Yes, I should have written about this when I went to encore last year with my boyfriend, but my parents went to another encore of it last night, and we had a decent conversation about it. This isn't a review of the performance but an commentary on it.
The Hero is a prince named Tamino who when we meet him is being chased by a giant serpent and is saved by Three Ladies of the Queen of the Night. When Tamino comes to he meets a bird catcher, Papageno, who tells him that he killed the snake himself. At this the three Ladies padlock Papageno's mouth to punish him for telling lies. They then tell Tamino that they saved his life.
Then the Queen of the Night herself enters, and she tells Tamino to rescue her daughter, Pamina, who has kidnapped by Sarastro. Tamino agrees upon seeing a portrait of the princess and sets off to find her. The Three ladies then give him a magic flute to protect himself on his journey, and to Papageno they give a set of magic bells. But when the two men reach the Temple where Pamina is held, Tamino finds out that the queen is the one in the wrong and Sarastro is the good guy. And before the prince and princess can be united he must first be initiated. Confused yet?
It doesn't stop there. While Tamino passes the trials with no trouble, poor Papageno can't seem to do anything right. Wisdom and Enlightenment do not interest him in the least, especially since the priests insist that he must first pass the trials before he can get them. Papageno wants the simple things in life; food, drink, and a family. Of course he's told there's a pretty Papagena waiting for him, but he can't have her until he's past the trials. This of course causes much stress for Papageno.
Then you have the Queen of the Night telling Pamina to kill Sarastro or be disowned, and everything becomes more and more convoluted until the final scene.
Here's the main problem with the opera: Tamino isn't given much of a character at all beyond his wanting Pamina and Enlightenment. He passes the trials no issue and doesn't face that much adversity. Pamina is characterized as strong in our day, but she still has nothing beyond being in love with Tamino, though she does try to escape the Temple. The Queen of the Night has two amazing arias (which I love to death), but her total stage time is less than twelve minutes. She also suffers from rather stilted characterization. Sarastro is probably the flattest character of the bunch, being nothing more than a blandly benevolent platitude-spewer who doesn't do much. And then there's Monostatos, Sarastro's slave who is Always Chaotic Evil and wants nothing more than to rape Pamina. He does have a few comic moments, such as when he and Papageno scare each other, but he's not interesting at all.
Papageno is probably the only character in the opera with anything resembling characterization. He is a simple man who wants a quiet life. He is also a very good joker to Tamino's straight man. In fact, both Tamino and Pamina's best scenes are with Papageno. He has a harder time than Tamino because he cannot handle the trials, even when he'll be rewarded with Papagena. It doesn't help that she gets getting taken away from him. So we're all happy when he gets his Papagena in the end.
So why is this complicated mish-mash of a story so popular? Because Mozart was so good at composing music, he could make even the weirdest of plots riveting. No one goes to the see Die Zauberflöte for the story, they go to hear the Queen of the Night sing about Hell's vengeance and watch Papageno and Papagena making out before the grand finale. If anyone else had tried to write this opera it would have faded into oblivion. But Mozart was a musical genius and that is why The Magic Flute still survives.
Sunday, December 2, 2018
Sunday, November 25, 2018
ALBION'S SEED: Four English Folkways In America
This thick, massive tome by Professor David Hackett Fischer is about the four main English groups who settled America in the 17th and 18th Centuries. The book explores their impact on America's socio-political landscape and how it still affects our society even today. These four groups are the Puritans, Cavaliers, Quakers, and Scots-Irish. Each group settled in a different region and brought their own customs and folkways with them.
Fischer defines "folkways" not as something primitive dating from way back when, but as a complex system of beliefs and customs that remain the same even as a culture goes through change. These are often found in the way people talk, their architecture, family structure, marriage rituals, death rituals, food, etc.. And we can still see the impact of these customs today.
The Puritans were the first wave of English to come to the New World. These are the famous "Pilgrims" who landed at Plymouth Rock and celebrated the first Thanksgiving with their Indigenous neighbors. Staunch Calvinists, they believed that Christ only died for the elect and looked for signs of God's favor. They are infamous for their obsessive fear of witchcraft. It was the Puritans founded the Ivy League schools in Massachusetts and Connecticut, and are the ancestors of today's Liberal elite.
The Cavaliers were the second group to cross over the Atlantic. In fact, a certain governor of Virginia intended to bring over second sons of the nobility in order to recreate the old Feudal system. These became the planter class that dominated Southern society. Cavaliers tended to be Anglican and held loyalty to the king. Among them were the ancestors of Robert E. Lee and George Washington.
The Quakers were the third set to come to America, settling in places like Delaware. Called the Society of Friends, they focused on what they called the "Inner Light" and the work of the Holy Spirit. They were very strict in areas such as sex and marriage to the point of asceticism. This led to one group breaking away and becoming the now-extinct Shaker sect. The Quakers would later become leading players in the Abolition Movement of the 19th Century.
