Tag: Brothers Quay

  • Sergei Prokofiev Offers Three Times Your Daily Allowance of Vitamin C

    Sergei Prokofiev Offers Three Times Your Daily Allowance of Vitamin C

    On Sergei Prokofiev’s birthday, I’ve got a love for…


    I’ve also got a newspaper article due.

    Ever wonder about the rest of the opera? I thought the production at the link below was the same as the one I caught in Philadelphia. However, as I remember it, the Philly production was not quite so dark. Turns out, that one was conceived by Alessandro Talevi. The one at the link was designed by the Brothers Quay – who also have a Philadelphia connection, as graduates of the late, lamented University of the Arts. Both productions employ an English translation by David Lloyd-Jones, who conducts the performance here – but if you still can’t understand it, use the closed captioning.

    Prokofiev wrote his own libretto, in French, after a play by Carlo Gozzi. The work was given its first performance in Chicago, with the composer conducting, in 1921. None of the critics liked it, except Ben Hecht, a newspaper man who also wrote novels and was soon to became one of Hollywood’s most-valuable screenwriters. When he completed a last-minute, uncredited rewrite of “Gone with the Wind,” he was dubbed the “Shakespeare of Hollywood,” which the cynical Hecht dismissed as proof of just bad Hollywood movies really are.

    It didn’t stop him from accepting assignments, though. It’s true that Ben liked “Oranges,” but what he really loved was green.

    ——-

    Played in transcription by Jascha Heifetz


    And Emil Gilels




  • Kafka Janáček Birthday Connection Brod’s Legacy

    Kafka Janáček Birthday Connection Brod’s Legacy

    Franz Kafka (1883-1924) and Leoš Janáček (1854-1928) were both born on this date. The two apparently never met, but beyond their common nationality (Czech), they shared an association with Max Brod. Brod was Kafka’s friend and literary executor, who ignored the writer’s explicit instructions to burn his work, opting instead to have it published. He also did much to promote Janáček and disseminate his music. He translated the libretti for some of the composer’s operas and wrote the first Janáček biography. Here Brod memorializes Janáček in an obituary he wrote in 1928:

    https://musiksalon.universaledition.com/en/article/remembering-leos-janacek

    An article about Kafka and music:

    https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/oct/05/kafka-was-author-unmusical-will-self

    More on the subject:

    http://www.kafka.org/index.php?aid=247

    A fragment of a film inspired by Kafka’s “The Metamorphosis” by Philadelphia-born University of the Arts graduates, the Brothers Quay, set to music by Janáček:

    More about the project from the Museum of Modern Art:

    https://www.moma.org/explore/inside_out/2013/01/04/the-quay-brothers-the-metamorphosis-by-franz-kafka/

    An earlier Quay film, “Leoš Janáček: Intimate Excursions”


    PHOTO: A Quay window into Janáček

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