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marți, 24 mai 2011

Glyndebourne lifts Wagner opera from Nazi taint

birou notarial


By Jonathan Lynn

GLYNDEBOURNE, England | Mon May 23, 2011 9:57am EDT

GLYNDEBOURNE, England (Reuters) - A new production of "Die Meistersinger" at the Glyndebourne festival sets aside the Nazi associations of Wagner's controversial opera to focus on its timeless story of art and love.

The idea of mounting Richard Wagner's five-hour drama at Glyndebourne -- the original and for many the ultimate country-house summer opera festival, where the champagne picnic in the stately gardens is as much part of the evening as the music -- struck some as incongruous.

But John Christie, who founded the festival at his house in 1934, always wanted to put on Wagner, and had organised a small private performance of part of Meistersinger six years earlier.

And the standing ovations garnered by director David McVicar and baritone Gerald Finley when Glyndebourne opened its 2011 season with its new staging of Die Meistersinger on Saturday showed just how popular it could be.

Die Meistersinger -- only the second Wagner opera to be put on at Glyndebourne -- is not only the longest but also the warmest and most humorous of the German composer's pieces.

But its final scene, with calls to honor German art and rid German culture of foreign influences, were exploited by Hitler's Nazis to back their nationalist and anti-Semitic policies.

Other recent productions too have sought to turn their back on these associations.

In McVicar's staging of the closing scene, with its procession of town guilds and singers, takes place in a good-natured, carnival atmosphere, recalling nothing more sinister in comparison to the mood in the "Lord of the Rings" film when the hobbits celebrate Bilbo Baggins's 111th birthday.

When Wagner wrote the opera -- first performed in 1868, as Germany was undergoing reunification -- he wanted German artists to tap into their cultural traditions and break away from the French influences favored by the ruling elite.

The opera -- a tribute to the shared joy of song -- takes place in Renaissance Nuremberg where a group of burghers and craftsmen are members of a guild of amateur singers.

One of them, the cobbler Hans Sachs -- played by Finley -- convinces his fellows of the need to re-invigorate their tired traditions and rules with young talent.

In doing so he smoothes the path of love of the daughter of a fellow guildsman, Eva, for a young nobleman and would-be singer, Walther, dashing the hopes of the pedantic town clerk Beckmesser, who had hoped to win Eva's hand in a song contest.

Finley, who started his career in the Glyndebourne chorus, was the star of the show with his portrayal of the wise but complex poet and craftsman caught in a midlife crisis.

In Beckmesser -- the part played by Glyndebourne founder Christie in his 1928 amateur staging -- Wagner was mocking the critics who rejected his own music, which was far ahead of its time and retains a revolutionary force to this day.

McVicar updates the action to the early 19th century -- Wagner's youth -- but his realistic staging avoids any distracting directorial gimmicks.

When the curtain rises after the famous overture it reveals the ornate interior of a Gothic church at the climax of divine service -- one of many heart-stopping moments in the production.

It also lets the humor of the opera come alive, from the committee meeting deliberations of the singers' guild, to the antics of the hapless Beckmesser, to the huge town brawl on Midsummer's Eve in the middle of the opera.

That midsummer setting, underlined by sets suffused with warm lighting, makes Meistersinger ideal for a summer festival.

Glyndebourne typically produces smaller-scale operas, with Mozart, Donizetti, Handel, Dvorak and Britten on the menu this year. Die Meistersinger is by far the largest production in its 77-year history.

"This is without doubt the biggest, most ambitious, in some people's opinion maddest project that we have ever done at Glyndebourne," General Director David Pickard said.

For a company that gets no public subsidy and relies on ticket sales, membership fees and donations, putting on such a big opera could be foolhardy at a time of economic uncertainty.

But there were few hints of the weak U.K. economy on Glyndebourne's lawns, and the festival, where the most expensive seat is 250 pounds ($405), was 96 percent booked up before opening.

