Originally posted by Flay
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Does it matter what opera singers look like?
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Originally posted by Flay View Post
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostInterestingly colour (which also might be thought to require some suspension of disbelief) is not an issue for anybody - opera has been colourblind, more or less, since Marian Anderson.
Rather than taking immediate cliched (e-acute) refuge in "willing suspension of disbelief" I just never cease to wonder how we get so caught up in any theatrical presentation for which we know we bought tickets, we're sitting on tip-up seats in a darkened auditorium, and with a very solid stage-edge right in front of our eyes. How weird is that???
[Written after being mesmerised by B'ham Royal Ballet's Elite Syncopations last Saturday. To the ballet lover I'd guess opera presents few if any problems]I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by rodney_h_d View PostPlease will somebody also explain to me why so many people, both male but especially female, veer towards (and often beyond) the obese.
I see very many obese people and they mostly claim "it's not for what I eat," or "it's my glands."
The only glands to blame are their salivary glands! Observe what the're buying, and what they eat in restaurants, cafés and fast food outlets, and especially what they are drinking. You'll see there is no magic to it. There are rows upon rows of shelves in the supermarkets for confectionery, chocolate-covered biscuits, sugary drinks etc: vastly sweet products all around. And people buy them and scoff them.
Consume an ounce more than you need each day and you will have taken in over 1½ stone excess in a year.
Simples!Pacta sunt servanda !!!
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Originally posted by rodney_h_d View PostPlease will somebody also explain to me why so many people, both male but especially female, veer towards (and often beyond) the obese.
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No, Sir V, it is more to do with intake than metabolism. 1 x 330 ml can of Coke = 139 Calories = 22 minutes aerobics or 30 minutes walking according to their own website
But many people buy it in 3 litre bottles, and consume them!
"Low fat" (supposedly healthy) yoghurts are packed with sugar etc etc etc.Pacta sunt servanda !!!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
[Written after being mesmerised by B'ham Royal Ballet's Elite Syncopations last Saturday. To the ballet lover I'd guess opera presents few if any problems]
I did once see a Swan Lake with a black Prince Siegfried, and after initial surprise it didn't concern me at all. He was suitably beautiful. (Things could get very complicated with similar casting for Odette and Odile, though.) Oddly, and rather to my shame, I'm still a bit bothered by a Japanese Sugar Plum Fairy or Aurora.
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Black Swan
Some really interesting comments. This is not a new issue for opera. Debra Voight being dropped due to her weight. I remember many years ago that similar comments were made by the New York Times critics reviewing I believe Manon Lescaut and making some very negative comments about Montserrat Caballe. I don't really feel the sexuality or the gender of the critics is the driver here. I also remember that when Waltraud Meier performed as Kundry at the MET in Parsifal one critic remarked is was the first time he'd seen a singer perform the role who actually looked as if she could seduce someone.
The reviews are over the top but those who can perform, those who can't criticize.
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Richard Tarleton
There is a programme on Sky Arts about the fat opera singer issue which gets repeated from time to time - some interesting interviews inc. with D Voigt and the generously proportioned Sharon Sweet. The contraption on which the latter was wheeled round the ROH stage in Turandot was nicknamed the Sweet Trolley by the stage hands. She was actually very funny talking about what directors tried to tell her to do in the movement department, and how she replied that she didn't do movement.
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And lest we forget what the law has to say on similar issues, may I remind Honourable Members of the judgment of the Court of Appeal, rejecting Jessye Norman's appeal from a judgment dismissing her libel action against Classic CD magazine, in Norman v Future Publishing Ltd [1998] EWCA Civ 161
You can read the judgment here (you have to enter the 4 digits indicated, into the 'Verification Code' box):
http://policy.mofcom.gov.cn/PDFView?...&libcode=fcase"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI once attended a performance of La Boheme at the Royal Opera House, where the 'consumptive' Mimi could've knocked the snot out of Mick McManus if she'd wanted. Just didn't seem right.
Which rather begs another question about casting.....I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostAre you suggesting that the director in this case just had to wrestle with his/her conscience?
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostJust had to box clever...
Well quite.
Or master the art of Marshalling their resources.
I wonder if they subsequently tackled "the Ring ".
Perhaps they roped in some help.
Might have helped if the had canvassed some opinions first.
Or got their coats......I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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