{"title":"莫扎特的《魔笛》(评论)","authors":"Joseph A. Heissan Jr.","doi":"10.1353/tj.2024.a932171","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Die Zauberflöte</em> by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Joseph A. Heissan Jr. </li> </ul> <em>DIE ZAUBERFLÖTE</em>. By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Libretto by Emanuel Schikaneder. Directed and choreographed by Simon McBurney. Metropolitan Opera House, New York. May 25, 2023. <p>In Mozart’s singspiel <em>Die Zauberflöte</em>, the characters struggle to distinguish truth from lies. Chock-full of conjurings, transformations, mysterious trials, and magical instruments, the heavily allegorical libretto provides many opportunities for elaborate onstage illusions. While this contemporary-dress production at the Met certainly delighted the eyes and ears with inspiring theatrical artifice, what distinguished the staging by Simon McBurney (co-founder of Complicité) was the decision to place the artists creating those effects in clear view of the audience. Exposing the artists’ activities paradoxically exemplified the Enlightenment ideals of truth, honesty, and integrity woven into the libretto while also championing the power of the imagination in live performance-making.</p> <br/> Click for larger view<br/> View full resolution <p>Thomas Oliemans (Papageno) and Ruth Sullivan (Foley artist) in <em>Die Zauberflöte</em>. (Photo: Karen Almond/Met Opera.)</p> <p></p> <p>From the moment I entered the auditorium in search of my seat, I noticed the creative team had worked to reinforce our collective awareness of being in the Metropolitan Opera House awaiting the performance. The open stage curtain revealed the upstage cyclorama and exposed wings. The minimal scenery consisted of a centerstage platform with four corner cables, each connected to tower-like scaffolding that formed two proscenium arches over the platform, thus creating a smaller onstage stage. (When repositioned during the performance, this platform was transformed imaginatively into various objects and locales.) In the orchestra pit, raised flooring made the musicians visible. After finishing their last-minute preparations, the actors, <strong>[End Page 226]</strong> who would serve as performer-puppeteers, took seats in chairs out on the apron, stage left and stage right, near the Met’s proscenium arch. Even farther left and right on the apron, workbenches displayed various materials and equipment. When the overture began, visual artist Blake Habermann and Foley artist Ruth Sullivan entered and walked onto the down-center apron to observe the audience. They exchanged glances confirming all was ready to begin. Habermann then crossed to one workbench and Sullivan to the other. From the beginning, this production called attention to the presence of these artists, whose labor—like that of most theatrical designers—might well have been left invisible.</p> <br/> Click for larger view<br/> View full resolution <p>Seth Morris (Flute Soloist), Lawrence Brownlee (Tamino), and the ensemble in <em>Die Zauberflöte</em>. (Photo: Karen Almond/Met Opera.)</p> <p></p> <p>The illusions Habermann and Sullivan produced during the performance, through projections and sound effects, respectively, proved especially engaging because we could view their creation in real time. In addition to Habermann using a chalkboard to generate a series of text and line-drawing projections—mountains, whirlpools, atmospheric changes, godlike commentaries, manifestations of characters’ emotions—he also employed shadow-puppetry to evoke appearances by Papageno (Thomas Oliemans) and the Three Boys (Deven Agge, Julian Knopf, and Luka Zylik) as well as physical objects like books to conjure Sarastro’s temple. Similarly, Sullivan utilized everyday items—bottles, shoes, sheet metal, an umbrella, rocks, a bucket—to produce various sound illusions. The impact of this multisensory trompe l’œil (and l’oreille) was enhanced whenever characters not only acknowledged the presence of these artists but also conspired with them to create onstage illusions. Allowing us to discover how these two artists engaged our imaginations made their illusions oddly more impactful.