Die Meistersinger itself is completely sold out but the final performance in this season on June 26 will also be streamed live on www.glyndebourne.com and screened live at London's Science Museum and selected venues around Britain.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)


Birou Notarial Bucuresti



Baloane


By Jonathan Lynn

GLYNDEBOURNE, England | Mon May 23, 2011 9:57am EDT

GLYNDEBOURNE, England (Reuters) - A new production of "Die Meistersinger" at the Glyndebourne festival sets aside the Nazi associations of Wagner's controversial opera to focus on its timeless story of art and love.

The idea of mounting Richard Wagner's five-hour drama at Glyndebourne -- the original and for many the ultimate country-house summer opera festival, where the champagne picnic in the stately gardens is as much part of the evening as the music -- struck some as incongruous.

But John Christie, who founded the festival at his house in 1934, always wanted to put on Wagner, and had organised a small private performance of part of Meistersinger six years earlier.

And the standing ovations garnered by director David McVicar and baritone Gerald Finley when Glyndebourne opened its 2011 season with its new staging of Die Meistersinger on Saturday showed just how popular it could be.

Die Meistersinger -- only the second Wagner opera to be put on at Glyndebourne -- is not only the longest but also the warmest and most humorous of the German composer's pieces.

But its final scene, with calls to honor German art and rid German culture of foreign influences, were exploited by Hitler's Nazis to back their nationalist and anti-Semitic policies.

Other recent productions too have sought to turn their back on these associations.

In McVicar's staging of the closing scene, with its procession of town guilds and singers, takes place in a good-natured, carnival atmosphere, recalling nothing more sinister in comparison to the mood in the "Lord of the Rings" film when the hobbits celebrate Bilbo Baggins's 111th birthday.

When Wagner wrote the opera -- first performed in 1868, as Germany was undergoing reunification -- he wanted German artists to tap into their cultural traditions and break away from the French influences favored by the ruling elite.

The opera -- a tribute to the shared joy of song -- takes place in Renaissance Nuremberg where a group of burghers and craftsmen are members of a guild of amateur singers.

One of them, the cobbler Hans Sachs -- played by Finley -- convinces his fellows of the need to re-invigorate their tired traditions and rules with young talent.

In doing so he smoothes the path of love of the daughter of a fellow guildsman, Eva, for a young nobleman and would-be singer, Walther, dashing the hopes of the pedantic town clerk Beckmesser, who had hoped to win Eva's hand in a song contest.

Finley, who started his career in the Glyndebourne chorus, was the star of the show with his portrayal of the wise but complex poet and craftsman caught in a midlife crisis.

In Beckmesser -- the part played by Glyndebourne founder Christie in his 1928 amateur staging -- Wagner was mocking the critics who rejected his own music, which was far ahead of its time and retains a revolutionary force to this day.

McVicar updates the action to the early 19th century -- Wagner's youth -- but his realistic staging avoids any distracting directorial gimmicks.

When the curtain rises after the famous overture it reveals the ornate interior of a Gothic church at the climax of divine service -- one of many heart-stopping moments in the production.

It also lets the humor of the opera come alive, from the committee meeting deliberations of the singers' guild, to the antics of the hapless Beckmesser, to the huge town brawl on Midsummer's Eve in the middle of the opera.

That midsummer setting, underlined by sets suffused with warm lighting, makes Meistersinger ideal for a summer festival.

Glyndebourne typically produces smaller-scale operas, with Mozart, Donizetti, Handel, Dvorak and Britten on the menu this year. Die Meistersinger is by far the largest production in its 77-year history.

"This is without doubt the biggest, most ambitious, in some people's opinion maddest project that we have ever done at Glyndebourne," General Director David Pickard said.

For a company that gets no public subsidy and relies on ticket sales, membership fees and donations, putting on such a big opera could be foolhardy at a time of economic uncertainty.

But there were few hints of the weak U.K. economy on Glyndebourne's lawns, and the festival, where the most expensive seat is 250 pounds ($405), was 96 percent booked up before opening.

