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		<title>At  last I see the wonderful Anthony Minghella&#8217;s production of  Madam Butterfly</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[wolf01]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 May 2012 11:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorised]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Anthony Minghella]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[English National Opera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gwyn Hughes Jones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Madam Butterfly]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mary Plazas]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://wolfiewolfgang.com/?p=726</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Yesterday was a powerful mixture of the old and the new when I went on a trip to London to see the revival of the late Anthony Minghella&#8217;s sensational production of Puccini&#8217;s opera Madam Butterfly. first produced in 2005 and now revived with the same singers in the two principal roles, it was the opera [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://wolfiewolfgang.com/at-last-i-see-wonderful-anthony/">At  last I see the wonderful Anthony Minghella&#8217;s production of  Madam Butterfly</a> appeared first on <a href="https://wolfiewolfgang.com">Wolfie Wolfgang</a>.</p>
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<p>
Yesterday was a powerful mixture of the old and the new when I went on a trip to London to see the revival of the late Anthony Minghella&#8217;s sensational production of Puccini&#8217;s opera Madam Butterfly. first produced in 2005 and now revived with the same singers in the two principal roles, it was the opera experience I have been awaiting since first cursing myself from missing it the first time round.</p>
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<p>
London on a hot muggy day looked fine with its now happy mix of the old and new in architecture as well as in the arts.</p>
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<p>
I spent some time round the corner from the English National Opera&#8217;s home at the London&nbsp;Coliseum at another of my favourite haunts, the National Gallery looking at the early Renaissance Italian paintings by Cimabue and Duccio before wandering off to see the gallery&#8217;s collection of paintings by Michelangelo, Raphael and Titian.</p>
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<p>
Luxury enough for one day anyone might think without the thrilling experience of seeing, for the first time, my favourite out of all the Puccini operas. I have avoided going before because of an immature fear of making a public spectacle of myself at this the most emotionally demanding of operas. In the end I cried with the best of them and feel a whole lot better..</p>
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<p>
Anthony Minghella always struck me as a fine but ultimately not that sensational a film director but this , his only opera production must stand as my all-time favourite production of any opera that I have seen in a life-time of opera-going. Not only did it bring a new mix of styles together into something entirely new but it did it with a musician&#8217;s ear for Puccini&#8217;s score, itself an inventire mix of the new and the old. It is a tragedy for opera that Mr Minghella didn&#8217;t live to build on this wonderful production.</p>
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<p>
The mix of traditional Japanese puppet theatre, the splendid Blind Summit Theatre, and&nbsp;cinematographic&nbsp;imagery in wide screen colour, where Michael Levine&#8217;s beautifully simple set design is gloriously lit by Peter Mumford, with vivid costumes by Han Feng, made this a truly magnificent as well as deeply moving experience. The use of a puppet for Butterfly&#8217;s young son was a brilliant and moving solution to the problem of child actors in this crucial role.</p>
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<p>
Too offten all those high production values can diminish the impact of the humble singers in their difficult job of singing and acting out their personal tragedies in such a vast space. none of that here last night. Mary Plazas, Minghella&#8217;s original Butterfly, returns to the part with real star quality. A tiny Japanese geisha with not just a bit heart but a huge voice too. Maybe it sounded frayed round the edges and a touch too mature for the opening scenes but, Plazas rose to the great love duet and then the evening was her&#8217;s. Impressive too was Minghella&#8217;s original Pinkerton, the Welsh tenor &nbsp;Gwyn Hughes Jones who has the right Italianate tones and knows how not to over-do things even if he doesn&#8217;t quite have the size of voice to provide that final operatic &#8220;ping&#8221; to the part of American Naval Lieutenant F.B. Pinkerton who&#8217;s marriage to butterfly is less real to him than it is to her. No question here what the F.B. stands for even if he ends the show appropriately broken-hearted.</p>
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<p>
It was like a night at the cinema with the added frisson of live performance and the thrill of operatic voices in visceral proximity. It is a production that everyone should see even if this curent run is unsurprizingly fully sold out. English National Opera and their co-producers, the Metropolitan Opera House, &nbsp;New York and Lithuanian National Opera must bring this back again and again. Don&#8217;t miss it next time.</p>
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<p>It was a great day in London and I was glad to be there before the place &nbsp;overflows with the crowds that will invade for this weekend&#8217;s &nbsp;Diamond Jubilee&nbsp;festivities&nbsp;and then, horror of horros, the dreaded Olympics. Well, OK, enjoy them too if you want but both events could learn &nbsp;more than a thing or two from Anthony Minghella in terms of presenting an awe-inspiring spectacle.</p>
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<p>With all that talk of Madam Butterfly, I had better play you a clip of the music &#8211; here, as a good starter if you don&#8217;t know it, is the &#8220;love&#8221; duet where Butterfly&#8217;s fate and her love is sealed and where Pinkerton might just be in &nbsp;love more than he thinks. Mirella Freni and Luciano Pavarotti are quite a hard act to knock in this music from the classic recording by Herbert von Karajan. Enjoy and weep &#8211; that&#8217;s Puccini&#8217;s way.</p>
<p><iframe loading="lazy" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/RlP7QHuhLJg" width="420"></iframe></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://wolfiewolfgang.com/at-last-i-see-wonderful-anthony/">At  last I see the wonderful Anthony Minghella&#8217;s production of  Madam Butterfly</a> appeared first on <a href="https://wolfiewolfgang.com">Wolfie Wolfgang</a>.</p>
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