</p> <p>The actors tasked with conjuring the birds that repeatedly flocked around Papageno employed a style of puppetry that made no attempt to conceal their own existence as puppeteers from the audience. For the birds’ initial appearance, eight of these actors and every member of the orchestra grabbed half-folded pieces of sheet music that resembled bird wings. Everyone then raised and lowered their hands as a group—much like fans doing the wave in a soccer stadium—which conjured a huge flock of birds rippling across the pit. The actors then made their birds swoop over toward Papageno to flit about him. Given the imaginative energy the audience invested in the birds whenever they appeared, it was no surprise that...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":46247,"journal":{"name":"THEATRE JOURNAL","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Die Zauberflöte by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (review)\",\"authors\":\"Joseph A. Heissan Jr.\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/tj.2024.a932171\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Die Zauberflöte</em> by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Joseph A. Heissan Jr. </li> </ul> <em>DIE ZAUBERFLÖTE</em>. By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Libretto by Emanuel Schikaneder. Directed and choreographed by Simon McBurney. Metropolitan Opera House, New York. May 25, 2023. <p>In Mozart’s singspiel <em>Die Zauberflöte</em>, the characters struggle to distinguish truth from lies. Chock-full of conjurings, transformations, mysterious trials, and magical instruments, the heavily allegorical libretto provides many opportunities for elaborate onstage illusions. While this contemporary-dress production at the Met certainly delighted the eyes and ears with inspiring theatrical artifice, what distinguished the staging by Simon McBurney (co-founder of Complicité) was the decision to place the artists creating those effects in clear view of the audience. Exposing the artists’ activities paradoxically exemplified the Enlightenment ideals of truth, honesty, and integrity woven into the libretto while also championing the power of the imagination in live performance-making.</p> <br/> Click for larger view<br/> View full resolution <p>Thomas Oliemans (Papageno) and Ruth Sullivan (Foley artist) in <em>Die Zauberflöte</em>. (Photo: Karen Almond/Met Opera.)</p> <p></p> <p>From the moment I entered the auditorium in search of my seat, I noticed the creative team had worked to reinforce our collective awareness of being in the Metropolitan Opera House awaiting the performance. The open stage curtain revealed the upstage cyclorama and exposed wings. The minimal scenery consisted of a centerstage platform with four corner cables, each connected to tower-like scaffolding that formed two proscenium arches over the platform, thus creating a smaller onstage stage. (When repositioned during the performance, this platform was transformed imaginatively into various objects and locales.) In the orchestra pit, raised flooring made the musicians visible. After finishing their last-minute preparations, the actors, <strong>[End Page 226]</strong> who would serve as performer-puppeteers, took seats in chairs out on the apron, stage left and stage right, near the Met’s proscenium arch. Even farther left and right on the apron, workbenches displayed various materials and equipment. When the overture began, visual artist Blake Habermann and Foley artist Ruth Sullivan entered and walked onto the down-center apron to observe the audience. They exchanged glances confirming all was ready to begin. Habermann then crossed to one workbench and Sullivan to the other. From the beginning, this production called attention to the presence of these artists, whose labor—like that of most theatrical designers—might well have been left invisible.</p> <br/> Click for larger view<br/> View full resolution <p>Seth Morris (Flute Soloist), Lawrence Brownlee (Tamino), and the ensemble in <em>Die Zauberflöte</em>. (Photo: Karen Almond/Met Opera.)