The Scots-Irish were the last group to arrive in the U.S., settling in the border areas and the Appalachian Mountains. They have long held a reputation for being fierce and vicious fighters, in fact, many were brought over to be the barrier between the Europeans and the Indigenous tribes. The Scots-Irish were a very clannish group and feuds were a way of life. The most famous of these was the feud between the Hatfields and McCoys, which started as a quarrel over livestock and resulted in the deaths of nearly twenty people. Surprisingly, a majority of American Presidents were Scot-Irish, including Andrew Jackson, Ulysses S. Grant, and Ronald Reagan.
Albion's Seed is a demanding read, but a good read nonetheless. It does a good job of explaining who settled where and when, what customs they brought with them, and how it has shaped our society and continues to do so.
Fischer defines "folkways" not as something primitive dating from way back when, but as a complex system of beliefs and customs that remain the same even as a culture goes through change. These are often found in the way people talk, their architecture, family structure, marriage rituals, death rituals, food, etc.. And we can still see the impact of these customs today.
The Puritans were the first wave of English to come to the New World. These are the famous "Pilgrims" who landed at Plymouth Rock and celebrated the first Thanksgiving with their Indigenous neighbors. Staunch Calvinists, they believed that Christ only died for the elect and looked for signs of God's favor. They are infamous for their obsessive fear of witchcraft. It was the Puritans founded the Ivy League schools in Massachusetts and Connecticut, and are the ancestors of today's Liberal elite.
The Cavaliers were the second group to cross over the Atlantic. In fact, a certain governor of Virginia intended to bring over second sons of the nobility in order to recreate the old Feudal system. These became the planter class that dominated Southern society. Cavaliers tended to be Anglican and held loyalty to the king. Among them were the ancestors of Robert E. Lee and George Washington.
The Quakers were the third set to come to America, settling in places like Delaware. Called the Society of Friends, they focused on what they called the "Inner Light" and the work of the Holy Spirit. They were very strict in areas such as sex and marriage to the point of asceticism. This led to one group breaking away and becoming the now-extinct Shaker sect. The Quakers would later become leading players in the Abolition Movement of the 19th Century.
The Scots-Irish were the last group to arrive in the U.S., settling in the border areas and the Appalachian Mountains. They have long held a reputation for being fierce and vicious fighters, in fact, many were brought over to be the barrier between the Europeans and the Indigenous tribes. The Scots-Irish were a very clannish group and feuds were a way of life. The most famous of these was the feud between the Hatfields and McCoys, which started as a quarrel over livestock and resulted in the deaths of nearly twenty people. Surprisingly, a majority of American Presidents were Scot-Irish, including Andrew Jackson, Ulysses S. Grant, and Ronald Reagan.
Albion's Seed is a demanding read, but a good read nonetheless. It does a good job of explaining who settled where and when, what customs they brought with them, and how it has shaped our society and continues to do so.
Thursday, November 22, 2018
One Year Later
It's been a full year since Dmitri Hvorostovsky died, but it still hurts a little bit. I never knew the man but I admired him very much. So his death was still painful for me.
I've talked before about when I first heard him and the various performances he was in that I went to see. But I want to focus on just one of them right now, the last one I saw him in. Ironically it was also the first time I had seen him live on the stage instead of in simulcasts. Hearing Dima sing in a live auditorium is something that I will always remember, especially his final encore, Proshchay, radost (Farewell, happiness). This simple folk song, sung without accompaniment, is a sentimental piece about a man saying good bye to his beloved. Considering that Dima had terminal cancer at the time he did the recital at the Lyric, it was more than fitting that his last song that night was a farewell song. I still remember that night every time I hear the song.
When I heard he was going to do a recital at the Lyric, I knew I wouldn't get another chance to see Dmitri Hvorostovsky again, so I grabbed the opportunity to buy tickets and go see him. I'm very glad I did, because that was the very last time I ever saw Dima perform. And even though I never met him, I will still miss him very much.
I've talked before about when I first heard him and the various performances he was in that I went to see. But I want to focus on just one of them right now, the last one I saw him in. Ironically it was also the first time I had seen him live on the stage instead of in simulcasts. Hearing Dima sing in a live auditorium is something that I will always remember, especially his final encore, Proshchay, radost (Farewell, happiness). This simple folk song, sung without accompaniment, is a sentimental piece about a man saying good bye to his beloved. Considering that Dima had terminal cancer at the time he did the recital at the Lyric, it was more than fitting that his last song that night was a farewell song. I still remember that night every time I hear the song.
When I heard he was going to do a recital at the Lyric, I knew I wouldn't get another chance to see Dmitri Hvorostovsky again, so I grabbed the opportunity to buy tickets and go see him. I'm very glad I did, because that was the very last time I ever saw Dima perform. And even though I never met him, I will still miss him very much.
Wednesday, October 10, 2018
Tips For Visiting The Museum Of Science And Industry
Yesterday I went with my brother and my boyfriend to the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. This was my second time going since 2007 when my mother took me and both my brothers on a Chicago trip. This second time around was fun, but I figured I should make a list of what and what not to do when you make one of these trips.
