Vladimir Franz [Wikipedia] |
OK, full disclosure, I have long been
a fan of science fiction. But I had never heard of War with the
Newts by the Czech writer Karel Căpek.
My first contact with the piece was the working of the novel into an
opera of the same name by Vladimir Franz, known informally as the
“tattoo man.” You can see why on the right.
The gist of the story is that some,
shall we say, educable, mutant newts found in the South Seas are
trained by humans to dive for pearls. Eventually the newts multiply
and overpower humans in the conflict over land usage.
The story is simple enough, but the
story proceeds to focus on the human need to deny reality, and it's
blindness to the harmful things humans do to themselves. The story
pits the individual against the group. The group, being the group,
establishes the zeitgeist, the perception and definition of reality. Obvious deviation from the
group ethos, by its nature, threatening to the group, becomes labeled
“heretic”, or non-conformist, etc., in order to keep the
group oblivious of their constant denial of reality. Bobby, the young boy in the show, shows us the result of what happens when you can't deny reality any longer. Complex, I know!
*Bobby become half newt |
My point here, though, is that this opera (at
the Statni Opera in Prague) wouldn't work if you only saw it on one
level. There is the music: dissonant, noisy, irritating,
enchanting, the very well-paced music moves along with few dead
spots—here annoying, there mesmerizing and compelling. It kept me
focused and involved. It was fun and, at least one time, poignant. Above all, I think it works. It leaves you feeling uneasy; the intention of the composer I believe.
*overweight and badly dressed |
The stage set is fairly elaborate and
colorful as are the costumes, which, I sat there thinking, reminded
me of something familiar, then it occurred to me that they could be
either a conscious or unconscious spoof of overweight, badly
dressed Americans. Obviously another subtly amusing level of what is going on in
this opera.
It is, in fact, a remarkably astute
satire on human nature in the 21st Century. I'm sorry to
say it's not very flattering to us humans. But I enjoyed it, it kept
me interested right through the curtain calls. But, with an amalgam
of musical genres of popular music seemingly mixed in, and the use of
microphones (although for effect in certain scenes) you can't help
but wonder if this is really an opera you are attending or a music
hall, or watching TV or.....but it doesn't seem to matter much. It was fun!
cast and conductor of "War with the Newts" |
* publicity photos from a critical article on the opera on the Internet
2 comments:
Very interesting, Joe. Sounds like something I would enjoy.
That 'tatoo' gentleman, as I recall, was going to run for President or something like that!
-R
Yes, the "tattoo man" did run for the Czech presidential election recently. He didn't make the cut, but said of the other two candidates who did that the choice was between "Asian flu and Swine flu". How 'bout dem apples?
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