</p> <p></p> <p>The illusions Habermann and Sullivan produced during the performance, through projections and sound effects, respectively, proved especially engaging because we could view their creation in real time. In addition to Habermann using a chalkboard to generate a series of text and line-drawing projections—mountains, whirlpools, atmospheric changes, godlike commentaries, manifestations of characters’ emotions—he also employed shadow-puppetry to evoke appearances by Papageno (Thomas Oliemans) and the Three Boys (Deven Agge, Julian Knopf, and Luka Zylik) as well as physical objects like books to conjure Sarastro’s temple. Similarly, Sullivan utilized everyday items—bottles, shoes, sheet metal, an umbrella, rocks, a bucket—to produce various sound illusions. The impact of this multisensory trompe l’œil (and l’oreille) was enhanced whenever characters not only acknowledged the presence of these artists but also conspired with them to create onstage illusions. Allowing us to discover how these two artists engaged our imaginations made their illusions oddly more impactful.</p> <p>The actors tasked with conjuring the birds that repeatedly flocked around Papageno employed a style of puppetry that made no attempt to conceal their own existence as puppeteers from the audience. For the birds’ initial appearance, eight of these actors and every member of the orchestra grabbed half-folded pieces of sheet music that resembled bird wings. Everyone then raised and lowered their hands as a group—much like fans doing the wave in a soccer stadium—which conjured a huge flock of birds rippling across the pit. The actors then made their birds swoop over toward Papageno to flit about him. Given the imaginative energy the audience invested in the birds whenever they appeared, it was no surprise that...</p> </p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":46247,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"THEATRE JOURNAL\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.8000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-07-23\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"THEATRE JOURNAL\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1353/tj.2024.a932171\",\"RegionNum\":3,\"RegionCategory\":\"艺术学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"0\",\"JCRName\":\"THEATER\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"THEATRE JOURNAL","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/tj.2024.a932171","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 沃尔夫冈-阿马多伊斯-莫扎特的《蝶恋花》 Joseph A. Heissan Jr. Die Zauberflöte.沃尔夫冈-阿玛迪斯-莫扎特著。剧本: Emanuel Schikaneder。导演和编舞:西蒙-麦克伯尼。纽约大都会歌剧院2023年5月25日在莫扎特的歌舞剧《蝶恋花》中,剧中人物努力分辨真假。剧中充满了变魔术、变身、神秘考验和魔法乐器,寓意深刻的剧本为精心设计的舞台魔术提供了许多机会。在大都会歌剧院上演的这部现代服饰剧无疑以令人振奋的戏剧技巧愉悦了观众的视觉和听觉,而西蒙-麦克伯尼(Compllicité 的创始人之一)的舞台表演的与众不同之处在于,他决定将创造这些效果的艺术家置于观众的视线之内。暴露艺术家们的活动,自相矛盾地体现了编织在歌词中的启蒙理想--真实、诚实和正直,同时也倡导了现场表演中想象力的力量。 点击查看大图 查看完整分辨率 托马斯-奥利曼斯(Thomas Oliemans,饰演帕帕盖诺)和露丝-沙利文(Ruth Sullivan,饰演福莱艺术家)在《蝶恋花》中。(照片:凯伦-阿尔蒙德/大都会歌剧院)从我进入观众席寻找座位的那一刻起,我就注意到创作团队努力加强我们的集体意识,让我们感受到自己是在大都会歌剧院等待演出。打开的舞台幕布露出了舞台上方的环景和外露的侧翼。简约的布景由舞台中央的平台和四根角钢组成,每根角钢都与塔式脚手架相连,脚手架在平台上形成两个拱形,从而形成了一个较小的舞台。(在演出过程中,当这个平台被重新定位时,就会充满想象力地变成各种物体和地点)。在管弦乐池中,加高的地板让音乐家们一览无余。演员们在完成最后的准备工作后,在舞台左侧和右侧靠近大都会剧院拱门的围裙上的椅子上就座。在围裙的左右两侧,工作台上摆放着各种材料和设备。序曲开始后,视觉艺术家布莱克-哈伯曼(Blake Habermann)和福莱艺术家露丝-沙利文(Ruth Sullivan)走进舞台,走到舞台中央的围裙上观察观众。他们交换了一下眼神,确认一切准备就绪,可以开始了。随后,哈伯曼走到一个工作台前,苏利文走到另一个工作台前。从一开始,这部作品就唤起了人们对这些艺术家的关注,他们的劳动和大多数戏剧设计师的劳动一样,很可能被忽视。 点击查看大图 查看完整分辨率 塞斯-莫里斯(长笛独奏者)、劳伦斯-布朗利(塔米诺)和《蝶恋花》中的乐队。(照片:凯伦-阿尔蒙德/大都会歌剧院)哈伯曼和沙利文在演出中分别通过投影和音效制造的幻觉特别吸引人,因为我们可以实时观看他们的创作。除了哈伯曼利用黑板生成一系列文字和线描投影--山峰、漩涡、大气变化、神一般的评论、人物情绪的表现,他还利用皮影戏唤起帕帕盖诺(托马斯-奥利曼斯)和三个男孩(德文-阿格、朱利安-诺普夫和卢卡-齐里克)的出场,并利用书籍等实物变出萨拉斯特罗的神庙。同样,沙利文利用日常用品--瓶子、鞋子、金属板、雨伞、石头、水桶--制造出各种声音幻觉。当剧中人物不仅承认这些艺术家的存在,而且还与他们合谋制造舞台幻觉时,这种多感官错觉(和错觉)的效果就会得到加强。让我们发现这两位艺术家是如何调动我们的想象力的,使他们的幻觉奇特地更具冲击力。负责变出鸟儿的演员采用了一种木偶戏的风格,他们不试图向观众隐瞒自己作为木偶戏演员的存在。在小鸟初次登场时,其中八位演员和乐团的每一位成员都拿起了半折的乐谱,这些乐谱就像小鸟的翅膀。然后,每个人都集体举起和放下双手--就像足球场上的球迷挥手一样--这样就幻化出一大群鸟儿在观众席上荡漾。然后,演员们让自己的鸟儿俯冲向帕帕盖诺,在他身边飞来飞去。每当小鸟出现时,观众们都会投入极大的想象力,这也就不足为奇了......
