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Opera Anecdotes (Oxford Paperbacks)
 
 
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Opera Anecdotes (Oxford Paperbacks) [Paperback]

Ethan Mordden (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

December 8, 1988 Oxford Paperbacks
From backstage squabbles and box-office chicanery to the gallantry and glory of creation, this book unveils a delightful panorama of opera lore, alternately hilarious, poignant, and wise. Ethan Mordden has mined the literature for "the best stories" and retells them in the fresh and witty style that prompted Publishers Weekly to hail him as "one of the most entertaining and provocative writers around."
Mordden has selected a vast collection of classic, arcane and unusual anecdotes, including Giuseppe Verdi's advice on how to run an opera house and how to write an aria, Enrico Caruso's adventures in the San Francisco earthquake, Arturo Toscanini's reunion dinner with his former lover Geraldine Farrar, and Beverly Sills' ad libbing from the Met balcony during a Lily Pons Lakm�. The volume contains sad stories, too, as when Hans von B�low confronts his wife Cosima after she has left him for Wagner; and silly stories, as when Colonel Henry Mapleson attempts to put on Il Trovatore while missing one of the four principals, Azucena. We see history being made when Gluck's "psychological" orchestration so startles the Paris Op�ra orchestra that the players trail off in astonishment; and we see history nearly unmade when Luciano Pavarotti's plane crashes en route to Milan.
"There is history here," Mordden notes, "for if many of the tales are silly, many others are telling. They bring us close to a moment in which art is invented, revised, elaborated. The characters of opera's adventures are so vital and stimulating that almost anything they do enlightens us."

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"A charming romp through opera legends, some fact, some fiction, all delightfully assembled and sparklingly presented."--Schuyler G. Chapin

"A charming romp through opera legends, some fact, some fiction, all delightfully assembled and sparklingly presented. An opera lovers' handbook that should always be near at hand."--Schuyler G. Chapin

"[An] entertaining anthology of opera fact and fiction....The author obviously relishes his task and has chosen the material well."--Library Journal

"Entertaining and frequently insightful....A very fine book; it is well worth reading."--Best Sellers

"Mordden, who knows his way around backstage...has gleefully amassed hundreds of such anecdotes, exchanges and choice bits of opera lore."--Time

"Mordden...has collected some of the most famous anecdotes--fact and fiction--to keep the conversation at many a music-lover's table humming."--Daily Press, Newport News, VA

"A thoroughly charming and light-hearted panorama of fact and fiction."--The Evening Gazette, Worcester, MA

"Mordden is one of the more entertaining--at times outrageous--popular writers on opera....He writes with authority and conviction....Highly entertaining."--Opera Journal

"Romping good fun."--Buffalo News

"A rare and delightful tour through the world of opera, led by a writer who has a firm grasp of his subject and tells his tales with alternate wit and poignancy....A wealth of information, as well as some lore about virtually every phase of opera life and production."--Charleston Evening Post

About the Author


Ethan Mordden has taught at Yale University and is the author of numerous books, including The American Theatre, A Guide to Orchestral Music, Broadway Babies, Opera in the Twentieth Century, and A Guide to Opera Recordings.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (December 8, 1988)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195056612
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195056617
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.3 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #656,555 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More Than Just a Joke Book, September 1, 2007
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This review is from: Opera Anecdotes (Oxford Paperbacks) (Paperback)

There are several books of opera anecdotes in print, but I am particularly partial to this one. There seems to be a basic repertoire of stories that make the rounds. Pompous composers and even more pompous singers fill the history books with their adventures and faux pas.

What's different about Mr. Mordden's collection is that he includes brief biographical sketches of the lives of many composers (Gluck, Mozart, Wagner, Rossini etc.), singers (Caruso, Flagstad, Callas) and musicians (Toscanini, Beecham). These bios, sometime covering two pages or more, provide interesting incidents and commentaries on the lives of the famous. There is even a short history of the castrati.

