ATOM EGOYAN’S SHIP SAILS IN
FIRST COMEDY FOR TORONTO’S
FILM AND OPERA DIRECTOR
By Stephen Weir (from Huffington Post ) Photographs by Stephen Weir and George Socka
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/stephen-weir/atom-egoyan-opera_b_4674959.html#es_share_ended
It is night-time in downtown Toronto. The opera, Cosi Fan Tutte, has just ended and the subway platform is crowded. Amongst the post show murmur two names are overheard -- Atom Egoyan and Superman. The Canadian director of movies and tonight's opera is juxtaposed with the Man of Steel.
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/stephen-weir/atom-egoyan-opera_b_4674959.html#es_share_ended
It is night-time in downtown Toronto. The opera, Cosi Fan Tutte, has just ended and the subway platform is crowded. Amongst the post show murmur two names are overheard -- Atom Egoyan and Superman. The Canadian director of movies and tonight's opera is juxtaposed with the Man of Steel.
“ Egoyan takes a Superman
view on facial recognition,” one 20-something woman lectures her group of
friends. “ When Superman puts on
glasses everyone thinks he is Clark Kent – they just aren’t able to see the Man
of Steel behind those horn rims.”
In Egoyan’s COC production of
Cosi Fan Tutte, the movie producer turned opera director admits that the big
challenge for this Mozart opera buffa is to make the audience forget some of
the silliness of the libretto and enjoy his light, lively and mildly kinky take
on an opera that was considered too immoral to be performed in North America
until 1922.
It is early in the 19th
century and we are with the well to dos of Naples. The opera’s plot revolves
around two teenage sisters – Dorabella and Fiordiligi – who are engaged to two
Naples dandies -- Ferrando and
Guglielmo. Are Dorabella and Fiordiligi truly in love, or given the
opportunity, will they stray into the arms and beds of other men? Ferrando and
Guglielmo accept a wager from the professor of their school to find out. The two tell their fiancées they have
been drafted into the navy and pretend to leave for the wars. They come back moments later, thinly
disguised as Albanians, and prove the fecklessness of their betrothed love by
seducing each other’s girl.
“The opera asks us to believe
that Dorabella and Fiordiligi won’t recognize these men - their fiancés – if the men wear
simple disguises (curly moustaches),” said Egoyan, just before the Four Seasons
Centre curtain is raised on this 3-hour opera.
“Mozart also called Cosi Fan
Tutte, The School For Lovers. So I had this idea why don’t we set this opera
inside a school and why don’t we make this a class experiment, that way we
don’t have to worry about the creditability issue so much, we just go with the
story and loose ourselves in this most delightful opera”
Lorenzo Da Ponte, who also
penned Figaro and Don Giovanni with Mozart, wrote the libretto. It is thought that Mozart’s
rival, Antonio Salieri, tried to compose the music to Da Ponte’s story but gave
up after only a few months. Mozart
took up the score and went on to direct the orchestra twice in the 1790s before
the opera was basically shelved for almost a century. It was rarely performed during the 19th and early
20th century because it was considered too risqué.
In the early versions of the
opera, this story of love, adultery and relationships, was set in a Naples
garden. When Cosi was rediscovered and put into modern day opera companies
repertoires, directors have had fun placing the opera in a variety of locations
including restaurants, sitting rooms, and even in a hippy colony.
“ I think we are the first
company to take this view of a school interpretation, “ explained the
director. The male lovers accept a
bet from the school’s headmaster to test their sweetheart’s loyalty to them –
the bet is played out as a classroom experiment.
The students watch as
Ferrando and Guglielmo tell the distraught sisters that they have been drafted
and must sail off immediately to war.
They return moments latter disguised as two rich Albanian visitors who
have been poisoned. The girls save the men with a variety of tools including a
magnetic rod seemingly inserted rectally into their disguised boyfriends. The girls, probably aware of the wager,
trade-off on their boyfriends and do soon succumb to their wooing – just was
predicted by Alfonso, the school headmaster.
“The issue of misogyny comes
up (with the traditional setting of the opera) because there is a very famous
aria in the piece where one of the young lovers Gugliemo, sings about the unfaithfulness of women,”
said Egoyan. “He would traditionally sing
it to the audience, which would be absolutely offensive to many women in the
theatre. What we have done here, because we are set in a school, is we have
Gugliemo sing to his fellow classmate and they actually get to react to what he
is saying – it takes the edge off
(the belittling of women).”
Egoyan’s schoolroom is filled
with stuffed animals, science experiment equipment and gigantic butterflies and
equally large insect pins. The
symbolism of the butterflies is not lost on the audience. Back to the subway
platform critics, a young woman explains it all to her boyfriend. “The sisters
are specimens, they are being hunted and collected by the headmaster. That’s
why all the giant butterflies and 2 metre tall pins are on stage”
“The two women in this
production are aware of the wager and in fact may be involved in a counter
wager which gives them leeway in terms of their own behaviour” said
Egoyan. “ They are smart. Remember when this was written they
were supposed to be 15-years old. We address that youth, it really does feel as
if they are all teenagers.”
“Part of the idea of the
opera being set in a school is that there is a ton of props that they can use
in their (love) experiments. So in
the scene when are going away to battle (five actresses walk in single file
across the stave wearing large model ships in their blue wigs), this is shown
as a kind of experiment using the school props.”
Throughout the performance
students wear skimpy white British public school uniforms, overtop of sporty
black panties, which are often flashed to patrons in the front row. Ferrando
and Guglielmo are not averse to looking up dresses and snatching quick feels of
each other’s girlfriend whenever possible.
CosiCosi
“The painting is very
important because it is Freda Khalo’s reflection on the amazing shift that
happened in her own life,” said Atom Egoyan. “It was painted at a time when she
was going through a divorce with Diego Rivera. She really felt that Rivera was
in love with another woman, another version of her… This is what this opera is
ultimately about, how people can change and what that means in terms of how
people are in love with one version of oneself and maybe how that shifts (over time)”
The cast, aside from an aging
Sir Thomas Allen as Don Alfonso, are the young bright lights in Canada’s opera
scene. Layla Claire and Wallis Giunta brought the full dress rehearsal audience
to its feet when they first sang together. Robert Gleadow’s Guglielmo defines the word cad while his
partner Paul Appleby is the perfect-cuckolded tenor.
Directing young singers in a
comedy is an extreme change for the Canadian director. On a week when both his Canadian Opera
Company production opened and his
latest film, Devil’s Knot (the true story of the Memphis Three killings) opened
in Canada, Egoyan admits that the Opera is a real departure.
“ This is all different for
me because it is the first time I have done comedy. My work is pretty dark;
this has been a real delight”
Videographer George Socka any
myself interviewed Atom Egoyan in the wig room of the Four Seasons Theatre in
downtown Toronto. Watch Atom
Egoyan talk about his newest COC production at http://youtu.be/QWRoXiLeR0Q
More photographs from the dress rehearsal can be seen at:
http://www.stephenweir.com/gallery1/index.php/Atom-Egoyan-Mozart-Opera
More photographs from the dress rehearsal can be seen at:
http://www.stephenweir.com/gallery1/index.php/Atom-Egoyan-Mozart-Opera
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