Anyone intending to try Marnie at ENO?
Marnie
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post
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Originally posted by seabright View PostI wonder how the music will compare to Bernard Herrmann's score for the Hitchcock movie ...
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Actually, Hitchcock did hire Herrmann for "Torn Curtain" but by then the movie studios wanted something "pop" and "with it" that would help sell the film, to youngsters in particular. Herrmann wasn't about to write a "pop" score for anyone, so when Hitchcock turned up at the film's first recording session and heard a massive symphony orchestra blaring out a grandiose score, he fired Herrmann on the spot. John Addison was brought in to write the music instead but it didn't help "Torn Curtain." Indeed, without Herrmann's music, none of Hitchcock's subsequent films had the same impact as "Psycho," "Vertigo," "North-by-Northwest," and "The Man Who Knew Too Much," in which Herrmann himself appeared in the Royal Albert Hall sequence conducting Arthur Benjamin's "Storm Clouds" Cantata.
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Originally posted by seabright View PostActually, Hitchcock did hire Herrmann for "Torn Curtain" but by then the movie studios wanted something "pop" and "with it" that would help sell the film, to youngsters in particular. Herrmann wasn't about to write a "pop" score for anyone, so when Hitchcock turned up at the film's first recording session and heard a massive symphony orchestra blaring out a grandiose score, he fired Herrmann on the spot.
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Somewhat to my surprise, looking at the seat areas for bookings for this suggests that there is already a not inconsiderable interest. However, it's not clear whether the balcony will be open, or whether the seats in that area have already sold out.
I've never heard anything by Nico Muhly, so I can't comment at present on what it might turn out like.
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I thought this was an interesting discussion/ conversation.
Matthew Sweet discusses memory and Marnie with novelist and Freud scholar Lisa Appignanesi, Andrew Graham - son of the novelist Winston Graham who wrote the 1961 novel which Alfred Hitchcock turned into a film in 1964, Gwyneth Hughes - director of 'The Girl' - and Hitchcock and Marnie scholar Murray Pomerance
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Originally posted by NickWraight View PostIt might be worthy saying that the new Muhly opera is based on the book by Winston Graham (of Poldark fame) and not the Hitchcock film. I am going to the first stage / orchestral run through next Monday and will report back.
I've not been exactly short of opera experiences this year - I'm over a dozen already.
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Just found the New York Times review by Zachary Woolfe (yes, the NYT allowed a critic to traipse to London for this one), and ZW is not impressed:
Given that this opera is set to travel to the Met down the line, this may not bode well critically (unless Tommasini reviews it here rather than ZW giving it another go).
PS: OT, but should the separate Khovanshchina thread be moved to the "A Night at the Opera" subsection? Sorry to pick nits.
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Originally posted by bluestateprommer View PostOT, but should the separate Khovanshchina thread be moved to the "A Night at the Opera" subsection? Sorry to pick nits.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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