Unlike the previous, this edition of The Magpie Mason looks only four months into the future when The Met will continue its annual tradition of staging Mozart’s Masonic opera The Magic Flute at Christmastime.
Courtesy The Met
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The show will run December 15 through January 4. Tickets start at only $30.
Again it will be Julie Taymor’s production of the opera, meaning it is a very accessible presentation—in English and less than an hour and forty-five minutes long.
The story is a fairy tale, but what makes it Masonic are the ritual elements and symbols that will be obvious to the initiated eye. Enjoy.
From the publicity:
A beloved holiday tradition continues as Mozart’s delightful
fairy tale returns in the Met’s abridged, English-language version for
families, perfect for younger audiences, with no intermission and a running
time of less than two hours. Lothar Koenigs conducts a dynamic cast of standout
Mozarteans in Julie Taymor’s magical production, an enduring Met classic with
its eye-popping puppetry and stunning visuals.
World Premiere: Freihaus-Theater auf der Wieden, Vienna,
1791. A sublime fairy tale that moves freely between earthy comedy and
noble mysticism, The Magic Flute (Die Zauberflöte in the
original German) was written for a theater located just outside Vienna with the
clear intention of appealing to audiences from all walks of life. The story is
told in a singspiel (“song-play”) format characterized by separate musical
numbers connected by dialogue and stage activity, an excellent structure for
navigating the diverse moods, ranging from solemn to lighthearted, of the story
and score.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-91) was the son of a Salzburg
court musician who exhibited him as a musical prodigy throughout Europe. His
achievements in opera, in terms of beauty, vocal challenge, and dramatic
insight, remain unsurpassed. He died three months after the premiere of Die
Zauberflöte, his last produced work for the stage. The remarkable Emanuel
Schikaneder (1751-1812) was an actor, singer, theater manager, and friend of
Mozart who wrote the opera’s libretto, staged the work, and sang the role of
Papageno in the initial run.
Courtesy The Met
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The libretto specifies Egypt as the location of the action.
That country was traditionally regarded as the legendary birthplace of the
Masonic fraternity, whose symbols and rituals populate this opera. Some
productions include Egyptian motifs as an exotic nod to this idea, but most opt
for a more generalized mythic ambience to convey the otherworldliness that the
score and overall tone of the work call for.
Mozart and his librettist, Emanuel Schikaneder, created The
Magic Flute with an eye toward a popular audience, but the varied tone of
the work requires singers who can specialize in several different musical
genres. The baritone Papageno represents the comic and earthy, the tenor Tamino
and the soprano Pamina display true love in its noblest forms, the bass
Sarastro expresses the solemn and the transcendental, and the Queen of the
Night provides explosive vocal fireworks.
Of course the publicist here is mistaken about “the legendary birthplace of the Masonic fraternity,” but it is right to understand Egypt was central to a few Masonic rites that were active during Mozart’s lifetime and may have influenced him.
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