Die Meistersinger itself is completely sold out but the final performance in this season on June 26 will also be streamed live on www.glyndebourne.com and screened live at London's Science Museum and selected venues around Britain.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)


Baloane


Cost aparat dentar


By Jonathan Lynn

GLYNDEBOURNE, England | Mon May 23, 2011 9:57am EDT

GLYNDEBOURNE, England (Reuters) - A new production of "Die Meistersinger" at the Glyndebourne festival sets aside the Nazi associations of Wagner's controversial opera to focus on its timeless story of art and love.

The idea of mounting Richard Wagner's five-hour drama at Glyndebourne -- the original and for many the ultimate country-house summer opera festival, where the champagne picnic in the stately gardens is as much part of the evening as the music -- struck some as incongruous.

But John Christie, who founded the festival at his house in 1934, always wanted to put on Wagner, and had organised a small private performance of part of Meistersinger six years earlier.

And the standing ovations garnered by director David McVicar and baritone Gerald Finley when Glyndebourne opened its 2011 season with its new staging of Die Meistersinger on Saturday showed just how popular it could be.

Die Meistersinger -- only the second Wagner opera to be put on at Glyndebourne -- is not only the longest but also the warmest and most humorous of the German composer's pieces.

But its final scene, with calls to honor German art and rid German culture of foreign influences, were exploited by Hitler's Nazis to back their nationalist and anti-Semitic policies.

Other recent productions too have sought to turn their back on these associations.

In McVicar's staging of the closing scene, with its procession of town guilds and singers, takes place in a good-natured, carnival atmosphere, recalling nothing more sinister in comparison to the mood in the "Lord of the Rings" film when the hobbits celebrate Bilbo Baggins's 111th birthday.

When Wagner wrote the opera -- first performed in 1868, as Germany was undergoing reunification -- he wanted German artists to tap into their cultural traditions and break away from the French influences favored by the ruling elite.

The opera -- a tribute to the shared joy of song -- takes place in Renaissance Nuremberg where a group of burghers and craftsmen are members of a guild of amateur singers.

One of them, the cobbler Hans Sachs -- played by Finley -- convinces his fellows of the need to re-invigorate their tired traditions and rules with young talent.

In doing so he smoothes the path of love of the daughter of a fellow guildsman, Eva, for a young nobleman and would-be singer, Walther, dashing the hopes of the pedantic town clerk Beckmesser, who had hoped to win Eva's hand in a song contest.

Finley, who started his career in the Glyndebourne chorus, was the star of the show with his portrayal of the wise but complex poet and craftsman caught in a midlife crisis.

In Beckmesser -- the part played by Glyndebourne founder Christie in his 1928 amateur staging -- Wagner was mocking the critics who rejected his own music, which was far ahead of its time and retains a revolutionary force to this day.

McVicar updates the action to the early 19th century -- Wagner's youth -- but his realistic staging avoids any distracting directorial gimmicks.

When the curtain rises after the famous overture it reveals the ornate interior of a Gothic church at the climax of divine service -- one of many heart-stopping moments in the production.

It also lets the humor of the opera come alive, from the committee meeting deliberations of the singers' guild, to the antics of the hapless Beckmesser, to the huge town brawl on Midsummer's Eve in the middle of the opera.

That midsummer setting, underlined by sets suffused with warm lighting, makes Meistersinger ideal for a summer festival.

Glyndebourne typically produces smaller-scale operas, with Mozart, Donizetti, Handel, Dvorak and Britten on the menu this year. Die Meistersinger is by far the largest production in its 77-year history.

"This is without doubt the biggest, most ambitious, in some people's opinion maddest project that we have ever done at Glyndebourne," General Director David Pickard said.

For a company that gets no public subsidy and relies on ticket sales, membership fees and donations, putting on such a big opera could be foolhardy at a time of economic uncertainty.

But there were few hints of the weak U.K. economy on Glyndebourne's lawns, and the festival, where the most expensive seat is 250 pounds ($405), was 96 percent booked up before opening.

