I have been a music and
theater critic for many years, but strangely, I don’t put a lot of stock in what
reviewers write.
Deep down, I know that a
reviewer’s comments are those of one person and one person only. And not only
that, they are the comments of that one person during one particular moment in
time.
Who knows what the critic felt
like that day or what had happened in his/her life that day? Did his dog die? Did his computer crash erasing years of
beloved photos? We don’t know.
More than once, I have
been surprised and shocked at people who didn’t like a concert or a play that I
absolutely loved. Were we at the same concert on the same day, I ask myself? I
feel that everyone’s opinion is honest and credible, but I am often shocked at the wide variety of viewpoints.
When I ask people what
they think about a concert they often say, “Well, I don’t know much about music
so my opinion really doesn’t count.
Wrong – everyone’s opinion counts. If composers only wrote music for the
select few who had music degrees or were professional musicians, they would be
missing their true audience.
I had that experience recently
at a performance of the opera “Orpheus in the Underworld”, as performed by the
MSU Opera Theatre. I have always admired the quality of the opera program under
the direction of Melanie Helton.
I remember years past,
when the opera program would simply produce short scenes of operas in the old MSU
music auditorium. Once, the set actually
fell down on the singers during a performance.
Happily, those days are long gone. Now, two fully staged operas are
produced with professional results each year,.
I was looking forward to
seeing “Orpheus in the Underworld”. I didn’t
plan on reviewing it but I wrote a preview of the show and interviewed Helton.
But, for reasons I cannot
fully explain, the show left me flat from the moment the music started. “Orpheus”
is a brash satire of French society of the period when Offenbach wrote it and
of the Greek story it on which it was based.
The production blossomed
forth with bright, garish costumes and mostly excellent voices. As usual,
Helton’s staging was brisk and brought out the most from the student performers
who put their all into the work.
Usually I enjoy and
appreciate silly, comic operas, but I had no interest in this one at all. I thought the music was bleh, the crazy story
bored me and nothing tickled my funny bone.
And because I was so fervent
in my mindset, I thought that everyone at the Fairchild Theater that night was
feeling what I was feeling. Total disengagement.
But to my surprise, the
audience was thrilled with the production. Talking to a few giddy people that
night, they told me to lighten up. The music was more like Gilbert and Sullivan
and it was good fun.
Eager to know what others
were thinking, I took an unscientific poll from some of my friends who were in attendance
throughout the run of the show (four shows) – some quite knowledgeable of opera and
some not.
To a person, everyone
loved the production. One said, “I laughed out loud. It was playful and had sexual suggestions
without being lewd. The voices and
acting were outstanding.”
One professor who heard that
I didn‘t like “Orpheus” told my wife “That’s because Ken doesn’t understand the
French culture during that time. It was very inflammatory.”
Maybe. Others told me that it was because I didn’t
understand the mythology. Maybe.
Yet another friend wrote, “I
loved Orpheus. It was very risqué and I
loved that. I thought the topical
references were clever and fun.”
The more adulation I heard
from people whose opinions I respect, the more I was happy that I didn’t write
a scathing review.
Now, I don’t mind writing
a negative review when most people like a show, if I can cite specific reasons
for my opinion. In this case, it was
probably that I was in a bad mood (me? never!).
Some critics even change their mind. I remember when Time
magazine’s critic ravaged the classic movie “Bonnie and Clyde” when it first
came out in the early 70s. A couple of months later, the magazine recanted the
review and put the movie on its cover saying that it was iconic.
The more mini-reviews I read,
the more I realized, also, that I just didn’t get it.
One person wrote: “It was
a hilarious take on the Orpheus-Eurydice story filled with glitter, hot pink
and fishnet costumes.”
A French expert I know
said, “I’m not familiar with the French libretto, but the translation into colloquial
English was clever and entertaining.”
Another person with great
knowledge of French history said, “They gave a fine representation of the vulgarity
of the underside of Parisian society at that time.”
OK, I give up! It was a great opera with a great cast. It was just a bad night for me. Good thing I
wasn’t writing a review.
3 comments:
Haha -- I avoided that one. Not big on opera, in general. Tom K loved it and came back to see the second cast! Always a mixed bag, reviewing and giving Thespies and such. All theatre is apples and oranges and to-each-his-own... should not be "judged" at all, maybe — yet those "judgements" encourage interest, attendance.... Hope you are in a better mood for the next one!
Jane
Haha -- I avoided that one. Not big on opera, in general. Tom K loved it and came back to see the second cast! Always a mixed bag, reviewing and giving Thespies and such. All theatre is apples and oranges and to-each-his-own... should not be "judged" at all, maybe — yet those "judgements" encourage interest, attendance.... Hope you are in a better mood for the next one!
Jane
I enjoyed it as much or more than Aladdin. Two of the lead females had finer voices than anyone in Aladdin. Most of Gilbert and Sullivan seem much better, though, than Orpheus in the Underworld. The Greek myth is a beautiful and balanced story with multiple layers of meaning and the music of Orpheus and Eurydice by Gluck (not Gluckman) is quite lovely and touching which makes this farcical operetta harder to appreciate. The staging and dance in Aladdin were fabulous but that wasn't enough for me. And I can understand why Ken didn't respond to Orpheus in the Underworld; it seemed kind of thrown together.
Anxiously awaiting the Mozart opera "La Clemenza di Tito" Lewis
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