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The Abduction from the Seraglio



By W.A. Mozart
Glimmerglass Opera
Stewart Robertson, conductor
Performers listed below

It seems there have always been stories featuring a "damsel in distress." They go back to the Orpheus legend, and beyond, and often they're pretty serious. In "Orpheus," the damsel is rescued from hell, itself. But today, the words "damsel in distress" generally bring to mind those mad-cap, Snydely Whiplash-type stories.

You know, where the pretty blond with ringlets in her hair is tied to the railroad tracks or to the conyevor belt at the lumber yard, about to be sawed in two, until the dashing young hero saves her at the last possible moment and she falls gratefully into his arms.

Of course, even those relatively new, silent-movie stories are "old-fashioned," right? At least they are by today's standards. And surely they're "politically incorrect." The girl is always totally helpless in the face of evil, and relies on a fearless young man to save her from certain doom. The thing is, these "modern day" damsels-in-distress are also old-fashioned compared to this week's opera. And that's pretty remarkable, considering the drama was written in 1782.

The opera is sort of a "madcap comedy." But this damsel is far from helpless. She's got her evil captor begging her for favors, and when her "hero" comes to save her, she won't even consider being rescued until she's sure he's got the right attitude. Considering the progressive nature of the story, it's hardly surprising that the piece is by Mozart, one of opera's great innovators. It's "The Abduction from the Seraglio," and this week on NPR WORLD OF OPERA, we'll hear it as produced by Glimmerglass Opera in Cooperstown, New York.

By the way, this production is sung in English - which happens to be quite appropriate. Remember the scene in Milos Foreman's film, Amadeus, when the Emperor commissions Mozart to write "The Abduction …?" There's an argument over whether the new work should be in Italian, the "proper" language for opera, or in German. The Emperor in the movie, in fact, had been promoting theater in German. After all, that's the language his people spoke - the vernacular. And German was chosen for "Abduction." So it's fitting that we'll be hearing the opera this week in English - our own vernacular.

Join host Steve Curwood on NPR WORLD OF OPERA, for Glimmerglass Opera's production of "The Abduction from the Seraglio." And to learn more about the piece, tune in AT THE OPERA with Lou Santacroce half-an-hour before curtain time.





Performers:
Joyce Guyer (Constanze); William Burden (Belmonte); Gustav Andreassen (Osmin); Timothey Swaim (Pedrillo); Anna Christy (Blonde)


Links:

  • Glimmerglass Opera
  • AT THE OPERA
  • Libretto, in German

    (These websites will open in a new browser window.)

    Coming Up:
    The Snow Maiden by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov
    Concertgebouw (Amsterdam) Mariinski Theatre Orchestra
    Valery Gergiev, conductor
    August 19, 2000




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