1. Buy all tickets in advance. There are ticketed exhibits and special traveling exhibits, and unfortunately many of them are timed-entry with no-reentry afterwards, not to mention that the prices are very high. So you either get tickets for the special exhibit or for the timed-tour, but not both.
2. Use the parking garage instead of the outside parking lot. The parking lot outside has a parking meter that puts you on a time-limit. The parking garage fee rates increase for every hour you're at the museum, but at the same time it's not on a time limit like the parking meter. Alternatively you can park at one of the L stations and take the subway and buses.
3. Plan on having lunch either before or after the 12:00 hour, because everyone wants to have lunch at noon, and so the lines are very long. And we all know how annoying it is to stand for fifteen to twenty minutes in line to get lunch when you don't have much time. So wait until crowd thins out before grabbing lunch. Also, be mindful of portion sizes (and any preexisting jaw problems* that you or someone in your group may have, but I digress).
4. Make sure that you and your buddies are all on the same page. Before you even leave on your trip, make sure you all agree on what you want to see. Don't be in a hurry as it affects not only your enjoyment but the enjoyment of everyone in your group.
5. Go during the spring and fall. I generally recommend going on a weekday when the museums aren't so busy, but with people's schedule this is often easier said than done. So if you have go on a weekend, that's fine. However, avoid going to the museums in Chicago during the summer as everyone and his kid brother will want to do the same thing and you will be thus unable to get in. You can go in winter, but that will greatly depend on how much snow there is.
6. Keep track of your possessions so that you don't lose anything or leave stuff behind.
Effectively what it all boils down to is good planning and organization.
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*I had a double root canal the day before our trip and didn't take the Ibuprofen soon enough when I had lunch. So eating was a chore.
1. Buy all tickets in advance. There are ticketed exhibits and special traveling exhibits, and unfortunately many of them are timed-entry with no-reentry afterwards, not to mention that the prices are very high. So you either get tickets for the special exhibit or for the timed-tour, but not both.
2. Use the parking garage instead of the outside parking lot. The parking lot outside has a parking meter that puts you on a time-limit. The parking garage fee rates increase for every hour you're at the museum, but at the same time it's not on a time limit like the parking meter. Alternatively you can park at one of the L stations and take the subway and buses.
3. Plan on having lunch either before or after the 12:00 hour, because everyone wants to have lunch at noon, and so the lines are very long. And we all know how annoying it is to stand for fifteen to twenty minutes in line to get lunch when you don't have much time. So wait until crowd thins out before grabbing lunch. Also, be mindful of portion sizes (and any preexisting jaw problems* that you or someone in your group may have, but I digress).
4. Make sure that you and your buddies are all on the same page. Before you even leave on your trip, make sure you all agree on what you want to see. Don't be in a hurry as it affects not only your enjoyment but the enjoyment of everyone in your group.
5. Go during the spring and fall. I generally recommend going on a weekday when the museums aren't so busy, but with people's schedule this is often easier said than done. So if you have go on a weekend, that's fine. However, avoid going to the museums in Chicago during the summer as everyone and his kid brother will want to do the same thing and you will be thus unable to get in. You can go in winter, but that will greatly depend on how much snow there is.
6. Keep track of your possessions so that you don't lose anything or leave stuff behind.
Effectively what it all boils down to is good planning and organization.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*I had a double root canal the day before our trip and didn't take the Ibuprofen soon enough when I had lunch. So eating was a chore.
Monday, October 1, 2018
Reenactments in the Rain
It was making down like a drizzle on and off yesterday at the Wade House. The 10:30 cavalry skirmish was canceled, but they were able to recreate part of the Battle of South Mountain. I haven't studied South Mountain that much, but it was one of the events leading up to Antietam in 1862.
One of the highlights of yesterday's fight was the one brown horse was actually being obedient this year. In the past that horse would panic at sound of a gunshot. This year, he was listening to his master a lot more, for which I am glad. When I saw the horse's nervousness the first year, it was mildly understandable. But it got annoying in the following years.
The Medical Demonstrations are always as must. One reenactress is actually descended from the very first woman doctor Rebecca Chisholm. She even has some of her ancestress' original medical tools! The stories of Civil War hospitals being complete hellholes were exaggerated to varying degrees, but then again a lot of these guys are in searing agony and doctors still didn't know much of what we do now. But the piles of dead arms and legs were blown out of proportion after the Battle of Gettysburg (the weather had been very hot that time and there was a shortage of water for the field hospitals).
The reenactors show how surgeons did their jobs back in the 1860s. Among other things they showed was an early version of the stethoscope. Apparently it was invented because doctors had to press their ear against the patient's chest to listen to the heartbeat, and you can imagine how awkward it must have been for male doctors when they had to do it with a woman patient. So someone made a little trumpet-like tool press against the patient's chest so as to make hearing the heartbeat easier with minimal physical contact.
The doctor's performed a simulated operation on a dummy whereby they try to remove a bullet from a patient's wounded leg. If the bullet does not appear to have broken the bone, they can save the limb. If the bone is broken, they may have to amputate the limb to save the person's life. Sometimes they might try "sectioning", carefully removing an inch of the broken bone, which would render the limb slightly shorter than before. The doctor's desk had an array of medical books and little bottles of medicines.