Die Meistersinger itself is completely sold out but the final performance in this season on June 26 will also be streamed live on www.glyndebourne.com and screened live at London's Science Museum and selected venues around Britain.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)


Cost aparat dentar

luni, 23 mai 2011

UK's Glyndebourne fest stages tainted Wagner opera

birou notarial


By Michael Roddy

LONDON | Fri May 20, 2011 8:55am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - The founder of Britain's Glyndebourne festival loved Wagner and performed excerpts from "Die Meistersinger" on the organ, but that was before the Nazis adopted the composer's longest opera as their signature piece.

On Saturday, in its first production of "Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg" and only second Wagner opera, Glyndebourne will attempt to show that a work used to stir up nationalism and anti-Semitism by the Third Reich is fitting musical fare for its well-heeled patrons, fortified for the seven-hour journey with lobster tail and rack of lamb during a long interval.

"I don't think Wagner was imparting ideas which were outspokenly fascist," conductor Vladimir Jurowski, who will lead the performance, said, confronting the issue head on.

"The fact that they (Wagner's operas) have been abused by the Nazis later on only says something about the ambiguity of Wagner's ideas," he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Everyone associated with the production, staged by the world-renowned director David McVicar, is aware that a lot is riding on the artistic, as well as financial, success of what is probably the most expensive and ambitious opera produced at Glyndebourne since it was founded in 1934 by wealthy landowner John Christie and his opera-singer wife.

Although details of the staging, as is usual in these affairs, have been kept under wraps, it is known that the historical period of Wagner's tale about a song contest sponsored by an opera guild in 16th-century Nuremberg has been moved to Wagner's time, the 19th century.

In addition to the soloists, there will be some 140 people on stage, including circus performers, a full orchestra in the pit and a chorus of about 90.

These are big -- and costly -- forces for the Glyndebourne Opera Festival, which gets all its funding from sponsors and ticket sales, but the fact that all 10 performances of an opera which begins just before 3 p.m. and, with two intervals, ends almost seven hours later, are sold out is music to the ears of general director David Pickard.

To accommodate those who can't get in for love or money, the opera will be streamed on the Guardian newspaper's website for its final performance on June 26.

"This gives truth to the myth that this place is about nice, light entertainment with a picnic attached," Pickard told Reuters in a telephone interview.

"Serious operas are wonderfully suited to the sort of overall experience here at Glyndebourne, especially spending a day immersed in music and a beautiful garden."

"Honor YOUR GERMAN MASTERS"

Harder to shake are the opera's Nazi associations. It was Hitler's favorite and he was a regular visitor, before and during World War Two, to see it performed at the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth, the hall in northern Bavaria that Wagner purpose-built to showcase his works.

At the end of the opera, the main character, cobbler and poet Hans Sachs, sings the line that endeared it to the Nazis and has caused trouble ever since: "Honor your German masters."

Jurowski, for one, thinks the words, and the whole opera, have been taken out of context.

"He (Wagner) ...was trying to give his support to (Chancellor Otto von) Bismarck's reunified Germany and ...the idea of national identity in the 19th century in the time when Wagner was growing up was a highly liberal idea...

"But of course we know the consequences of this idea in the 20th century, and we also know about the popularity of this opera in the Third Reich. It was a piece that enjoyed greater popularity than any other work by Wagner."

Canadian baritone Gerald Finley, singing the role of Sachs, is less worried about the political and historical overtones than he is with managing what someone has figured to be 6,000 words of German -- the biggest baritone role in the repertoire.

It is the first time Finley, 51, has sung the part -- a huge departure from his recent appearance as radio personality Howard Stern in the premiere at the Royal Opera House of "Anna Nicole," based on the life of the celebrity playgirl.

"It's been one of the fuller years of my career," Finley said, adding that while it may seem like a huge leap from Stern to Sachs, the first was a supporting role while the second requires him to be on stage almost the entire time.

"But in fact it's one of those things where hopefully one gets into a groove and they're paced nicely with four days between shows," he said. "So there's enough recovery time and, one hopes, rejuvenation time, too."

