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Dido and Aeneas: Untethered Passion
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16501 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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11 / 1989 |
1,040 Words |
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Lawrence O'' Toole Lawrence O'Toole writes on the arts for Entertainment Weekly
and other national publications. |
Henry Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, composed three hundred years ago, is one of the first grand operas, although it is certainly not grand in terms of its size. The music, lasting less than one hour, is written for what by modern standards is an extremely small orchestra (ten players), and the action is rather static. But its emotions are big, hurled forth with spellbinding directness by Purcell's music and Nahum Tate's libretto.
Dido, queen of Carthage, emerges as a truly tragic character. Dispossessed of her homeland, she falls in love with the wandering Trojan hero Aeneas, breaking her vow of chastity and fidelity to her dead husband's memory. She has allowed her emotions to rule her and overcome her sense of duty. It is the price she pays for being human--a warm and accessible theme in this opera--and she redeems herself by a noble suicide in one of opera's greatest arias, "When I am laid in earth."
The original production of Dido and Aeneas took place at Josias Priest's Boarding School for Young Ladies, in Chelsea. To celebrate the three hundredth birthday of Purcell's opera, New York's Opera at the Academy, an affiliate of the New York Academy of Art, chose that setting as the springboard for its production. The prologue and epilogue (spoken, as Purcell's music for these sections has been sadly lost) were set in a seventeenth century girls' school.
However, the performance at Josias Priest's School for Young Ladies probably never had the kind of sexual subtext the Academy gives it, nor the defiantly modern gloss lent by the stark white setting and the costumes of celebrated fashion designer Mary
... (1967 of 6177 Characters)
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