[During the surgery simulator one little boy kept hiding his face in his mother's shirt. No surprise there, the concept of cutting someone open is very disturbing to the majority of people.]
Because of the drizzle it was muddy out. It was also chilly and we had to get my boyfriend a pair of mittens because his hands got cold quickly. It also meant that we were pressing close together to keep warm. He and I tend to do that anyway, but the cold weather made it all the more necessary because sweaters and cardigans aren't quite enough when the temperature is less than 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
One of the stalls was selling smoking hats. I was a little surprised because they looked exactly like the hats worn by people in Qing Dynasty China. At the time, partly thanks to the two Opium Wars, people in China took to smoking in certain rooms. This also took off in the U.S. and Europe, and Chinese-style smoking jackets and smoking hats were popular. Men wore them over their regular clothes so that the tobacco did not stick to them. I have been in a house where people were smoking all the time, and the smell of tobacco never leaves the place.
We got turned around several time going to the Kettle Moraine Visitor's Center and we got there twenty minutes before closing time. But were able to enjoy ten minutes of the little museum and getting my boyfriend a mammoth T-Shirt. It was too wet and chilly to go out on the observation deck, though.
One of the highlights of yesterday's fight was the one brown horse was actually being obedient this year. In the past that horse would panic at sound of a gunshot. This year, he was listening to his master a lot more, for which I am glad. When I saw the horse's nervousness the first year, it was mildly understandable. But it got annoying in the following years.
The Medical Demonstrations are always as must. One reenactress is actually descended from the very first woman doctor Rebecca Chisholm. She even has some of her ancestress' original medical tools! The stories of Civil War hospitals being complete hellholes were exaggerated to varying degrees, but then again a lot of these guys are in searing agony and doctors still didn't know much of what we do now. But the piles of dead arms and legs were blown out of proportion after the Battle of Gettysburg (the weather had been very hot that time and there was a shortage of water for the field hospitals).
The reenactors show how surgeons did their jobs back in the 1860s. Among other things they showed was an early version of the stethoscope. Apparently it was invented because doctors had to press their ear against the patient's chest to listen to the heartbeat, and you can imagine how awkward it must have been for male doctors when they had to do it with a woman patient. So someone made a little trumpet-like tool press against the patient's chest so as to make hearing the heartbeat easier with minimal physical contact.
The doctor's performed a simulated operation on a dummy whereby they try to remove a bullet from a patient's wounded leg. If the bullet does not appear to have broken the bone, they can save the limb. If the bone is broken, they may have to amputate the limb to save the person's life. Sometimes they might try "sectioning", carefully removing an inch of the broken bone, which would render the limb slightly shorter than before. The doctor's desk had an array of medical books and little bottles of medicines.
[During the surgery simulator one little boy kept hiding his face in his mother's shirt. No surprise there, the concept of cutting someone open is very disturbing to the majority of people.]
Because of the drizzle it was muddy out. It was also chilly and we had to get my boyfriend a pair of mittens because his hands got cold quickly. It also meant that we were pressing close together to keep warm. He and I tend to do that anyway, but the cold weather made it all the more necessary because sweaters and cardigans aren't quite enough when the temperature is less than 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
One of the stalls was selling smoking hats. I was a little surprised because they looked exactly like the hats worn by people in Qing Dynasty China. At the time, partly thanks to the two Opium Wars, people in China took to smoking in certain rooms. This also took off in the U.S. and Europe, and Chinese-style smoking jackets and smoking hats were popular. Men wore them over their regular clothes so that the tobacco did not stick to them. I have been in a house where people were smoking all the time, and the smell of tobacco never leaves the place.
We got turned around several time going to the Kettle Moraine Visitor's Center and we got there twenty minutes before closing time. But were able to enjoy ten minutes of the little museum and getting my boyfriend a mammoth T-Shirt. It was too wet and chilly to go out on the observation deck, though.
Correction
Three years ago, I made a list of my Top 12 Favorite Male Opera Singers. Juan Diego Florez was at the top with Dmitri Hvorostovsky and Kyle Ketelsen coming in second and third respectively. This has become largely inaccurate. While I still like JDF, it was Dima and Mr. Ketelsen who were tied for first place all along. Don't get me wrong, I still enjoy all the singers on my list. But when it comes to which one I get excited over the most, Dmitri Hvorostovsky and Kyle Ketelsen both come out on top.
Dmitri Hvorostivsky was the one I gushed over the most even before I realized it, and I still do almost a year after his death. I bought more of his recordings than of any other singer. It was through Dima that I fell in love with opera back in 2007, and he still remains one of my biggest influences to this day. However, as much as I loved seeing him Live in HD, I only had the pleasure of seeing him live onstage once.
