Headshot of La Cieca

Cher Public

  • Camille: Gee, that is bizarre—R 11;I was thinking of you a while back and wanting to let you know I HAD... 4:02 PM
  • kashania: I also checked out the second act finale and agree completely. It’s rare that a moment of hysteria... 3:59 PM
  • Lucy: Like arepo, I’m seeing Andrea Chenier: 1. Courtroom scene, just before “Si, fui soldato.”... 3:51 PM
  • grimoaldo: Hi Camille, you were interested in “Craig’ ;s Wife” with Rosalind Russell.I watched... 3:20 PM
  • Camille: “Inno ad Imene”. Sorry. Just had to try it on for size. Thanks, operaguy. 3:11 PM
  • lorenzo.venezia: hair-raising. that’s why the tee shirts were so surprising. it has been a while since the... 3:04 PM
  • operaguy: Down in the Depths on the 90th Floor is a Cole Porter song from “Red, Hot and Blue” –... 2:56 PM
  • Clita del Toro: Cammie, well, Swiffers do make this old lady’s life much easier. You can Swiffer around the... 2:54 PM

Comments that witness madness

happy_feetLa Cieca will never, ever again (even if she ever had, which she didn’t so much) complain about the comments of the cher public. The comments are far and away crazier (and not in an entertaining way) elsewhere.

99 comments

  • Pelleas says:

    My favorite part: “If their performance is good, you will feel pretty also regardless of the environment.”

    Hope springs eternal.

  • regiefida says:

    I think that OC’s blog and the opera situation in LA are getting intertwined in a way that is misleading.

    LA opera has some terrific people working for them – they have an excellent “opera for educators” program that tries to bring opera into the schools by providing classes that teachers can take for credit. Since there is not money for a serious arts program in many schools, this is the next best thing.
    Presenters include young up-and-coming singers, academics from the local universities, etc.

    Los Angeles does NOT have a large enough opera-savvy community to support a blog like Parterre ( ok, there can never be another Parterre – but you know what I mean)

    OC has a SoCal “connection” and I suspect that’s why comments end up there.

    Don’t forget that California is facing a severe budget crisis. When a mega production like the Ring needs public money ( direct public money – all arts institutions get indirect public money via the tax exemption for non-profit donations) and gets it, I believe it actually harms the opera community because people who might have been “neutral” or curious, react in a way that many of us would when we feel that “our” money has not been spent wisely.

    The long and the short of it is that opera in LA is a fragile enterprise and has not been well-served by those who make the most noise or biggest splash;

    So cut the posters some slack – they are frustrated.

    • Henry Holland says:

      The long and the short of it is that opera in LA is a fragile enterprise and has not been well-served by those who make the most noise or biggest splash

      So true. I’m baffled why Domingo and his cohorts were so hell-bent on doing a Ring cycle here before they’d done large chunks of the standard rep. Ring mania at the Dot has gone on for 10 years or more, it’s warped the budget and priorities. It’s going to take years to dig out of the hole the Ring has created, so I imagine more seasons with 3 Puccini operas are in our future.