Die Zauberflöte by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
Die Zauberflöte by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Joseph A. Heissan Jr.
DIE ZAUBERFLÖTE. By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Libretto by Emanuel Schikaneder. Directed and choreographed by Simon McBurney. Metropolitan Opera House, New York. May 25, 2023.
In Mozart’s singspiel Die Zauberflöte, the characters struggle to distinguish truth from lies. Chock-full of conjurings, transformations, mysterious trials, and magical instruments, the heavily allegorical libretto provides many opportunities for elaborate onstage illusions. While this contemporary-dress production at the Met certainly delighted the eyes and ears with inspiring theatrical artifice, what distinguished the staging by Simon McBurney (co-founder of Complicité) was the decision to place the artists creating those effects in clear view of the audience. Exposing the artists’ activities paradoxically exemplified the Enlightenment ideals of truth, honesty, and integrity woven into the libretto while also championing the power of the imagination in live performance-making.
Click for larger view View full resolution
Thomas Oliemans (Papageno) and Ruth Sullivan (Foley artist) in Die Zauberflöte. (Photo: Karen Almond/Met Opera.)
From the moment I entered the auditorium in search of my seat, I noticed the creative team had worked to reinforce our collective awareness of being in the Metropolitan Opera House awaiting the performance. The open stage curtain revealed the upstage cyclorama and exposed wings. The minimal scenery consisted of a centerstage platform with four corner cables, each connected to tower-like scaffolding that formed two proscenium arches over the platform, thus creating a smaller onstage stage. (When repositioned during the performance, this platform was transformed imaginatively into various objects and locales.) In the orchestra pit, raised flooring made the musicians visible. After finishing their last-minute preparations, the actors, [End Page 226] who would serve as performer-puppeteers, took seats in chairs out on the apron, stage left and stage right, near the Met’s proscenium arch. Even farther left and right on the apron, workbenches displayed various materials and equipment. When the overture began, visual artist Blake Habermann and Foley artist Ruth Sullivan entered and walked onto the down-center apron to observe the audience. They exchanged glances confirming all was ready to begin. Habermann then crossed to one workbench and Sullivan to the other. From the beginning, this production called attention to the presence of these artists, whose labor—like that of most theatrical designers—might well have been left invisible.
Click for larger view View full resolution
Seth Morris (Flute Soloist), Lawrence Brownlee (Tamino), and the ensemble in Die Zauberflöte. (Photo: Karen Almond/Met Opera.)
The illusions Habermann and Sullivan produced during the performance, through projections and sound effects, respectively, proved especially engaging because we could view their creation in real time. In addition to Habermann using a chalkboard to generate a series of text and line-drawing projections—mountains, whirlpools, atmospheric changes, godlike commentaries, manifestations of characters’ emotions—he also employed shadow-puppetry to evoke appearances by Papageno (Thomas Oliemans) and the Three Boys (Deven Agge, Julian Knopf, and Luka Zylik) as well as physical objects like books to conjure Sarastro’s temple. Similarly, Sullivan utilized everyday items—bottles, shoes, sheet metal, an umbrella, rocks, a bucket—to produce various sound illusions. The impact of this multisensory trompe l’œil (and l’oreille) was enhanced whenever characters not only acknowledged the presence of these artists but also conspired with them to create onstage illusions. Allowing us to discover how these two artists engaged our imaginations made their illusions oddly more impactful.
The actors tasked with conjuring the birds that repeatedly flocked around Papageno employed a style of puppetry that made no attempt to conceal their own existence as puppeteers from the audience. For the birds’ initial appearance, eight of these actors and every member of the orchestra grabbed half-folded pieces of sheet music that resembled bird wings. Everyone then raised and lowered their hands as a group—much like fans doing the wave in a soccer stadium—which conjured a huge flock of birds rippling across the pit. The actors then made their birds swoop over toward Papageno to flit about him. Given the imaginative energy the audience invested in the birds whenever they appeared, it was no surprise that...
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