Kyle. Ketelsen is the singer whom I have seen perform live the most. This man lives in my hometown, in fact, I've even met him in person. I have seen him perform in two operas, three recitals, and he even did a master class at my high school during my senior year. I may have only heard him perform over the radio once, but it doesn't matter when he gets perform IN MADISON!
Sorting favorites as means of just keeping track of them doesn't always work in the long run. Sometimes the one you thought was your absolute favorite may not have been at all. Dmitri Hvorostovsky and Kyle Ketelsen were tied from the beginning, and I only recognized that this past month.
Monday, July 2, 2018
Impulsive Behavior Leads to Tragedy in TROVATORE
Last week I went to my very first Live in HD Summer Encore (finally, after several unsuccessful tries). The performance being broadcasted was the performance of Giuseppe Verdi's Il Trovatore from October 3rd, 2015, which I have already written about. After seeing this a second time, I decided to focus on the main theme of this operatic staple.
If there is one word that sums up Il Trovatore, it's passion. Wild, unbridled, searing passion. The opera is full of tempestuous emotions; pride, anger, love, hate, desperation, anguish. There is not a peaceful moment in Il Trovatore, only lulls in the storm.
All four of the main characters are ruled by emotions that eventually lead to their mutual downfalls. They are so focused on their own desires that they rush into situations without thinking everything through and suffer the consequences. Manrico is in love with Leanora, but the young Count di Luna is love with her as well, and when you have two men in love with the same women, you all too often get trouble. While it may seem that di Luna is the more evil of the two, in truth they are both rash young men who are ruled by their hormones. Both men severely reproach Leanora when it appears she does not love them. When she decides to become a nun when she believes false reports of Manrico's death, they both run off to stop her. And when di Luna captures Manrico's adopted mother, the Gypsy Azucena, Manrico impulsively rushes off to rescue her and is captured.
Making things even more nerve-racking is that Manrico is the long-lost younger brother for whom the Count has searched for twenty years. But the two men don't recognize each other, and neither is willing to lay aside his pride and talk things over peacefully. This ruins them both in the end.
Leanora is so wildly in love for Manrico that she will do anything for his sake, whether it makes sense or not. She begs the Count to punish her after confusing for Manrico in the darkness. When she hears rumors of Manrico's death, she tries to enter a convent. But when her lover shows up alive, she immediately rushes off with him get married. When Manrico is captured and condemned to die after his impetuous rescue attempt, Leanora makes a false promise of love to di Luna in order to secure Manrico's freedom, then commits suicide rather than live without her beloved.
And meanwhile Azucena is desirous of revenge after di Luna's father had her mother burnt at the stake for trying to hurt the old Count's younger son, and it has left her more than a little unhinged. She lives only for vengeance and even though she has raised Manrico as her own son, she does not truly care for him, only herself and her own anguish. Azucena herself kidnapped him in hopes of killing him to avenge her mother, but adopted him after she accidentally killed her own baby son. And she has been manipulating him in hopes that he will die to satisfy her wrath. I would even go so far as to say that she deliberately lets herself be captured by di Luna's soldiers so that Manrico would come and rescue her, only to be captured and sent to death row.
At the opera's end, Azucena practically tricks di Luna into his killing his own brother and Leanora lies dead after poisoning herself. The result of all that passion and untamed emotion is destruction, destitution, and ultimately grief. One can't help but feel for the Count di Luna as he looks at where all his passion and anger have led him, his family, and the woman he loved. And the mad gypsy's evil laughter is the last thing we hear as the curtain falls.
If there is one word that sums up Il Trovatore, it's passion. Wild, unbridled, searing passion. The opera is full of tempestuous emotions; pride, anger, love, hate, desperation, anguish. There is not a peaceful moment in Il Trovatore, only lulls in the storm.
All four of the main characters are ruled by emotions that eventually lead to their mutual downfalls. They are so focused on their own desires that they rush into situations without thinking everything through and suffer the consequences. Manrico is in love with Leanora, but the young Count di Luna is love with her as well, and when you have two men in love with the same women, you all too often get trouble. While it may seem that di Luna is the more evil of the two, in truth they are both rash young men who are ruled by their hormones. Both men severely reproach Leanora when it appears she does not love them. When she decides to become a nun when she believes false reports of Manrico's death, they both run off to stop her. And when di Luna captures Manrico's adopted mother, the Gypsy Azucena, Manrico impulsively rushes off to rescue her and is captured.
Making things even more nerve-racking is that Manrico is the long-lost younger brother for whom the Count has searched for twenty years. But the two men don't recognize each other, and neither is willing to lay aside his pride and talk things over peacefully. This ruins them both in the end.
Leanora is so wildly in love for Manrico that she will do anything for his sake, whether it makes sense or not. She begs the Count to punish her after confusing for Manrico in the darkness. When she hears rumors of Manrico's death, she tries to enter a convent. But when her lover shows up alive, she immediately rushes off with him get married. When Manrico is captured and condemned to die after his impetuous rescue attempt, Leanora makes a false promise of love to di Luna in order to secure Manrico's freedom, then commits suicide rather than live without her beloved.
