(By the way, I've read Conchis' #118 a few times now, and I still don't understand it.)
ROH 'William Tell'
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So I hear - e.g. woman no longer stripped naked (though being trailed as 'her choice'), and scene shortened. Perhaps the gun is not being used quite so graphically?
No doubt they just thought we can't have booing on the broadcast or transmitted to the cinemas. No point of principle at all (in any direction), just brute commercial logic.
It is pretty dreadful, all this non-apologetic apologising coming from Kasper Holten etc, and then not offering a refund but saying (after people have bought tickets) that at least there is now a warning!
A pretty dismal episode. I imagine someone on the board has had to step in and say enough is enough. Hence the open letter from all three of them - Beard, Pappano and Holten.
Must be a squeaky bum moment every night - will there be booing or not? I do wonder what Pappano really thinks.. Having people shout 'Shame on you Tony' (not even including the Sir) must take the gilt off the ginger bread.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut isn't everyone here agreed that the production has managed to "convey its message"?Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWhat those who dislike this production seem to be arguing is that the message is being imposed upon the work, not emerging from it?Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostIf the "conveyancing" is clear to most people - does that make it 87.4% successful?
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post(And how does the sentence I've quoted match with Beethoven's "production", the Great Fugue? Can that be described as not 100% successful because it "only manages to convey its message to an enlightened, broad-minded few"?)
There is the question, of course, that one controversial scene eclipses all the excellent qualities of the production; or, alternatively as some critics would have it, does it paper over the deficiencies, music notwithstanding, that it wasn't a very good production in other respects? I pose the question, merely.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post(By the way, I've read Conchis' #118 a few times now, and I still don't understand it.)
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post(By the way, I've read Conchis' #118 a few times now, and I still don't understand it.)
A bit like Tim Hunt's, except that Vasily didn't lose his position over them. Fortunately
.Last edited by jean; 03-07-15, 16:37.
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostBack to the thread. I've decided to attend the Odeon cinema live relay of William Tell on Sunday.
So I hear - e.g. woman no longer stripped naked (though being trailed as 'her choice'), and scene shortened.
If the part was cast with this planned then the idea that someone would choose to audition for it then object is laughable
It's not as if nudity is a new thing in theatre (or even opera)
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostNot everyone sees nudity as such a big deal
If the part was cast with this planned then the idea that someone would choose to audition for it then object is laughable
It's not as if nudity is a new thing in theatre (or even opera)
Still, I'm just a man saying this, and I have not even seen the production. How about reading the reaction of a woman who did see it - at least in dress rehearsal?
I'd be interested in reading the views of others on how rape is and should be represented on the stage or on screen, but I am always deeply suspicious of the motives of those who choose to exhibit it protractedly and graphically.
I shan't be going to the cinema relay of this production on Sunday. I feel fortunate to have seen the WNO production last year in which quite a different solution was adopted, namely the use of dancers to represent both sexual passion and affection in the first act and oppressive violence and subjugation in the third. The production relied on something that this director is possibly reluctant to encourage - the audience's imagination.
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aeolium's comments tie back to what I was saying about classical drama - no violence on stage. People didn't need to see it to experience 'pity and fear' and there were alternative ways of presenting violent acts. Is the message now that human beings have become so evolved (= brutalised?) that they only feel or understand if there's a realistic portrayal?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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