Tag: Peter Shaffer

  • Amadeus at 40 Examining Genius and Jealousy

    Amadeus at 40 Examining Genius and Jealousy

    “Amadeus” opened nationwide on this date 40 years ago.

    Milos Forman’s film of Peter Shaffer’s play is that rarest of animals: popular entertainment set in the world of classical music that doesn’t talk down to the audience and actually for the most part gets it right.

    By this I do not mean the historical facts, with which the creators play fast and loose (to the best of our knowledge, Salieri did NOT plot Mozart’s death, and in fact got along with him as well as any rival possibly could), but rather the broader truths underlying the all-too-human dilemmas that face the film’s “antagonist,” with whom every one of us can relate.

    Why does this jerk I work with get all the recognition? What does this idiot have that I don’t? What is the source of genius? Why does it so seldom match up with personal ambition? How can a spark of the divine exist in this… creature? What is the nature of creativity? Why is talent so random? What do I do with these feelings of resentment? How does jealousy corrupt?

    Furthermore, the film is a hell of a lot of fun, with plenty of broad, crowd-pleasing moments – the emperor is a boob, the court musicians ludicrous schemers, and the artists flagrant bohemians who swill from wine bottles as they stride the colorful streets of Vienna (really Prague), shop for fright wigs, and have very silly laughs – without ever teetering over into farce.

    Critics AND audiences lapped it up, and the film was decorated with eight Academy Awards, including those for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay (for Shaffer), and Best Actor (F. Murray Abraham in the performance of his career).

    Avoid the director’s cut, except as a curiosity or “bonus feature.” It was assembled too long after the fact and changes the tone of the picture, expanding the running time by 20 minutes and hardening the original PG rating to an R. A new 4K UHD Blu-Ray of the theatrical cut is imminent, if it’s not out already.

    Sadly, they just don’t make ‘em like this anymore. Happy 40th, “Amadeus.”

  • Salieri Beyond Amadeus The Music of a “Mediocrity”

    Salieri Beyond Amadeus The Music of a “Mediocrity”

    Happy birthday, Antonio Salieri! Patron saint of mediocrities everywhere. Or so “Amadeus” would have us believe.

    I first encountered this article in The New Yorker back in 1985. The piece takes the form of a letter to Milos Forman, director of the Oscar-winning adaptation of Peter Shaffer’s stage play.

    Is it the funniest thing ever? No, but, much like Salieri himself, it has its moments, and somehow I’ve never forgotten it. (For the record, Franz Schubert’s middle name is Peter.)

    Salieri composed 37 operas, in addition to orchestral works, concertos, chamber music, and sacred pieces. And what do you know? A lot of his music is quite good! He was no Mozart, maybe – but who was?


    Beethoven’s Variations on “La stessa, la stessissima,” cited in the article

    The theme, from Salieri’s “Falstaff”

    Overture to “Les Horaces”

    Concerto for Flute, Oboe and Orchestra

    “Das Lob der Musik” (“The Praise of Music”)

    A Mozart and Salieri collaborative effort, the cantata “Per la ricuperata salute di Ofelia”

    “De Profundis”

    “I absolve you.”

  • Salieri Beyond the Mozart Myth Debunked

    Salieri Beyond the Mozart Myth Debunked

    Poor, maligned Antonio Salieri. He was a second-rate hack. He murdered Mozart. Yadda yadda yadda.

    While it’s true there’s no such thing as bad publicity, it would be nice if the man could transcend his notoriety to be recognized for his achievements. Especially since none of the charges against him happen to be true.

    I like “Amadeus” very much, and while I am happy it has served to keep Salieri’s name alive and perhaps lend a greater degree of commercial viability to subsequent recordings of his music, it is worthwhile to examine the historical facts.

    In reality, Salieri was a generous teacher, who fostered Beethoven, Schubert, Liszt and even Franz Xaver Mozart, the composer’s son, who was born a little more than four months before his father’s death.

    Salieri was also a prolific and successful composer. He wrote 37 operas, in addition to orchestral works, concertos, chamber music and sacred pieces. While he was no Mozart – who was? – his music is finely crafted and often quite enjoyable, certainly no worse than that of a majority of his contemporaries.

    Yes, Mozart believed Salieri and the Italian faction ensconced at the Viennese court (including future Mozart librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte) were against him, and there may have been something to it at first. However, beyond a rivalry over certain specific jobs, Mozart and Salieri appear to have been often better than cordial acquaintances. The two even collaborated on a cantata, “Per la ricuperata salute di Ophelia,” a venture which was apparently entered into voluntarily (as opposed to an earlier juxtaposition of one-act operas composed for the edification of the emperor). Here it is, only recently rediscovered:

    When Salieri was appointed Kapellmeister in 1788, his first act was to revive “The Marriage of Figaro.” He was responsible for arranging first performances of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 22, K. 482, the Clarinet Quintet and the Symphony No. 40. He was full of praise for “The Magic Flute.” And as I said, he took it upon himself to educate Mozart’s son.

    Sadly, Salieri’s enormous compositional output gradually faded from memory already during the latter years of his life. Ironically, it is the scandalmongers who kept his name alive.

    Rumors of Salieri’s involvement in Mozart’s death were codified by Alexander Pushkin in 1831, a few years after Salieri himself had passed, in the tragedy “Mozart and Salieri.” This was later set as an opera, in 1898, by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.

    Peter Schaffer picked up the thread in 1979, when he wrote the play “Amadeus,” which of course was adapted into the Academy Award-winning film in 1984.

    As the compact disc era advanced, more and more of Salieri’s repertoire became available for first-hand assessment – and guess what? A lot of it is quite good!

    Join me Friday afternoon to sample some of it, among my featured selections, from 4 to 6 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org. Then stick around, as I host “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, at 6. I’ll have more about that in just a bit.

  • Mozart Tributes WPRB Celebrates a Master

    Mozart Tributes WPRB Celebrates a Master

    “Mozart! Forgive your assassin! I confess, I killed you!”

    Poor Antonio Salieri. Wracked with guilt (at least, according to playwright Peter Shaffer) for having “killed” Mozart.

    We’re killing Mozart with kindness this morning on WPRB, as we salute the 18th century master on the eve of his birthday anniversary. However, we won’t hear a single note of Mozart, except perhaps as filtered through the sensibilities of others. It will be a full morning of Mozart tributes, ranging from the composer’s day to our own, as old favorites by Tchaikovsky and Reger exist cheek-by-jowl with works by living composers Calvin Bowman, Jonathan Dove, and Pulitzer Prize-winner Kevin Puts.

    It’s a cheeky concept, but you have to admit, it’s a lot more interesting, and certainly a lot more creative, than playing all-Mozart, which will be the case with most classical music stations tomorrow (as I will amply demonstrate when the time comes).

    We make the most of Mozart this morning, from 6 to 11 EST, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. I forgo contredanses for contrarianism, on Classic Ross Amico.


    At 9:00, I’ll be joined by Jerry Kalstein, president of Boheme Opera NJ. Boheme Opera will be presenting semi-staged performances of Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville” (a.k.a. the prequel to Mozart’s “The Marriage of Figaro”) at The College of New Jersey, this Sunday at 3 p.m., and at Cherry Hill West High School, on Saturday, February 4, at 7 p.m. Tune in to our interview to find out more, or look online at bohemeopera.com.

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