And meanwhile Azucena is desirous of revenge after di Luna's father had her mother burnt at the stake for trying to hurt the old Count's younger son, and it has left her more than a little unhinged. She lives only for vengeance and even though she has raised Manrico as her own son, she does not truly care for him, only herself and her own anguish. Azucena herself kidnapped him in hopes of killing him to avenge her mother, but adopted him after she accidentally killed her own baby son. And she has been manipulating him in hopes that he will die to satisfy her wrath. I would even go so far as to say that she deliberately lets herself be captured by di Luna's soldiers so that Manrico would come and rescue her, only to be captured and sent to death row.
At the opera's end, Azucena practically tricks di Luna into his killing his own brother and Leanora lies dead after poisoning herself. The result of all that passion and untamed emotion is destruction, destitution, and ultimately grief. One can't help but feel for the Count di Luna as he looks at where all his passion and anger have led him, his family, and the woman he loved. And the mad gypsy's evil laughter is the last thing we hear as the curtain falls.
Sunday, June 24, 2018
Star Wars Bookmarks
Three years ago, I discovered the website known as Opera Bracelets. This abstract form of storytelling uses colors, shapes, and symbols in the bracelet to describe a person, theme, or event in an opera. I found the concept so fascinating that I decided to try it out for myself, only in this case using bookmarks.
I made this set for my boyfriend for his birthday a few weeks ago. He's an avid Star Wars fan and in particular likes the Prequel Trilogy. One of his favorite characters (and mine) is Padme Naberrie Amidala, who served as both queen and senator of Naboo, and was the wife of Anakin Skywalker and mother of Luke and Leia. I had wanted to do a bracelet inspired by her, but could not figure out how to do so considering how little time I spend beading. Then my mom suggested that I do beaded bookmarks instead, which I did.
So here are the Padme Naberrie Amidala Bookmarks. A crown charm symbolizes Padme's role as queen, a wavy heart her love for Anakin, and baby feet represent the twins Luke and Leia. Orange-pink beads in the first bookmark represent Padme's youth and innocence, bright red beads in the second indicate her passionate love, and dark red beads in the third symbolize her heartbreak. Black beads hint at Padme's tragic fate, and black goldstone beads evoke the galactic setting. And round blue beads symbolize both Padme's home planet of Naboo, and her loyalty to the republic.
I had a blast making these bookmarks, and hope to do some more like them later on.
Monday, May 14, 2018
Female Characters
I often hear about Strong Female Characters in stories. In recent years I have heard the term used more and more frequently; so much so that I'm wondering if people even know what they are talking about.
Sure, we all love our women characters to be strong and independent. I grew up with characters like Princess Leia and her mother Padme from Star Wars. My favorite cartoon series (and by that I mean the only cartoon series I watch at all at this point) is all about young mares who learn about friendship and protect their home from evil. But what is a Strong Female Character (SFC)? And how do we differentiate between her and an Obligatory Feminist Archetype (OFA)?
The first place to start would be characterization. Does the woman have both strengths and weaknesses? A good writer knows that that character is more interesting if she has qualities that are both good and bad. For example, Hermione Granger from the Harry Potter series is very intelligent, in fact, she's the best student in Hogwarts. She is not afraid to speak her mind and desires to help those who most need it. But she can also be an annoying know-it-all and sometimes doesn't think her ideas through. This combination of virtues and flaws make her an interesting three-dimensional character.
Sure, we all love our women characters to be strong and independent. I grew up with characters like Princess Leia and her mother Padme from Star Wars. My favorite cartoon series (and by that I mean the only cartoon series I watch at all at this point) is all about young mares who learn about friendship and protect their home from evil. But what is a Strong Female Character (SFC)? And how do we differentiate between her and an Obligatory Feminist Archetype (OFA)?
The first place to start would be characterization. Does the woman have both strengths and weaknesses? A good writer knows that that character is more interesting if she has qualities that are both good and bad. For example, Hermione Granger from the Harry Potter series is very intelligent, in fact, she's the best student in Hogwarts. She is not afraid to speak her mind and desires to help those who most need it. But she can also be an annoying know-it-all and sometimes doesn't think her ideas through. This combination of virtues and flaws make her an interesting three-dimensional character.
Another thing to consider is that an SFC can be found in any role, traditional or otherwise. Molly Weasley is an example of an SFC in a more traditional feminine role, that of the stay-at-home mother. She is devoted to her family and friends and cares about their safety. She looks after the house while her husband is at work and her kids are at Hogwarts. But she is certainly no pushover. Anyone foolish enough to get between her and her family—particularly her children—will more than likely find themselves in the afterlife.
Teneniel Djo of the Star Wars franchise is an example of an SFC in a non-traditional female role, the Amazon. She is a huntress who roams the planet Dathomir. She is a tough warrior and does not shy away from a fight. Although she does not know it as the Force, she knows she is powerful and proves an invaluable ally to Luke Skywalker and Company when they are on Dathomir. But she is not without vulnerability. She is wandering soul because she was ousted from her clan and is trying to avoid the evil Nightsisters. And she gradually learns that a man may want to be her partner and not so much her slave.
