Originally posted by oddoneout
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post(I accept that the ideal is to know the opera in detail before you attend. This may take some time... )
I had a singer girlfriend a decade or three ago who didn’t know how Tosca ended until she first saw it. I was SO JEALOUS.
I’ve usually been able to read a printed programme during performances without too much trouble. Have halls got darker since I had kids?
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Originally posted by oliver sudden View PostIs it though?
I had a singer girlfriend a decade or three ago who didn’t know how Tosca ended until she first saw it. I was SO JEALOUS.
I’ve usually been able to read a printed programme during performances without too much trouble. Have halls got darker since I had kids?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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I switched on Radio 4's Today this morning, and could scarcely believe what I was hearing. Lise Doucet was ostensibly hosting. Lise has seen it all, lived among the wreckage and reported on the homeless, the limbless and the bloodied babies, and spoken to and of the selfless life savers and givers doing their best amid the impossible and the surely unforgiveable. The Overseas Minister of Jordan is interviewed - he of all moderate Middle East opinion is at least someone whose opinions that great open receptacle the British listening public will be listening to, one dearly hopes. He tells us what he has seen and is seeing, and which (one could add) is available online for strong stomachs - politely critiqueing along the way of the interview the glib way the west's media frame and pose the questions. And what first question does Lise ask? When are Hamas going to stop their war effort? Not when is Netanyahu's lot going to agree to a ceasefire at the very least. The truth that the Knesset stands charged in principle for trampling on the Holocaust and all in its wake who have agonized justifications based on a once-great culture that gave us Isiah, Jesus, Einstein, Mahler, Marx, Trotsky, Schoenberg, Eisler, (make up your own lists for preferences to see what I mean), and so many of the great contributions to of western progressive thought and art, probably the majority of role models for some of us?
Is it, one has to ask oneself, Lise Doucet or the entire western mainstream media maintaining the livelihoods of its obedient mouthpieces that is in collective denial? When is the western political establishment and its mouthpiece apologists going to retrieve some self-respect, integrity, backbone, call it what you will, and tell it as it is and what you really feel about it? Is nothing going to be done until the entire population of Gaza, and maybe the West Bank too while we're at it, assembles in some place, douses itself in accelerant, and has someone standing by with a match at the ready until or unless this cruel, stupid, needless and lethal carnage stops?
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Originally posted by oliver sudden View PostI had a singer girlfriend a decade or three ago who didn’t know how Tosca ended until she first saw it. I was SO JEALOUS.
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostIgnorance can be an asset on occasion. Fiona Shaw once recalled a performance of Medea in Ireland where a good proportion of the audience reacted in genuine shock and horror at the moment she kills her children -- one woman shouting "Noooo !!"
"IN his viva voce examination for 'Divvers' at Oxford, Oscar Wilde was required to translate from the Greek version of the New Testament, which was one of the set books. The passage chosen was from the story of the Passion. Wilde began to translate, easily and accurately. The examiners were satisfied, and told him that this was enough. Wilde ignored them and continued to translate. After another attempt the examiners at last succeeded in stopping him, and told him that they were satisfied with his translation. 'Oh, do let me go on,' said Wilde, 'I want to see how it ends.' "
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Post
I don’t know about these things, one of my many areas of lack of expertise, but light sensor numbers do decline at a remarkably early age in humans. Not sure what the evolutionary benefit is !!
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
... I am reminded of the Oscar Wilde anecdote -
"IN his viva voce examination for 'Divvers' at Oxford, Oscar Wilde was required to translate from the Greek version of the New Testament, which was one of the set books. The passage chosen was from the story of the Passion. Wilde began to translate, easily and accurately. The examiners were satisfied, and told him that this was enough. Wilde ignored them and continued to translate. After another attempt the examiners at last succeeded in stopping him, and told him that they were satisfied with his translation. 'Oh, do let me go on,' said Wilde, 'I want to see how it ends.' "
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostIgnorance can be an asset on occasion. Fiona Shaw once recalled a performance of Medea in Ireland where a good proportion of the audience reacted in genuine shock and horror at the moment she kills her children -- one woman shouting "Noooo !!""I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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A friend and I went to see Lindsey Anderson's If in the West End in 1968, a momentous year generally. We were students having left school the year before and wanted to catch the film as soon as it came out. It famously ends with Malcolm Mcdowell and friends machine-gunning the School's great and good from a rooftop. I have never forgotten a massive shouting match which ensued between two audience members. So long ago I'm afraid I can't remember the content of their interchange.
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It's certainly a film to arouse strong feelings,which is clearly what Lindsay wanted; he had a contempt for what might be called English complacency.
I'm afraid I've never liked his feature film s and feel he was at his best with documentaries. I'm sure this would produce a snort of ridicule if anyone said so to him!
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Originally posted by smittims View PostIt's certainly a film to arouse strong feelings,which is clearly what Lindsay wanted; he had a contempt for what might be called English complacency.
I'm afraid I've never liked his feature film s and feel he was at his best with documentaries. I'm sure this would produce a snort of ridicule if anyone said so to him!
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