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The Ultimate Art: Essays Around and About Opera
The Ultimate Art Essays Around and About Opera Author:David Littlejohn Anyone who cares about opera will find The Ultimate Art a thoroughly engaging book. David Littlejohn's essays are exciting, provocative, sometimes even outrageous. They reflect his deep love of operathat exotic, extravagant, and perpetually popular hybrid performing art formand his fascination with the many worlds from which it sprang. — From... more » its seventeenth-century beginnings, opera has been decried by its detractors for its elitism, its artifice, its absurd costliness, and its social irrelevance. But Littlejohn makes us see that opera embraces an extraordinary amount of intense human emotion and experience, Western culture, and individual psychology. It is also the most complex, challenging, and demanding form of public performance ever developedat its most spectacular it pulls together in one evening a play, a concert, a ballet, and a pageant, not to mention an exhibition of painting and sculpture.
Every opera is a veritable piece of cultural history. The book begins with "The Difference Is They Sing," a potentially controversial essay on the nature of opera and its place in modern culture. From there Littlejohn goes on to consider everything from "Sex and Religion in French Opera" to "What Peter Sellars Did to Mozart." He tells us about every major staging of Wagner's Ring cycle since 1876, the troubled fate (in legend, history, and opera) of the city of Nuremberg, and the volatile collaboration of Richard Strauss and Hugo von Hofmannsthal. Littlejohn presents these and many other fascinating moments in the history of opera with conviction and flair. By the end of the book the reader may very well be persuaded that opera is indeed the ultimate art.
Introduction : the difference is they sing --
Singing Greek tragedy --
When opera was still serious --
Ariosto and his children --
Don Giovanni : the impossible opera --
What Peter Sellars did to Mozart --
Norma : the case for bel canto --
Hugo sung and unsung : or why we put up with dumb opera plots --