And an SFC understands the value of companionship. Even if she is a fiercely independent woman, she will acknowledge that she cannot do everything on her own. She may not want the man to stand in front of her and take the bullet, but she will be more than happy if he's watching her back from a distance and taking down those whom she does not see coming.
An OFA at first sounds like an SFC, but in fact she is a kind of Mary Sue. The first thing to notice is that she will be an insufferable equality queen** who is always right. Tauriel from the Hobbit films exhibits this behavior in The Desolation of Smaug when she bluntly says, "This is our fight." She is always right in the film and Thranduil is almost always wrong. This is not a mark of strength but of arrogance. The love-triangle thing didn't help matters either*.
The OFA can only be found in one role, an exaggerated form of tomboy known as the Girl-in-Boy's-Clothes. This is a woman character who holds traditional feminine trappings in contempt and acts as tough as she possibly can and is always better than the men. Rey from the Disney canon behaves like a tough girl every chance she gets. She defeats an evil overlord in less than a minute and is more powerful than Luke Skywaker. She uses her anger on a regular basis and belittles the men around her. And Disney wants her to be role model?
Finally, the OFA's entire purpose is to promote an agenda. She will not have any personality save for whatever socio-political ideas the author wants to trumpet. This means that any other characters in the story who are not the OFA will fade into the background and have little to no relevance no matter how often they appear. And when that happens, the story dies.
To sum it all up Strong Female Characters are likeable, fun, and entertaining. Obligatory Feminist Archetypes are annoying, insufferable, and boring. A woman should not have to cast aside all things feminine in order to be strong. And no one wants to be around anyone who thinks she's right all the time. Obligatory Feminist Archetypes give Strong Female Characters a bad name and should never be used in stories again.
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*If there is anyone reading this who bore witness to the horrific argument between me and my brother as we were leaving the now-defunct Eastgate Cinema in Madison on December 14th, 2013, I apologize for my rash behavior. It was wrong of me to go into a purist fan rage in public.
**An equality queen is a woman who fights for equality in a self-righteous manner.
Updated 5-16-18 at 6:13 pm
*If there is anyone reading this who bore witness to the horrific argument between me and my brother as we were leaving the now-defunct Eastgate Cinema in Madison on December 14th, 2013, I apologize for my rash behavior. It was wrong of me to go into a purist fan rage in public.
**An equality queen is a woman who fights for equality in a self-righteous manner.
Updated 5-16-18 at 6:13 pm
Wednesday, April 25, 2018
Russian Music
It's not every day you get to hear Russian Folk Music live. I've had the good fortune to experience it twice in one month. The UW Madison's Russian Folk Orchestra is a mostly string ensemble made up of largely of balalaikas (a triangular lute), and domras (a relative of the mandolin). Also included are a flute and oboe, a tambourine, and occasionally drums and chimes.
My family went on April the 14th to see them RFO perform at the Stoughton Opera House, and then two nights ago I took my brother to see them perform at Oakwood Village in Madison.
I could not find fault with the performance at all. What I can say is that it's a very unique experience to hear these traditional instruments in action. Some of the songs were traditional tunes, some were original pieces, and some were arrangements of Classical music redone for traditional instruments. The maestro wrote a few interesting tunes, the one we heard performed was an instrumental piece based off of Pushkin's poem "The Cart of Life". But perhaps the ones that stuck out to me the most were an arrangement of Scott Joplin's "The Easy Winners" of all things, the "Butterfly Polka", the Russian folk song "The Moon Shines", and an arrangement of Khachaturian's famous "Sabre Dance" from his ballet The Corsair.
I think I'll go see them again next season.
My family went on April the 14th to see them RFO perform at the Stoughton Opera House, and then two nights ago I took my brother to see them perform at Oakwood Village in Madison.
I could not find fault with the performance at all. What I can say is that it's a very unique experience to hear these traditional instruments in action. Some of the songs were traditional tunes, some were original pieces, and some were arrangements of Classical music redone for traditional instruments. The maestro wrote a few interesting tunes, the one we heard performed was an instrumental piece based off of Pushkin's poem "The Cart of Life". But perhaps the ones that stuck out to me the most were an arrangement of Scott Joplin's "The Easy Winners" of all things, the "Butterfly Polka", the Russian folk song "The Moon Shines", and an arrangement of Khachaturian's famous "Sabre Dance" from his ballet The Corsair.
I think I'll go see them again next season.
Monday, March 12, 2018
SEMIRAMIDE: Power Play in Ancient Mesopotamia
It's about time I did another review!
I had heard of Rossini's little-known opera Semiramide, but had never heard it before until this past Saturday. Angela Meade sang the title role, with Elizabeth DeShong and Ildar Abdrazokov in the roles of the warrior Arsace and the villain Assur, respectively. Javier Camarena was the lovelorn foreign king Indreno, whose role appears to be limited to a minor subplot. And Ryan Speedo Green was Oroe, the high priest of Baal.
