我们感觉到了什么

Schuyler Whelden
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1965 年 2 月 11 日,在巴西军事独裁统治开始后不到一年的时间里,歌手玛丽亚-贝塔尼娅(Maria Bethânia)在里约热内卢的音乐剧作品《Opinião》中担任主要角色之一。贝莎尼亚接替了帮助构思该剧的娜拉-莱昂(Nara Leão),她的表演受到了歌迷的热烈欢迎,尤其是她演唱了合作演员若昂-多-瓦莱(João do Vale)的歌曲《Carcará》。这首歌的歌词唤起了人们对巴西东北部的想象,而东北部正是瓦莱和贝萨妮娅的家乡,表演中还加入了关于东北部人口向南部城市迁移的口语统计报告。尽管这首歌的作曲者否认这首歌是一种抗议行为或政治评论,但时任联邦警察局局长的里奥格兰蒂诺-克鲁尔(Riograndino Kruel)将军认为这首歌是演出中的 "颠覆性 "元素之一,必须予以删除。这一审查要求与 1964 年娜拉-莱昂(Nara Leão)担任主演期间审查委员会对该剧的批准相矛盾。本文分析了歌手玛丽亚-贝莎妮亚参与《Opinião》的情况,以探讨音乐表演通过情感手段唤起政治共同体的潜力。根据档案资料以及对观众和参与者的访谈,我认为贝塔妮亚的表演是形成反对派 "情感社区 "的催化剂,而这一社区的形成是以表达对新生专制国家的负面情感能量为前提的。我展示了观众和评论家对贝莎妮娅表演的情感反应如何证明了公众对《奥皮尼昂》的基调发生了转变,随后引起了军政府的怀疑。此外,我还研究了独裁政权的镇压反应如何说明了通过音乐表演形成的社区的可能性和局限性:1965 年,玛丽亚-贝塔尼亚在圣保罗竞技场剧院的 Opinião 演出中。(公有领域/国家档案馆收藏)
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'We Feel Something'
On February 11, 1965, less than one year after the outset of the Brazilian military dictatorship, singer Maria Bethânia assumed one of the principal roles in the musical theater piece Opinião in Rio de Janeiro. Taking over for Nara Leão, who helped conceive the play, Bethânia was celebrated by fans, especially for her performance of co-star João do Vale’s song ‘Carcará.’ The song’s lyrics invoke imagery of the Brazilian northeast, home region of both Vale and Bethânia, and the performance includes a spoken statistical report on the migration of people from the northeast to the southern cities. Although the song’s composer denied that the song was an act of protest or political commentary, General Riograndino Kruel, then head of the Federal Police, identified it as one of the ‘subversive’ elements in the show that needed to be cut. This call to censorship contradicted the censor board’s 1964 approval of the show, during Nara Leão’s run as star. This article analyzes singer Maria Bethânia’s participation in Opinião to consider the potential for musical performance to engender political community by affective means. Drawing on archival materials and interviews conducted with audience members and participants, I argue that Bethânia’s performances were the catalyst for the formation of an oppositional ‘community of feeling,’ a collective predicated the expression of negative emotional energy toward the nascent authoritarian state. I show how audience members’ and critics’ affective response to Bethânia’s performance evidenced a shift in the tenor of the public for Opinião, which subsequently raised the suspicions of the military government. Additionally, I investigate how the dictatorship’s repressive response illustrates the possibilities and limits of a community formed through musical performance. Photo caption: Maria Bethania in the show Opinião, at Teatro de Arena, São Paulo, 1965. (Public domain / Arquivo Nacional Collection)
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