Adelaide Festival

REVIEW: The Magic Flute

REVIEW: The Magic Flute March 1 – 3, Adelaide Festival Theatre. In The Magic Flute, Australian opera director Barrie Kosky presents a striking interpretation of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s classic opera in collaboration with the German Komische Oper Berlin and live action animation by London’s 1927. With music by our very own Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, it’s an audio-visual extravaganza set to an iconic soundtrack. The show is an eccentric clash of Gatsby-era vaudeville, silent film vibes and 21st century technology—a love story raging with the kind of antiquated gender dynamics you’d expect from an opera written in 1791. The Magic Flute premiered in Vienna just two months before Mozart’s premature death at the age of just 35. The show was an instant hit and has remained a cherished work for audiences globally ever since. Quips about capturing feeble-minded women might make you cringe. You can dismiss some of it as a product of its time, forgive most of it for its enduring value as a piece of classical music history, and laugh at the rest. The set—a simple white wall with revolving panels—is a blank canvas for the live stream animations that are meticulously crafted. The cast interacts with the animation seamlessly, exhibiting outstanding attention to detail and artistry. Papageno plays with a prancing animated cat, while Sorastros holds his deadly dogs at the end of a cord. The stage is at once an enchanted forest, then the stomach of a deranged serpent, and then the whirring steampunk mechanics of the human brain. In the story, we see Prince Tamino lusted over by three attendants of the Queen of the Night as he’s coaxed to save her daughter Pamina from the evil high priest Sarastro. Soon Tamino meets the mischievous, amorous Papageno. We see him fantasising about his future lover with a cast of trippy pink elephants dipping in martini glasses. Later, he’s dashing across the rooftops with Pamina, and then hanging off a brick wall that grows thick with blue and yellow flowers. Tamino is gifted a magic flute, personified as a twinkly tinker-bell, and Papageno a case of magical bells. At various times in the journey, three choirboys depicted as heavenly butterflies float into the scene, offering sage advice to our heroes. While The Magic Flute was originally a singspiel—with both speaking and singing parts—the spoken elements in this show are presented like narrative projections as in silent films. See it for the dazzling animations, charming costumes and dreamy, timeless (if sometimes bizarre) storyline. Or see it simply for the thrill of hearing ‘The Queen of the Night’ sung live (by a giant matriarch-spider, no less). The festival suggests to bring children, but kids under 10 may get restless sitting for 2 hours and 40 minutes (including 20 minute interval). It’s presented in German so any children in tow should be confident readers to follow the English surtitles on screen. View the full Adelaide Festival Program HERE

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YOUR GUIDE TO ADELAIDE FESTIVAL

ADELAIDE FESTIVAL 1 – 17 March For more than 58 years, Adelaide Festival has been delighting audiences with the very best in artistic excellence from international and local performers, musicians, artists and writers. The 2019 Adelaide Festival will be no exception, with a range of free and ticketed experiences to tickle the fancy of every family member – from theatrical triumphs, jaw-dropping physical theatre, spine-tingling music, to whimsical one-man shows; Adelaide Festival is the perfect way for families to get out and about in Mad March. DON’T MISS ZIZANIE With evocative imagery and enchanting illusion, Australian dance icon Meryl Tankard works with Adelaide’s Restless Dance Theatre to create a whimsical world where a mesmerising tale for all the family unfolds. This exciting new work celebrates the beauty in difference and reminds us of Grayson Perry’s inimitable words that “weeds are just owers in the wrong garden.” 14 – 17 March Space Theatre – Adelaide Festival Centre Tickets available from adelaidefestival.com.au LITTLE PEOPLE BLAAS 2 -10 March Thomas Edmonds Opera Studio – Adelaide Showgrounds FOEHN 13 -17 March Main Theatre – AC Arts BABA YAGA 26 Feb – 6 Mar Queen’s Theatre – Gillies Arcade SYMPHONY FOR OUR WORLD – ELDER PARK OPENING WEEKEND CONCERT 2 March Elder Park BIG PEOPLE CARMEN  8 -10 March Festival Theatre – Adelaide Festival Centre COUNTING AND CRACKING 2 – 9 March Ridley Centre – Adelaide Showgrounds MAHLER CHAMBER ORCHESTRA 8 -10 March Auditorium – Adelaide Town Hall MEGAN WASHINGTON 15 March The Palais – Elder Park OUT OF CHAOS… 27Feb – 6 Mar Scott Theatre – The University of Adelaide WIN WIN A FAMILY PASS TO FOEHN! Armed only with a pun (“foehn” is a warm Mediterranean breeze), some sticky tape, fans and a pile of shopping bags – a single puppeteer/ magician will breathe life into the inanimate. Your jaws and those of your young charges will go slack as the little plastic dancers it, swirl and waltz on the rising currents of air. No strings. No tricks. Just a brilliantly conceived and planned improvisation that to believe… well, you must see! Enter online at HERE Tickets are available via adelaidefestival.com.au @adelaidefestival #AdlFest #AdlWW #ThePalaisAF

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