himself into their house, overwhelms Mrs Hunding with the force of his personality and then drags her out into the woods... That and similar approaches can be interesting and perhaps even revelatory, but I'd hate anyone coming to a work for the first time to see it done like that.Last edited by Bert Coules; 29-12-10, 20:02.
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostYou must have caught me mid-edit.
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostI've seen that contented married couple Hunding and Sieglinde have their lives absolutely ruined when a wildly-dressed raving maniac forces himself into their house, overwhelms Mrs Hunding with the force of his personality and then drags her out into the woods... That and similar approaches can be interesting and perhaps even revelatory, but I'd hate anyone coming to a work for the first time to see it done like that.
"I'd hate anyone coming to a work for the first time to see it done like that" There's always going to be someone in the audience who'll be seeing the work for the first time. Your comment suggests that all productions should be extremely 'safe' & by the book, which might result in audiences consisting only of those who are first-timers.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostBut such an interpretation would ignore the fact that Sieglinde had been abducted & forced into a marriage, & that she is as ecstatic as Siegfried - she is as eager to rush into the woods with him as he is with her.
"I'd hate anyone coming to a work for the first time to see it done like that" There's always going to be someone in the audience who'll be seeing the work for the first time. Your comment suggests that all productions should be extremely 'safe' & by the book, which might result in audiences consisting only of those who are first-timers.
Despite the strange very 'unsafe' production and the even odder perspective (slips were all I could afford) she absolutely loved it. We've been to many other productions together since and she's planning to take me to the forthcoming Opera Noth Ring over the next few years for my birthday(s).
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