Headshot of La Cieca

Cher Public

  • oedipe: You are right, I almost forgot! Though -as she is the one and only and way past sale by date, whereas... 5:13 AM
  • armerjacquino: Apart from the fact that the singer he originally cast is French. 4:51 AM
  • oedipe: That’s why she is moving on to French roles, which ANYBODY can sing. Of course, it would never occur... 4:23 AM
  • Feldmarschallin: What a surprise this morning when I was listening to Bayern 4 Klassik at 7 and they bring a... 2:39 AM
  • antikitschychick: This was a smart move…if anything a definitive attempt to distance himself from the... 12:38 AM
  • antikitschychick: ITA. Very well-put. As Cieca incisively noted, debacles/decisions like these are not just about... 12:20 AM
  • antikitschychick: Manou, your wit is boundless!! This has truly made me LMAO!! 11:34 PM
  • Bosah: Very glad to hear that. Thanks for the information. 11:34 PM

Près des ramparts

Opening tonight at Manhattan’s Film Forum: U-Carmen e-Khayelitsha, a 2005 film adaptation of Bizet’s Carmen updated to the present and transplanted to an industrial community near Cape Town, South Africa. The score, somewhat abridged but otherwise not altered, is sung in the Xhosa language. The NYT’s reviewer isn’t completely bowled over by the film, but he does admit “the overall conception is so original that even when the movie falters in the moment, it dazzles in the memory.”

3 comments

  • sugarmezzo says:

    Hmmm. Interesting. Most singers who sing opera and songs will, at some point, have to sing in Italian, French, German, Russian, English, Spanish, Swedish, Latin, Czech, and more, but I doubt you will soon see the finest conservatories offering Xhosa diction classes.

  • paddypig says:

    saw this film last night. If you are an uptight opera queen and purist you will probably hate it. I loved it for what it is. an adaptation of Bizet’s CARMEN. It is not meant to be the opera proper, It reminds me of Matthew Bourne’s SWAN LAKE. I thoroughly enjoyed it and found it thrilling at times. Haven’t spent time in South Africa, I found the setting wildly inventive. It really works. don’t miss it, you will either love it or hate, but do see it

  • paddypig says:

    Having spent time in South Africa, not haven’t, spent several months there during three separate visits