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`MAGIC FLUTE' THAT'S QUITE A SIGHT.


Byline: Reed Johnson Daily News Staff Writer

An overgrown overgrown

said of a part that has not been kept trimmed.


overgrown hoof
overgrown hooves put unusual stresses on bones and tendons and allow for distortion of the wall and sole.
 schoolboy. An oversexed o·ver·sexed
adj.
Having or showing an excessive sexual appetite or interest in sex.
 genius.

Ever since Peter Shaffer's play ``Amadeus'' and Milos Miloš, prince of Serbia
Miloš or Milosh (Miloš Obrenović) (both: mĭ`lôsh ōbrĕ`nəvĭch) 
 Forman's subsequent movie version, that's been the popular if widely debated image of Mozart.

Yet as L.A. Opera's current revival of ``The Magic Flute'' reminds us, it takes a very mature artist to see the world like a hyperimaginative adolescent. Set halfway between lush children's fable and pre-Enlightenment allegory, ``The Magic Flute'' exists in a state of magically arrested development - ever anxious, ever hopeful and forever promising that whatever's around the corner will be better than what we have now.

Originally directed by Sir Peter Hall, with sets and costumes by British illustrator Gerald Scarfe, this production stirred international interest when it premiered at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion is one of the halls in the Los Angeles Music Center (which is one of the three largest performing arts centers in the United States). The Music Center's other halls include the Mark Taper Forum, Ahmanson Theatre, and Walt Disney Concert Hall.  in 1993. In its present state, directed by Paul L. King with strong comic timing, the production's most salient feature remains Scarfe's brilliantly conceived design schemes.

Best-known as a savage political satirist, Scarfe makes the most of the Dorothy Chandler's massive canvas, filling it with richly saturated Froot Loops colors, psychedelic rear-screen projections and a bestiary bestiary (bĕs`chēĕr'ē), a type of medieval book that was widely popular, particularly from the 12th to 14th cent. The bestiary presumed to describe the animals of the world and to show what human traits they severally exemplify.  of whimsical creatures such as a half-baboon, half-tiger and a tottering penguin with a crocodile's head. Scarfe turns Mozart's ancient Egpyt into a pop-operatic fusion of Sesame Street and Haight-Ashbury, circa 1967, a realm simultaneously fantastic and vaguely frightening.

This playfully menacing sensibility permeates the entire production, whose appearance suggests a baroque rock concert. Our hero, Tamino (tenor Greg Fedderly), wears Luke Skywalker all-white, with hair he might've borrowed from David Bowie in his Ziggy Stardust star·dust  
n.
1. A dreamlike, romantic, or uncritical sense of well-being.

2. A cluster of stars too distant to be seen individually, resembling a dimly luminous cloud of dust. Not in scientific use.

3.
 phase. Mozart's heroes were lovers, not fighters, and the sweet-sung Fedderly (impressive in last fall's ``La Boheme'') is cut from the proper cloth. He's pure, if not overpowering.

Same goes for soprano Gwendolyn Bradley's Pamina, an innocent but determined vocal presence amid Mozart's exotic tonalities.

The remaining cast offer generally solid support, though it's a shame to have versatile baritone Kurt Ollmann underutilized here as the Speaker. Making his long-overdue North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 operatic stage debut as Papageno the bird-catcher, Austrian lyric baritone Wolfgang Holzmair steals the production with his euphoric and self-mocking phrasings. And Sally Wolf carries off the Queen of the Night's tongue-twisting coloraturas with aplomb a·plomb  
n.
Self-confident assurance; poise. See Synonyms at confidence.



[French, from Old French a plomb, perpendicularly : a, according to (from Latin ad-; see
.

Oddly, at Friday's opening-night performance, nearly everyone sounded a bit muted in Act 1, as if that giant pyramid at center stage were a black hole sucking up noise. Even Kenneth Cox's commanding Sarastro seemed distant.

By contrast, the orchestra was gently commanding. Under Sir Peter's original direction, Mozart's singspiel Singspiel: see opera.
singspiel

(German; “song-play”)

Eighteenth-century opera in the German language, containing spoken dialogue and usually comic in tone.
 has received a large injection of British comic-operatic irreverence, a Gilbert and Sullivan 1.

William Schwenk Gilbert erson> and

Sir Arthur Sullivan erson>, who collaborated on a number of light operas. See Gilbert.

Noun 1. Gilbert and Sullivan - the music of Gilbert and Sullivan; "he could sing all of Gilbert and Sullivan"
 tongue-in-cheek that permits absurdity without silliness. Conductor Julius Rudel, however, keeps these 19th-century impulses in check, ensuring that an opera ahead of its time stays true to the spirit of its own age.

THE FACTS

What: ``The Magic Flute.''

Where: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Music Center of Los Angeles County, 135 N. Grand Ave., Los Angeles.

When: 7:30 tonight, Thursday, Saturday, Feb. 26 and March 1; 1 p.m. Saturday.

Tickets: $24 to $135. Call (213) 365-3500.

Our rating: Three Stars.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Photo: Soprano Gwendolyn Bradley and baritone Wolfgang Holzmair appear through March 1 in Mozart's ``The Magic Flute'' at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.
COPYRIGHT 1998 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:L.A. LIFE
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Article Type:Theater Review
Date:Feb 17, 1998
Words:538
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