(Wagner's "Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg" in rotation at the Glyndebourne Opera Festival from May 21 through June 26. www.glyndebourne.com)

(Editing by Paul Casciato)


Birou Notarial Bucuresti



Baloane


By Michael Roddy

LONDON | Fri May 20, 2011 8:55am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - The founder of Britain's Glyndebourne festival loved Wagner and performed excerpts from "Die Meistersinger" on the organ, but that was before the Nazis adopted the composer's longest opera as their signature piece.

On Saturday, in its first production of "Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg" and only second Wagner opera, Glyndebourne will attempt to show that a work used to stir up nationalism and anti-Semitism by the Third Reich is fitting musical fare for its well-heeled patrons, fortified for the seven-hour journey with lobster tail and rack of lamb during a long interval.

"I don't think Wagner was imparting ideas which were outspokenly fascist," conductor Vladimir Jurowski, who will lead the performance, said, confronting the issue head on.

"The fact that they (Wagner's operas) have been abused by the Nazis later on only says something about the ambiguity of Wagner's ideas," he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Everyone associated with the production, staged by the world-renowned director David McVicar, is aware that a lot is riding on the artistic, as well as financial, success of what is probably the most expensive and ambitious opera produced at Glyndebourne since it was founded in 1934 by wealthy landowner John Christie and his opera-singer wife.

Although details of the staging, as is usual in these affairs, have been kept under wraps, it is known that the historical period of Wagner's tale about a song contest sponsored by an opera guild in 16th-century Nuremberg has been moved to Wagner's time, the 19th century.

In addition to the soloists, there will be some 140 people on stage, including circus performers, a full orchestra in the pit and a chorus of about 90.

These are big -- and costly -- forces for the Glyndebourne Opera Festival, which gets all its funding from sponsors and ticket sales, but the fact that all 10 performances of an opera which begins just before 3 p.m. and, with two intervals, ends almost seven hours later, are sold out is music to the ears of general director David Pickard.

To accommodate those who can't get in for love or money, the opera will be streamed on the Guardian newspaper's website for its final performance on June 26.

"This gives truth to the myth that this place is about nice, light entertainment with a picnic attached," Pickard told Reuters in a telephone interview.

"Serious operas are wonderfully suited to the sort of overall experience here at Glyndebourne, especially spending a day immersed in music and a beautiful garden."

"Honor YOUR GERMAN MASTERS"

Harder to shake are the opera's Nazi associations. It was Hitler's favorite and he was a regular visitor, before and during World War Two, to see it performed at the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth, the hall in northern Bavaria that Wagner purpose-built to showcase his works.

At the end of the opera, the main character, cobbler and poet Hans Sachs, sings the line that endeared it to the Nazis and has caused trouble ever since: "Honor your German masters."

Jurowski, for one, thinks the words, and the whole opera, have been taken out of context.

"He (Wagner) ...was trying to give his support to (Chancellor Otto von) Bismarck's reunified Germany and ...the idea of national identity in the 19th century in the time when Wagner was growing up was a highly liberal idea...

"But of course we know the consequences of this idea in the 20th century, and we also know about the popularity of this opera in the Third Reich. It was a piece that enjoyed greater popularity than any other work by Wagner."

Canadian baritone Gerald Finley, singing the role of Sachs, is less worried about the political and historical overtones than he is with managing what someone has figured to be 6,000 words of German -- the biggest baritone role in the repertoire.

It is the first time Finley, 51, has sung the part -- a huge departure from his recent appearance as radio personality Howard Stern in the premiere at the Royal Opera House of "Anna Nicole," based on the life of the celebrity playgirl.

"It's been one of the fuller years of my career," Finley said, adding that while it may seem like a huge leap from Stern to Sachs, the first was a supporting role while the second requires him to be on stage almost the entire time.

"But in fact it's one of those things where hopefully one gets into a groove and they're paced nicely with four days between shows," he said. "So there's enough recovery time and, one hopes, rejuvenation time, too."