All in all when you finish this book you've not only had some good laughs, but have learned some interesting new things about the world of opera.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars light, easy reading, March 31, 2004
By 
Robertson Thomas (Hapcheon, Gyeongnam, South Korea) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Opera Anecdotes (Hardcover)
Don't pick up this book at bedtime if you have to get up early next morning. You might not be able to put it down until you finish it.

The book is not a historical source, but nor does it purport to be. He tells of an organ-grinder who was playing the Intermezzo from Cavalleria Rusticana. Mascagni passes by and advises him to play it at a different tempo. The next day, the organ-grinder is seen wearing a sign saying "Student of Mascagni." In other anecdote collections, the organ-grinder is either a "Student of Verdi" playing an excerpt from Il Trovatore or a "Student of Puccini" playing Musetta's Waltz from La Boheme. Could this be a true story which happened three times?

The author occasionally strays from the assigned topic of anecdotes to discuss individual composers and performers. He makes value judgments with which the reader may or may not agree. He certainly does not esteem Puccini as highly as I do.

Just one grievance: the author assumes that every reader knows every well-known opera ever written. He refers to operatic characters and operatic highlights without telling the reader which opera he is referring to. I felt like I was the only opera-lover in the world who was too stupid to know that Kundry is a character in Parsifal.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What times the next swan?, July 29, 2001
This review is from: Opera Anecdotes (Oxford Paperbacks) (Paperback)
This book consists of operatic biographies-by-anecdote. If anyone remotely connected to opera in the past three hundred years said or did anything clever, then he or she is lovingly quoted in "Opera Anecdotes."

Sometimes, as in "The Famous Story of Handel's Cook," the reader might have to strain to find the humor:

"How great a composer was Gluck? Some say very great---"The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera" calls him `opera's second founder.' Handel said not so great: `he knows no more uff counterpoint zan mein cook!'"

Handel's rollicking commentary is included in Mordden's anecdotal sketch of Christoph Willibald Gluck.

Even the author admits to the existence of operatic greats who are not remembered for their sparkling wit:

"One doesn't expect [Arnold] Schoenberg anecdotes---is this not the most austere character in music?---remote, complex, patriarchal, silently disapproving? Schoenberg is like Moses, bringing a new code of behavior to his people---twelve-tone composition---and raging when they prove unworthy."

Of course, Mordden does go on to tell Schoenberg's story in three pages worth of anecdotes, many of them grim---there really is nothing humorous about twelve-tone composition, or about being chased out of Germany by the Nazis ("Maus" comics notwithstanding.)

Usually this book looks at the lighter side of operatic life, and it includes my favorite story about Leo Slezak, who must have been one of the funniest tenors ever to grace the Wagnerian repertoire. Here is the "Classic Leo Slezak Story:"

"Backstage at `Lohengrin' before his first entrance, Slezak was bemused to see the swan-boat take off just before he got into it: a stagehand had jumped the cue. As the boat glided into the opera without its silver knight, Slezak turned to someone and asked, `Wann geht der nächste Schwann?': What time's the next swan?"

If you love opera, you'll love "Opera Anecdotes." If you don't---well, Dave Barry has also written a book about music.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Because so many of opera's most typical stories evoke the capers of divas and divos, let's launch our tour with a sampling of the stars in glory or disaster, waxing witty or dull, playing magnanimous or self-intent. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Covent Garden, Mary Garden, Sir Thomas, Act Two, Geraldine Farrar, Guillaume Tell, Richard Strauss, Academy of Music, Act One, Act Three, Birgit Nilsson, Colonel Mapleson, Der Rosenkavalier, Don Giovanni, Enrico Caruso, Olive Fremstad, Thomas Beecham, Arturo Toscanini, Die Meistersinger, Les Huguenots, Madama Butterfly, Marie Powers, Nellie Melba, Rudolf Bing
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