Originally posted by Bert Coules
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Hamlet (Brett Dean) at Glyndebourne
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I don't think it was the fact of being on TV that was the problem: I believe I would have reacted the same way in the theatre. Actually, TV enhanced the experience because the subtitles made the text clearer - when I saw the Searle I remember just wanting the music to shut up so I could hear the words. This was particularly important tonight because the piece uses in part (and perhaps more than that) the rarely-performed first quarto text.Last edited by Bert Coules; 22-10-17, 23:53.
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostBut I have to admit that contemporary music doesn't speak to me
Pfff ... mmnnyers ... well ... sheeesh ... hmmmm ...
It wasn't "bad", but it was far from very good Musically, and the staging was little better than that of an undergrad Theatre Studies course production (with a bit more expensive machinery) - and the alterations to the text nothing like as insightful or shocking as what Marowitz did to it fifty years ago! The sort of "modern" opera to keep the Glyndebourne regulars titilated with the idea that they'd seen a "contemporary" work, without disturbing their enjoyment of Rossini and Mozart.
I found it predictable - but its success (together with the Ades' Exterminating Angel at Covent Garden last year) might revive an interest in some of those operas from the '80s - which also weren't all "bad" - and the Osborne was certainly much better than this Dean.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Ah, but contemporary music began about sixty years ago, by my reckoning.
I've watched a bit more now: as you say, the alterations to the text were annoying rather than insightful, and a modern-dress Hamlet is now no more than a well-worn cliché.
I did smile at one moment: the queen's description of Hamlet during the final duel - "He's fat and scant of breath" - is often altered these days to "He's hot..." or "He's faint..."; here, where the original line would have been perfectly justified, it was dutifully changed nonetheless. What's more, poor Gertrude actually came out with "He's scant and faint of breath" - presumably a slip rather than a deliberate rewrite but an interesting variation in either case.Last edited by Bert Coules; 23-10-17, 00:35.
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Originally posted by agingjb View PostI wonder what I would make of this if I were not familiar with the play.
But that also makes me wonder how much this was a concern for audiences of previous operas - how well did Verdi's audiences know La Dame aux Camélias when they went to see the first performances of La Traviata - and did their expectations thereof have an influence on the poor reception of the opera amongst some of the audience? (And for Puccini, many of whose operas were based on previously well-known plays or stories - and, in the case of Manon Lescaut, an already well-known previous operatic setting)?
I wonder what would have been the result if Dean and Jocelyn had chosen The Spanish Tragedy as the basis of their work.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostPersonally, I would have preferred a much more incisive "deconstruction" of the text (a la Marowitz, or even Aperghis' Hamletmachine) to liberate it from the simple "story-setting" that was the basis of this production (...) I wonder what would have been the result if Dean and Jocelyn had chosen The Spanish Tragedy as the basis of their work.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostSurely almost everyone is going to feel let down by a "straight" operatic treatment of Shakespeare.
Are people let down by Verdi's Otello or Macbeth?
I'm certainly not by Britten's Midsummer Night's Dream (no comments about that being a "straight" treatment by Britten and Pears, please ).
I haven't seen this Hamlet yet, so must catch up while it's still available.
I can certainly appreciate that some (not just Shakespeare) plays are more suited to being transformed into an opera libretto than others, though.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostAre people let down by Verdi's Otello or Macbeth? I'm certainly not by Britten's Midsummer Night's Dream
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWhile I personally have no time at all for Britten, you're surely right that Verdi isn't generally regarded as a letdown! I guess I'm talking about a more contemporary situation. It's no longer the 19th century (although in the opera house it often seems to be); it's no longer even the 1950s when Britten's opera was written (and was already retrogressive in style and concept).
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostAh, I thought you were talking more of the complex art of forging a workable libretto from the original play.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostAre people let down by Verdi's Otello or Macbeth?
(Not that original libretti after Shakespeare are guarantors of inspired operas: Ades/Oakes' Tempest does not set Shakespeare.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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