(Wagner's "Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg" in rotation at the Glyndebourne Opera Festival from May 21 through June 26. www.glyndebourne.com)

(Editing by Paul Casciato)


Baloane


Cost aparat dentar


By Michael Roddy

LONDON | Fri May 20, 2011 8:55am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - The founder of Britain's Glyndebourne festival loved Wagner and performed excerpts from "Die Meistersinger" on the organ, but that was before the Nazis adopted the composer's longest opera as their signature piece.

On Saturday, in its first production of "Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg" and only second Wagner opera, Glyndebourne will attempt to show that a work used to stir up nationalism and anti-Semitism by the Third Reich is fitting musical fare for its well-heeled patrons, fortified for the seven-hour journey with lobster tail and rack of lamb during a long interval.

"I don't think Wagner was imparting ideas which were outspokenly fascist," conductor Vladimir Jurowski, who will lead the performance, said, confronting the issue head on.

"The fact that they (Wagner's operas) have been abused by the Nazis later on only says something about the ambiguity of Wagner's ideas," he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Everyone associated with the production, staged by the world-renowned director David McVicar, is aware that a lot is riding on the artistic, as well as financial, success of what is probably the most expensive and ambitious opera produced at Glyndebourne since it was founded in 1934 by wealthy landowner John Christie and his opera-singer wife.

Although details of the staging, as is usual in these affairs, have been kept under wraps, it is known that the historical period of Wagner's tale about a song contest sponsored by an opera guild in 16th-century Nuremberg has been moved to Wagner's time, the 19th century.

In addition to the soloists, there will be some 140 people on stage, including circus performers, a full orchestra in the pit and a chorus of about 90.

These are big -- and costly -- forces for the Glyndebourne Opera Festival, which gets all its funding from sponsors and ticket sales, but the fact that all 10 performances of an opera which begins just before 3 p.m. and, with two intervals, ends almost seven hours later, are sold out is music to the ears of general director David Pickard.

To accommodate those who can't get in for love or money, the opera will be streamed on the Guardian newspaper's website for its final performance on June 26.

"This gives truth to the myth that this place is about nice, light entertainment with a picnic attached," Pickard told Reuters in a telephone interview.

"Serious operas are wonderfully suited to the sort of overall experience here at Glyndebourne, especially spending a day immersed in music and a beautiful garden."

"Honor YOUR GERMAN MASTERS"

Harder to shake are the opera's Nazi associations. It was Hitler's favorite and he was a regular visitor, before and during World War Two, to see it performed at the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth, the hall in northern Bavaria that Wagner purpose-built to showcase his works.

At the end of the opera, the main character, cobbler and poet Hans Sachs, sings the line that endeared it to the Nazis and has caused trouble ever since: "Honor your German masters."

Jurowski, for one, thinks the words, and the whole opera, have been taken out of context.

"He (Wagner) ...was trying to give his support to (Chancellor Otto von) Bismarck's reunified Germany and ...the idea of national identity in the 19th century in the time when Wagner was growing up was a highly liberal idea...

"But of course we know the consequences of this idea in the 20th century, and we also know about the popularity of this opera in the Third Reich. It was a piece that enjoyed greater popularity than any other work by Wagner."

Canadian baritone Gerald Finley, singing the role of Sachs, is less worried about the political and historical overtones than he is with managing what someone has figured to be 6,000 words of German -- the biggest baritone role in the repertoire.

It is the first time Finley, 51, has sung the part -- a huge departure from his recent appearance as radio personality Howard Stern in the premiere at the Royal Opera House of "Anna Nicole," based on the life of the celebrity playgirl.

"It's been one of the fuller years of my career," Finley said, adding that while it may seem like a huge leap from Stern to Sachs, the first was a supporting role while the second requires him to be on stage almost the entire time.

"But in fact it's one of those things where hopefully one gets into a groove and they're paced nicely with four days between shows," he said. "So there's enough recovery time and, one hopes, rejuvenation time, too."

(Wagner's "Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg" in rotation at the Glyndebourne Opera Festival from May 21 through June 26. www.glyndebourne.com)

(Editing by Paul Casciato)


Cost aparat dentar