Weill, K.: Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny (Los Angeles Opera, 2007) (Sung in English) (Ntsc)
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Welcome to Mahagonny, where sin is "in" and love is always on sale. This Old West boomtown rises from the desert to become a razzle-dazzle mecca for lust,...
Welcome to Mahagonny, where sin is "in" and love is always on sale. This Old West boomtown rises from the
desert to become a razzle-dazzle mecca for lust, liberty, and the pursuit of pleasure. Cash is king, poverty is
punishable by death, and anything worth doing is worth overdoing.
Director John Doyle melds his Tony Award winning talent with the lyrics of influential playwright Bertolt Brecht
and an incomparable score by Kurt Weill.
The brilliant cast is led by superstars Audra McDonald, as the tart-with-a-heart 'Jenny' and
Patti LuPone, who portrays the town's feisty madam.
Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny (more info)
Performed by:
Los Angeles Opera Orchestra
Composed by:
Kurt Weill
Conducted by:
James Conlon
Robert Worle, tenor
Mel Ulrich, baritone
Patti LuPone, soprano
Anthony Dean Griffey, tenor
John Easterlin, tenor
Donnie Ray Albert, baritone
Steven Humes, bass
Derek Taylor, tenor
Audra McDonald, soprano
Recording date: 1, 4 March 2007
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Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny (Sung in English) (NTSC) - 2:30:00
Reviews
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fine musical performance marred by stagnant stage production (Jan 6, 2008)
Reviewer:
Fred
This 2007 LA Opera production of Kurt Weil and Berthold Brecht’s 1931 Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny Gets a fine musical performance led by James Conlon, but the stage production falls short and frustratingly stagnant. Many numbers are given with the performers seated on stage (a particular peeve of mine I’ll admit) or often standing in a line across the stage facing the...
This 2007 LA Opera production of Kurt Weil and Berthold Brecht’s 1931 Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny Gets a fine musical performance led by James Conlon, but the stage production falls short and frustratingly stagnant. Many numbers are given with the performers seated on stage (a particular peeve of mine I’ll admit) or often standing in a line across the stage facing the audience and often without interaction between the characters. In one scene two characters reminisce about their friendship. The music suggests intimacy yet the singers not only don’t address each other but are also many feet apart on stage with the chorus standing between them. In a work that straddles the worlds of opera and musical theater, it’s not surprising that the strongest and most fully rounded performances come from the two Broadway stars in the cast. Audra McDonald in particular throws herself into the part of Jenny, the leader of Mahagonny’s prostitutes, giving a provocative performance that a star of her stature could easily avoid. Her singing which I’ve often found overpowering her material here fits nicely. Patti LuPone also does well as Leocadia Begbick, one of the band of fugitives who found the city providing recreation and entertainment for gold miners out in the middle of nowhere. Overall the rest of the cast sings well, but delivers spoken dialogue stiffly.
As I’ve said, the musical performance is first rate. Weill’s score lies somewhere between Stravinsky and Gershwin, always tuneful, yet rhythmically active and harmonically pungent. Conlon delivers this in the present tense, without making it sound like a retro-recreation of Weimar Republic era sounds. My only criticism is that the chorus is sometimes unintelligible which, combined with the lack of English subtitles, can make the plot a bit hard to follow at times. Otherwise, considering the short supply of available recordings of this work (especially in English) I would recommend it to listen to with the video turned off.
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New Take on an Old Classic (Jan 2, 2008)
Reviewer:
Emma Choi
I’ve long been a fan of the Kurt Weill-Bertolt Brecht opera “Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.” In particular, I love the mid-1950s recording featuring Weill’s wife Lotte Lenya in the lead role of Jenny. And I’ve always felt that this musical opus—a radical conjunction of opera, jazz, musical theater and political agit-prop—is best served by...
