Headshot of La Cieca

Cher Public

  • bluecabochon: CAST: Nina Stemme, Salome Jane Henschel, Herodias Rudolf Schasching, Herod Garrett Sorenson,... 11:35 PM
  • A. Poggia Turra: They should have gotten this one: httpv://www.youtub e.com/watch?v=2bH8 q1SEHvQ 11:31 PM
  • Signor Bruschino: I was down in the orchestra and was surprised how well behaved the elderly set were this... 11:20 PM
  • Camille: Hey, mucho spasibo, Salomanda!! Already heard from husband–he said the Austrian guy who played... 10:56 PM
  • Salomanda: Quick impressions from tonight’s Salome: The orchestra sounded great but it sounded like... 10:39 PM
  • Bosah: Well, there are UK/Commonwealth singers – three hours worth of them. Just not classical singers.... 10:00 PM
  • phoenix: Buster, saw the following broadcast listing & wondered if you ever heard this one: 27 MAY 2012 at... 9:59 PM
  • louannd: Happy Birthday to Beverly Sills httpv://www.youtub e.com/watch?v=MV2Q dRxZ4Kk&featur e=related 9:55 PM

deh vieni alla finestra

Liza’s main man Paulo Szot has some interesting and rather bold (if La Cieca may say so) opinions about the character of Leporello in today’s New York Times: “Don Giovanni needs him for everything: butt sex, to give him food, to give him drink, to share his feelings with.” (The article, fetchingly entitled “The Great Mozart Switcheroo,” poses the probing question, “So which, in the end, is the better part?”)

31 comments

  • Perfidia says:

    Messages 28 and 29. Of course a street sweeper could not yell he was married to a noblewoman and make it so. Every social class had a certain set of obligations and rules of conduct dictated by honor, and to go outside your class was a violation of honor that could be punished by death. That is the justification for the killing of a nobleman by his subjects in Lope de Vega’s “Fuenteovejuna.” We are talking about theater, not the reality of social practices. It makes sense symbolically that simply swearing before God had the strength of law. It was a way for the church to assert its earthly power.