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Screening the Operatic Stage: Television and Beyond: Opera Lab: Explorations in History, Technology, and Performance

Autor Christopher Morris
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 mar 2024
An ambitious study of the ways opera has sought to ensure its popularity by keeping pace with changes in media technology.

From the early days of television broadcasts to today’s live streams, opera houses have embraced technology as a way to reach new audiences. But how do these new forms of remediated opera extend, amplify, or undermine production values, and what does the audience gain or lose in the process? In Screening the Operatic Stage, Christopher Morris critically examines the cultural implications of opera’s engagement with screen media.

Foregrounding the potential for a playful exchange and self-awareness between stage and screen, Morris uses the conceptual tools of media theory to understand the historical and contemporary screen cultures that have transmitted the opera house into living rooms, onto desktops and portable devices, and across networks of movie theaters. If these screen cultures reveal how inherently “technological” opera is as a medium, they also highlight a deep suspicion among opera producers and audiences toward the intervention of media technology. Ultimately, Screening the Operatic Stage shows how the conventions of televisual representation employed in opera have masked the mediating effects of technology in the name of fidelity to live performance.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226831299
ISBN-10: 0226831299
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 40 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Seria Opera Lab: Explorations in History, Technology, and Performance


Notă biografică

Christopher Morris is professor of music at the National University of Ireland Maynooth. He is the author of Modernism and the Cult of Mountains: Music, Opera, Cinema and Reading Opera Between the Lines: Orchestral Interludes and Cultural Meaning from Wagner to Berg. He is co-executive editor of Opera Quarterly.

Cuprins

List of Figures

Introduction

Part 1
1: Screening the Stage/Staging the Screen
2: Split Loyalties

Part 2
3: What Time Is It in New York?
4: You Are Here
5: You Are More Than Here
6: You Are Not Here

Part 3
7: Hosts and Ghosts
Conclusion

Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Videography
Index

Recenzii

Screening the Operatic Stage offers the most comprehensive account to date of opera’s representation on screen. Morris’s rich, absorbing narrative stretches across a century and a half, consulting a wide range of sources from media industry publicity to opera fan accounts to the small but growing literature on filmed and televised opera. This is an important, timely, and well-executed study. Scholars, students, and the institution of opera should take its lessons to heart.”

“Opera has always absorbed all media innovations and even brought them into the world itself. Morris’s book proves that this perspective provides particularly fruitful conditions for opera research, especially under the current conditions of live screening and live streaming, the use of old and new media in the opera house, and the consequences for spectatorship in the opera house or in front of a screen. Morris’s book is an intellectual inspiration.”

“This strikingly original book explores a topic that is absolutely central to our idea and experience of opera. But Morris’s brilliant observations have much to say about all kinds of theater and performance in the context of our hyperdigital world. Screening the Operatic Stage is a must-read for anybody interested in the performing arts today.”

"Morris explores the intersection of operatic stage and screen, focusing on how this relationship influences both production design and audience perception. . . The concepts of media theory allow Morris to explore how technology impacts how audiences and producers 'see' video productions and how that technology impacts the 'fidelity' of live performances. The use of HD, CCTV, panning/zooming, and backstage chats changes opera’s 'public' (sitting in the venue itself) versus 'private' (viewing from home or in a cinema) audience experience, forcing producers to be more creative with staging. . . . Recommended for comprehensive academic opera collections."