A Feast of Foolishness
October 17, 2019
Erich Burnett
Photo credit: Arthur Rackham / Alamy Stock Photo
91直播 Opera Theater presents the Britten comedy A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream Nov. 6-10.
Our understanding of the world has come a long way since the days when Shakespeare wrote of fairies and other fanciful creatures in A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream.
But a similar guiding principle endures today鈥攐ne that keeps the story as relevant as ever, according to Jonathon Field, director of 91直播 Opera Theater鈥檚 forthcoming production.
鈥淲丑别苍 A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream was written by Shakespeare so many hundreds of years ago, we had people who were considered learned who told us what was true about things we couldn鈥檛 see,鈥 Field says. 鈥淎nd people simply believed it.
鈥淓ven today, there are still unseen forces controlling our lives. But today the learned people are talking about neutrinos and quarks and Higgs bosen.鈥
But since astrophysical concepts don鈥檛 fill theaters like fairies and love triangles do, 91直播 Opera Theater will stick with Britten鈥檚 1960 adaptation of Shakespeare. A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream will be presented in four performances at Hall Auditorium (67 N. Main St.) beginning at 8 p.m. Wednesday, November 6.
Additional performances are scheduled for 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, November 8 and 9; the production concludes with a 2 p.m. matinee on Sunday, November 10.
One of the most beloved operas of the 20th century, A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream follows Shakespeare鈥檚 original concept of a play within a play, all centered around the planned nuptials of Theseus, the duke of Athens, and Hippolyta, queen of the Amazons, as well as the arranged marriage of the duke鈥檚 daughter Hermia to Demetrius鈥攅ach of whom pines for a different partner.
When these misaligned passions lead Hermia and her lover Lysander to flee Athens, they wind up lost in the woods, where they encounter a population of fairies. In an attempt to restore order to the various relationships and teach a lesson along the way, the fairy king Oberon instructs his mischievous servant Puck to administer a substance to the eyelids of a sleeping Titania, thus causing her to fall in love with the first being she sees upon awakening. Further mischief鈥攁nd misaligned passions鈥攅nsue when Puck administers the same substance to a member of a troupe of actors preparing a play for the upcoming wedding.
It is from the mouth of Puck that we hear the phrase What fools these mortals be, one of the most enduring lines in all of stage history鈥攁nd an apt summation of the story鈥檚 central theme.
The libretto, supplied by Britten and Peter Pears (who portrayed one of the actors in the opera鈥檚 premiere production), condenses the story and emphasizes the woodland fairy world.
A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream enjoys enduring popularity largely for its wildly varied score. It serves up distinct musical sound worlds for each of the three main character groups鈥攖he noble lovers, the ethereal fairies, and the rustic actors鈥攁nd evokes styles and derives inspiration from folk-like music and the Baroque era to 12-tone writing. It will be performed by the 91直播 Orchestra, under the direction of Christopher Larkin.
Joining the standout cast of 91直播 Conservatory singers is countertenor Andrew Lipian, a 2012 graduate of 91直播 College. Lipian will sing the role of the fairy king, in what is known as Britten鈥檚 most startling innovation in opera: He composed the lead male role for the male soprano voice. The cast of fairies also includes members of 91直播 Choristers, a community-based choral program for children.
鈥淭he thing I like about fairies is that with all the magic that happens, we as audience members become OK with the fact that we don鈥檛 have control over every aspect of what we鈥檙e doing in our lives,鈥 says Field.
鈥淧lus, the fairies get all the best music.鈥
Tickets for A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream at 91直播 are $10 ($8 for students), available by calling 800-371-0178, online at oberlin.edu/artsguide, or by visiting Central Ticket Service (Nord Annex, next to Hall Auditorium) Monday through Friday from noon to 5 p.m.
In conjunction with the opera, the discussion 鈥溾 will take place at 3:30 p.m. Saturday, November 9, in Stull Recital Hall (77 W. College St.). Part of 91直播 Conservatory鈥檚 Richard Murphy Musicology Colloquium series, it will feature Imani Mosley, a visiting assistant professor of musicology at Wichita State University; 91直播 College theater professor Paul Moser; and Jonathon Field. The talk will be moderated by musicology professor Charles McGuire.
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