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Lyubimov's Lulu: Innocence Dressed in Blood
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14491 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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3 / 1988 |
1,720 Words |
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Nicholas Rudall Nicholas Rudall is artistic director of the Court Theatre,
Chicago, and professor of classics at the University of
Chicago. |
At the outset of these observations on the recent production of Lulu at the Lyric Opera of Chicago, I should make clear that my profession is the theater and I am a neophyte to the world of opera. As a matter of fact, I know very few theater professionals who feel comfortable in an opera house. There are notable and brilliant exceptions--including, of course, Sir Peter Hall (who directed Le Nozze di Figaro for an earlier Lyric Opera Production this season), and the current director of Lulu, Yuri Lyubimov. What makes us uncomfortable is the little matter of convention--that tacit acceptance by an audience of what is the illusion of truth. For us journeymen of the stage, realism is a convention that seeks to mirror the natural behavior of life. That is a narrow view, of course, but it accounts for our discomfort in the presence of theatrical conventions where majestic music and great voices have to be matched by great themes and majestic settings.
But despite such professional prejudices, inadequacies, and trepidations, I went to this Lulu with a pleasurable anticipation. I knew a little of Alban Berg's Wozzeck since I had recently staged the play and had listened to the opera. But I knew nothing of this mountain of an opera except the original plays by Franz Wedekind (Erdgeist and Die Büchse der Pandora). Wedekind prefigured, if not fathered, German Expressionist drama. Expressionism was a reaction to Naturalism, giving its exponents the freedom to paint human issues on a large canvas. Its focus was on Sex and Money and Power and Death, and it could and did create characters who were types, even prototypes, rather than individuals.
Berg seized upon Wedekind's brilliant "Lulu" plays, seeing in their bizarre sexual Grand Guignol world
... (2000 of 10211 Characters)
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