Stephen Schwartz Opera Has Timely Deception Theme

Arts - Performing Arts, Musicals, Opera, Wicked, Stephen Schwartz, movies, Biography, Wizard of Oz, Disney, seance opera, The Hunchback of Notre Dame No Comments »

“…our greatest illusion is to believe that we are what we think ourselves to be…” — Henri F. Amiel

Stephen Schwartz Seance Opera

The Art of Deception: Madoff in real life, Mrya in Stephen Schwartz’s Seance on A Wet Afternoon, Frollo in the Hunchback of Notre Dame, and the Wizard of Oz in Wicked

By Carol de Giere

Illusions and cover-ups were on my mind recently as I shopped for a dress for an upcoming opera premiere while wearing shorts, t-shirt, and a baseball cap. Actually, my husband and I don’t mind switching from our casual selves to dressed up versions for one night, and we’re looking forward to attending Opera Santa Barbara’s production of Séance on A Wet Afternoon, premiering September 26th. Still, it’s interesting to consider the range of topics suggested by facades.

Séance on A Wet Afternoon weaves itself around the subject area of illusion, deception, self-delusion, being “in denial”—the misty and twisted possibilities outside of straightforward thinking. The warped mindsets of the couple, Myra and Bill, in the movie version of Séance on A Wet Afternoon, captivated Stephen Schwartz when he first saw it. Years later, when he was commissioned by Opera Santa Barbara for a new opera, he thought Séance would be ideal as source material for something tragic. [Read more about the opera]

As I ponder the kidnapping deception plot of the movie and opera, I can’t help but think of news reports of recent months and years.  I think of master deceiver Bernie Madoff, and of politicians who create facades as model citizens and prove otherwise in their actions. And so it’s not surprising that an artist like Stephen Schwartz should want to depict deception. He has already touched on the topic in Wicked in terms of the Wizard of Oz. His original angle on Wicked was to create a musical that showed how “things are not what they seem.”

There’s another twist on the theme in Séance. Unlike Bernie Madoff, who apparently fully cognizant of the rules he was breaking, Myra doesn’t get what she’s doing wrong. She is in denial about the criminal nature of the kidnapping plan and only focuses on how to bring acclaim to her skills as a medium by revealing the location of the kidnapped child. She believes what she’s doing is legitimate. AND she thinks she’s better at her mediumship than she actually is—she is also self-deceived.

She is much like Claude Frollo in Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame, for whom Schwartz wrote the lyrics for the song “Hellfire.” Frollo is the dark antagonist character who is personally haunted by his repressed desire for the gypsy Esmeralda. Writing the lyric, Schwartz has Frollo sing a prayer while saying “you know I’m so much purer than the common, vulgar, weak, licentious crowd.” Not so! He blames Esmeralda’s “witchcraft” for his own passion’s fire. He tries to destroy her.

Schwartz claims that Frollo was a delight to write for. As quoted in the biography Defying Gravity: The Creative Career of Stephen Schwartz, from Godspell to Wicked, Schwartz says, “My favorite character I have ever written is Frollo, who is probably the most despicable human being in anything I’ve done; I love him as a character. He was so totally self-justifying and in such denial of his own true motives. It was really fun to go to dark places in myself I would never let myself do in real life. It made me understand why actors love to play villains.”

I’m sure Stephen Schwartz has also relished writing for Myra. He has commented that the movie’s characters struck him as operatic. Myra’s “intense neediness,” for example, “seemed very worthy of being sung, but at the same time, she is covering a lot of what’s really going on inside her with the veneer of calm and pleasantness.” [Comments quoted on a New York City Opera VOX Showcase video documenting his process for Séance.]

The opera depicts a difficult subject and is not meant as a feel-good show. We might consider it a kind of cautionary tale both for the times we live in and for the webs we spin for ourselves.

Says Daniel J. Boorstin about human psychology: “We suffer primarily not from our vices or our weaknesses, but from our illusions. We are haunted, not by reality, but by those images we have put in place of reality.”

The “Wicked” Tour Reaches Musical Fans in 2009/2010

Arts - Performing Arts, Musicals, Entertainment, Wicked, Stephen Schwartz, Show Business, Defying Gravity, Winnie Holzman, Wizard of Oz No Comments »

Katie Rose Clarke Wicked Tour

Katie Rose Clark descends in her Glinda bubble during the Wicked tour on stages from Omaha to Seattle. She travels with Donna Vivino as Elphaba and the full large cast and crew. Another touring Glinda is Heléne Yorke who is paired with Marci Dodd as the green-skinned Witch.

Producer David Stone recently accepted the award for “Best Long-Running Touring Musical” for Wicked during the Broadway League’s 2009 spring conference. For the third year in a row, Wicked also received the “Touring Broadway Audience Choice Award.” These are among the many awards for the Stephen Schwartz/Winnie Holzman musical, one whose complete development has been revealed in a new book “Defying Gravity” named after a song from the show. http://www.defyinggravitythebook.com/

As announced earlier, two tours are now bringing their emerald green dazzle around North America. In this year that The Wizard of Oz movie celebrates its 70th anniversary, this musical can really show off its Wizard of Oz prequel story.

First tour with Donna Vivino and Katie Rose Clarke as Elphaba and Glinda:May 6-31 in Omaha at the Orpheum Theatre
June 3-28 in San Antonio at the Majestic Theatre
July 1-26 in Tempe at Gammage Auditorium
July 29-Aug. 23 in San Diego at the Civic Theatre
Aug. 26-Sept. 27 in Seattle at the Paramount

Second Tour gets Marci Dodd and Heléne Yorke as Elphaba and Glinda:

April 23-May 10 in Jacksonville at the Times Union Center
May 13-31 in Norfolk at Chrysler Hall
June 3-21 in Indianapolis at the Murat Centre
June 24-July 12 in Memphis at the Orpheum Theatre
July 15-Aug. 9 in Tulsa at the Chapman Music Hall
Aug. 12-30 in Austin at Bass Hall
Sept. 2-20 in Nashville at TPAC
Sept. 23-Oct. 18 in Des Moines at the Civic Center
Oct. 21-Nov. 8 in Wichita at the Century II Concert Hall

Newspaper reports have been trickling in for new tour cities for 2010:

  • Greenville, South Carolina
  • Dayton and Columbus, Ohio
  • Miami, Florida
  • Richmond, Virginia
  • Durham and Charlotte, North Carolina
  • and Milwaukee, Wisconsin

CATCH UP WITH THE WICKED TOUR http://www.musicalschwartz.com/wicked-tour.htm

and find out all about Wicked at http://www.musicalschwartz.com/wicked.htm

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