I’ve long been a fan of the Kurt Weill-Bertolt Brecht opera “Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.” In particular, I love the mid-1950s recording featuring Weill’s wife Lotte Lenya in the lead role of Jenny. And I’ve always felt that this musical opus—a radical conjunction of opera, jazz, musical theater and political agit-prop—is best served by actors who sing rather than singers who act. Lenya’s unorthodox vocals, simultaneously harsh and tender, fits this work to a T, especially since the musical numbers are closer to popular song than traditional operatic arias. Like Weill and Brecht’s “Threepenny Opera,” “Mahagonny” is a fierce critique of capitalism conveyed in irresistible, jazzy melodies. It was with some trepidation, therefore, that I approached this DVD of a live 2007 performance of “Mahagonny” by the Los Angeles Opera starring noted singers Patti Lupone and Audra McDonald. This new production follows the storyline closely, but adopts a chronological progression that brings the action into the present in an attempt to make the work more relevant and accessible to modern audiences. I found this a little jarring at first, then decided it simply provided another level of aesthetic disconnection that’s perfectly in tune with Brecht’s famous alienation effect (i.e., self-consciously stressing the formal artificiality of a work so that audiences can engage more directly with its content). The staging, costumes and sets are impressive, and the performances suitably stylized and impassioned. Lupone is excellent as the amoral brothel owner whose vision of greed inspires the rise of the city of Mahagonny. As the prostitute Jenny, McDonald adroitly blends eroticism, tenderness and mercenary self-interest. The male performers are less vibrant, with the exception of Anthony Dean Griffey as Jimmy, the opera’s sacrificial lamb who pays the ultimate price for having committed the ultimate crime: poverty. The musical arrangements of Weill’s tunes are perhaps the production’s weakest element, lacking the brio and emotional shading necessary to make the numbers truly come alive. And having the songs sung in English, while understandable, lessens the sardonic character of the German version. These criticisms aside, the performance captured on this DVD is an ambitious and welcome variation of this timeworn classic, one whose many positives make up for its few imperfections.
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...and must have dollars... (Dec 16, 2007)
Reviewer:
Jim Shine
Mahagonny is more-or-less an opera - Weill intended it as such, but with the cabaret-style numbers it can also be seen as musical theater. To modern viewers (well, me, at any rate) its construction initially seems unsatisfactory: the first half-hour is very bitty, more a series of tableaux than anything, and scenes are announced over a loudspeaker (every time we cut to it, I expected it to go...
Mahagonny is more-or-less an opera - Weill intended it as such, but with the cabaret-style numbers it can also be seen as musical theater. To modern viewers (well, me, at any rate) its construction initially seems unsatisfactory: the first half-hour is very bitty, more a series of tableaux than anything, and scenes are announced over a loudspeaker (every time we cut to it, I expected it to go "The white zone is for loading and unloading only..."). This is all very distancing for the viewer, but that's the whole point - as James Conlon explains in the useful 20-minute interview, we are expected to be intellectually but not emotionally engaged. In fact, though, with a performance as good as Anthony Dean Griffey's as the unfortunate Jimmy and with the orchestra on top form, it's hard not to get caught up as the story unfolds, and Weill knew exactly what he was doing - musically, it all comes together superbly. The plot? Mahagonny is founded as a haven of "contentment" for men, but rules of good behavior bring boredom and, in the face of destruction from a hurricane, the rule is changed to "everything is permitted" (accompanied in this production by explicit reference to Nazi Germany). Mahagonny prospers, but Jimmy McIntyre commits the ultimate crime of not being able to pay; the end is remarkably bleak in its view of society: "there's nothing you can do for a dead man". The production is well designed, and clever in its gradual transformation to modern times, reminding us that although Brecht's particular form of anti-capitalist art may seem a little old-fashioned it still is of relevance. Of course if you're coming to this DVD as a lover of musicals rather than opera, the big draws will be Patti LuPone and Audra McDonald; both are excellent - in as much as you can get to the heart of a character who might not have one, McDonald manages it.
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