Semiramide is based off of the legend of Semiramis, a notorious queen of Babylon who had many lovers and was married at least twice. Perhaps one of the most well-known stories about her is that she succeeded the throne upon the death of her husband, Ninus, although some versions have Semiramis murdering Ninus.
The story is complicated, so I'll give a brief synopsis.
Semiramide is preparing to name a successor. She is in love with the young warrior, Arsace, whom she has summoned to the palace. But the conniving Assur wants the throne for himself, and he knows the queen's deep dark secret. Fifteen years prior, the two of them poisoned Semiramide's husband, King Ninus. Semiramide names Arsace her new husband and appoints him to be King of Babylon. Arsace is unnerved by this, but then the ghost of King Ninus rises from the ground and tells Arsace that it is his destiny to rule. But before he can do that, a victim must be sacrificed to avenge Ninus' murder. No prizes for guessing who the victim turns out to be after all is said and done. There is also the little subplot involving Indreno trying to woo a reluctant princess.
The opera is rarely performed due to its intense vocal demands. You need five virtuosos for the leading roles. There are three arias for Semiramide in Act 1 alone!
I could not find fault with the singers' performances. However, compared some of Rossini's other works, this opera has very few notable stand-out moments. Aside from Indreno's two arias, the moment that sticks out to me the most is the Act 2 duet between Semiramide and Arsace. This scene is an absolutely gorgeous moment where two characters go through a whole range of emotions as they gradually understand who the other is.
From the looks of Angela Meade's costumes, I think the same person who did the Met's most recent production of Zandonai's Francesca da Rimini did this production of Semiramide. I say this because the color of her costume goes from royal purple and gold at the very beginning to light blue, then to red, and then to very dark purple at the end.
The opera is one of those pieces where you go for the music and not the story. Yeah, the story has some very good moments in it, but it takes a back seat to the music. Now that doesn't mean I won't go see it again (in fact, I think I will), it just means that this opera doesn't have as much in it as Armida or La Cenerentola.
I had heard of Rossini's little-known opera Semiramide, but had never heard it before until this past Saturday. Angela Meade sang the title role, with Elizabeth DeShong and Ildar Abdrazokov in the roles of the warrior Arsace and the villain Assur, respectively. Javier Camarena was the lovelorn foreign king Indreno, whose role appears to be limited to a minor subplot. And Ryan Speedo Green was Oroe, the high priest of Baal.
Semiramide is based off of the legend of Semiramis, a notorious queen of Babylon who had many lovers and was married at least twice. Perhaps one of the most well-known stories about her is that she succeeded the throne upon the death of her husband, Ninus, although some versions have Semiramis murdering Ninus.
The story is complicated, so I'll give a brief synopsis.
Semiramide is preparing to name a successor. She is in love with the young warrior, Arsace, whom she has summoned to the palace. But the conniving Assur wants the throne for himself, and he knows the queen's deep dark secret. Fifteen years prior, the two of them poisoned Semiramide's husband, King Ninus. Semiramide names Arsace her new husband and appoints him to be King of Babylon. Arsace is unnerved by this, but then the ghost of King Ninus rises from the ground and tells Arsace that it is his destiny to rule. But before he can do that, a victim must be sacrificed to avenge Ninus' murder. No prizes for guessing who the victim turns out to be after all is said and done. There is also the little subplot involving Indreno trying to woo a reluctant princess.
The opera is rarely performed due to its intense vocal demands. You need five virtuosos for the leading roles. There are three arias for Semiramide in Act 1 alone!
I could not find fault with the singers' performances. However, compared some of Rossini's other works, this opera has very few notable stand-out moments. Aside from Indreno's two arias, the moment that sticks out to me the most is the Act 2 duet between Semiramide and Arsace. This scene is an absolutely gorgeous moment where two characters go through a whole range of emotions as they gradually understand who the other is.
From the looks of Angela Meade's costumes, I think the same person who did the Met's most recent production of Zandonai's Francesca da Rimini did this production of Semiramide. I say this because the color of her costume goes from royal purple and gold at the very beginning to light blue, then to red, and then to very dark purple at the end.
The opera is one of those pieces where you go for the music and not the story. Yeah, the story has some very good moments in it, but it takes a back seat to the music. Now that doesn't mean I won't go see it again (in fact, I think I will), it just means that this opera doesn't have as much in it as Armida or La Cenerentola.
Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Writing Short Stories
How do you write a good detective story? In particular, how do you handle a detective short story? They're not going to be as long and complex as a full novel, so it's best to keep it simple.
You have to get the the solution in around ten to twelve pages. This means no long and complicated backstories. It also means that you have to set up the mystery fairly quickly, even if the murder happens halfway. And the number of clues is reduced.
You have to get the the solution in around ten to twelve pages. This means no long and complicated backstories. It also means that you have to set up the mystery fairly quickly, even if the murder happens halfway. And the number of clues is reduced.
ANFSTD
A penguin walks into a bar. "What will you have?", asks the bartender. "Well," says the penguin, "I have to go through leopard seal territory several times a day, so I'll have a Canadian Club."
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