THE METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE AND THE “WAR OF IDEOLOGIES”:

2020 ◽  
pp. 111-130
Author(s):  
CHRISTOPHER LYNCH
1998 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 128-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph M. Siry

Adler and Sullivan's Auditorium Building in Chicago (1886-1890) is here analyzed in the context of Chicago's social history of the 1880s. Specifically, the building is seen as a capitalistic response to socialist and anarchist movements of the period. The Auditorium's principal patron, Ferdinand W. Peck, created a theater that was to give access to cultural and civic events for the city's workers, to draw them away from both politicized and nonpoliticized "low" urban entertainments. Adler and Sullivan's theater was to serve a mass audience, unlike opera houses of the period, which held multiple tiers of boxes for privileged patrons. This tradition was represented by the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City (1881-1883). Turning away from works like the Paris Opéra, Peck and his architects perhaps sought to emulate ideas of other European theaters of the period, such as Bayreuth's Festspielhaus (1872-1876). Sullivan's interior had an ornamental and iconographic program that was innovative relative to traditional opera houses. His design of the building's exterior was in a Romanesque style that recalled ancient Roman monuments. It is here compared with other Chicago buildings of its era that represented high capital's reaction to workers' culture, such as Burnham and Root's First Regiment Armory (1889-1891), Peck's own house (1887), and the Chicago Athenaeum (1890-1891). The Auditorium's story invites a view of the Chicago School that emphasizes the role of patrons' ideological agenda rather than modern structural expression.


2010 ◽  
Vol 4 (8) ◽  
pp. 10-22
Author(s):  
Claudio Reis Vieira

Esse artigo discute as relações de produção que caracterizam as montagens operísticas contemporâneas a partir do programa "Ópera no cinema", que trasmite récitas do Metropolitan Opera House, em alta definição e ao vivo, para salas de cinema em diferentes países. Duas montagens desse programa – Lucia de Lammermoor e La Sonnambula, de Donizetti – são analisadas ao lado da versão de Dimitri Tcherniakov para o Macbeth, de Verdi, realizada pela Ópera de Novossibirski em parceria com a Opéra National de Paris.


2019 ◽  
Vol 144 (2) ◽  
pp. 287-321
Author(s):  
Ditlev Rindom

AbstractGeraldine Farrar's performances in Ruggero Leoncavallo's Zazà (1900) at New York's Metropolitan Opera House in the early 1920s were widely acclaimed as an unexpected triumph for the soprano. This article examines Farrar's Zazà in the context of New York's post-war operatic crisis, the concurrent emergence of Hollywood cinema and Farrar's own highly prominent movements between operatic and cinematic media throughout the 1910s. While Leoncavallo's opera raised a number of pressing difficulties for New York critics, Farrar's critical and popular success in Zazà points to new understandings of operatic performance at the dawn of the cinematic age.


2018 ◽  
pp. 275
Author(s):  
Virginia Sánchez Rodríguez

La soprano María Barrientos (*1884; †1946) fue una de las artistas españolas con mayor proyección internacional durante el primer tercio del siglo XX. A pesar de que al final de su vida se dedicó a la canción de concierto, María Barrientos estuvo vinculada a la ópera hasta la década de 1920, perteneciendo a las compañías más relevantes de la época y actuando en los principales teatros. En el presente trabajo ofrecemos un acercamiento a su debut en la Metropolitan Opera House de Nueva York, acaecido en el año 1916. La selección de este evento como objeto de estudio se debe a que significa la presentación musical de la diva española en uno de los espacios operísticos más relevantes y el punto inicial de su carrera norteamericana, caracterizada por las ovaciones del público, la aprobación de la crítica y un lugar destacado en la industria discográfica, tal como demuestran las fuentes hemerográficas consultadas.


2017 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Frederick Hale

The appropriateness of Christian themes in the performing arts has often been debated. Defenders have argued that various media, including drama, can serve as instruments of spiritual edification, while critics have contended that such efforts often eventuate in sacrilege and a vulgarising exploitation of the sacred for commercial and entertainment purposes. A heated debate took place in 1903 when Richard Wagner’s opera Parsifal, which since its première at Bayreuth in 1882 had been hailed as a magnificent representation of redemption and other themes central to Christianity, was staged at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York – its first performance as an opera outside its original venue. Numerous clergymen and lay people in several denominations sought to have the production banned and cautioned fellow Christians against seeing it. Others, generally of a theologically more liberal bent, defended the work. The heated public controversy is placed into historical context and compared with the history of Parsifal in the United Kingdom, where it was widely appreciated without noteworthy opposition.


2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (54) ◽  
pp. 83-101
Author(s):  
Luíza Beatriz Alvim ◽  
Diana Maron

Neste artigo, consideramos o aspecto da atuação no cinema silencioso de estrelas da ópera com o objetivo de trazer questionamentos sobre uma possível influência das experiências desses artistas em sua atuação operística no sentido de um maior naturalismo. Colocando a atuação nos palcos dentro de uma esfera mais ampla, estudamos o “pictorialismo” (as poses), comum no teatro não musicado do final do século XIX e adotado também na ópera. Para nossas reflexões, usamos um caso com boa documentação de exibição cinematográfica, o da estrela do Metropolitan Opera House, a soprano Geraldine Farrar, como Carmen, no filme homônimo de 1915 de Cecil B. DeMille.


Author(s):  
Aleksandra Ożarowska

The present paper focuses on the issue of translating operatic libretti in the form of surtitles. This is a very specific type of translation, and it becomes even more challenging when operatic productions for which surtitles are created are modernised. In such cases the application of skopos theory proves to be the most useful and effective, even though some of its premises may be regarded as controversial. The data for the present study come from the most reputable opera houses, for example the Metropolitan Opera House or Royal Opera House, as they are known for providing their audiences with high-quality libretti translations.


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