But it was effectively 2 companies, with the touring branch eventually leading to the formation of Opera North.
Conquering Wagner.
Collapse
X
-
Certainly, and the two companies were combined for the famous Mastersingers. But that didn't affect the perception of the company as a whole, at least not in my experience.
Incidentally, I've just obtained (but haven't read yet) Opera for Everybody by Susie Gilbert, a lengthy history of the Wells/ENO. Looks good, at first glance.Last edited by Bert Coules; 02-01-11, 12:37.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostFlosshilde, I was trying to imagine how you could have seen it 2.5 times, but then I realised
The drawback of the hydraulic stage was that no attempt was made to hide its mechanism. I find that productions like this distract from the drama.
Promming was a wonderful experience - both for seeing the perfromances & for the cammeraderie. A group of chums (met during the queue) & I slept out on the pavement to be first in the queue for Gotterdammerung (just for the hell of it). I also had a brief (unfortunately) affair with someone I met elsewhere who recognised me from the prom. (oh dear - nostalgia is a terrible thing sometimes!)
Alpen - I don't remember the central pivot for the platform being very obtrusive. Perhaps it could be regarded as the modern equivelant of the stage machinery in 18th century theatres - the workings are obvious & everyone knows it's there, but it's ignored in appreciation of the spectacle.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAlpen - I don't remember the central pivot for the platform being very obtrusive. Perhaps it could be regarded as the modern equivelant of the stage machinery in 18th century theatres - the workings are obvious & everyone knows it's there, but it's ignored in appreciation of the spectacle.
Comment
-
-
You can either buy into that sort of theatrical artifice or you can't - and if you can't, then it must take you out of the drama, I suppose. But the theatre has never been about absolute realism.
The platform and hydraulics in the Ring were fine, I thought, and rather impressive in the big moments. For a less happy bit of basically similar (if smaller in scale) stage mechanism, there was the earlier Flying Dutchman, which reviews of the time pegged as pretty unfortunate: ugly and juddering and prone on occasion to not working at all.Last edited by Bert Coules; 02-01-11, 13:27.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostCovent Garden had two productions by Gotz Friedrich - the first (which I saw 2.5 times) had a hydraulic platform replacing the stage. I think that's the one you are thinking of, Kernel. It had many memorable stage pictures, & is the one I probably have in mind most when I listen to the Ring.
I'm not in agreement about that platform's mechanics being intrusive. A bit like modern dress (etc) productions - doesn't it all just force us to really look at the drama afresh? My hunch is, Richard Wagner would have approved.
Comment
-
-
Mandryka
Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostMandryka, Rita Hunter's Grane was a projection: a short film-loop of a white horse galloping (which was actually first used in the Wells' staging of Berlioz's The Damnation of Faust). It was a fleeting moment and not completely successful, but at least there was a horse: full marks to them for that.
Comment
-
I'd dearly love to see a real horse at the end of the Immolation scene. Alberto Remedios's triumphant entrance on horseback in the Covent Garden Boris Godunov is an image that's still sharp in my memory.
If I recall correctly, the splendid 1955 movie Interrupted Melody about the Australian dramatic soprano Marjorie Lawrence depicts her saddling up and heading full-tilt into the flames, after scornfully refusing to sedately lead her horse off as she'd been directed to do.Last edited by Bert Coules; 02-01-11, 20:19.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostI'd dearly love to see a real horse at the end of the Immolation scene. Alberto Remedios's triumphant entrance on horseback in the Covent Garden Boris Godunov is an image that's still sharp in my memory.
Comment
-
Comment