LIVING IN THE PAST

“What opera needs, at least as much as great voices, is great personalities. Not ‘divas,’ in the debased sense of egomaniacs with mannerisms, but intrepid explorers of the human condition, each a Ulysses who has traveled far, seen much, felt deeply. Explorers who convey the fullness of experience through music, word and gesture, touching, in ways unique to themselves, the chord of the universal.” – New York Times

SOLO SERVICE

What happened to the jazz solo? “More often than not, I brace myself at that moment when all members of a group simmer down to accompany a solo from a frontline musician. Because it often means that I’m going to hear not just one solo, but a bunch of them. They may be long, far longer than they need to be. They may seem like place-fillers for what could be stronger, shorter, more memorable music. By the end of the tune, I’m often left wondering how it is that solos – and especially that theme-solos-theme format – became such a necessary part of jazz.” – New York Times

DRIVEN TO ACT

John Gielgud’s career stretched out over three-quarters of a century. Why so many movies in his last decades? “It seems that he was also driven towards film by the increasing difficulty of remembering lines. It further transpires that much weight must be given to the financial pressure of Gielgud’s extravagant domestic establishment in Buckinghamshire, which made him chary of refusing any part – even to the extent of making two films with Michael Winner and the ghastly Caligula (1980). – The Telegraph (UK)

THEATRE MAN

Boston’s new theatre impresario dynamo has big plans for the city. In just a few short months he’s already made a mark. “We’re seeing the emergence of a diverse not-for-profit theater community – though I wish to God we could figure out what to call it. In Chicago, it’s the off-Loop community. In New York, it’s off-Broadway. We don’t have a name for it, but it’s very positive.” – Boston Globe

TO BE YOUNG AND GERMAN (AND A PLAYWRIGHT)

German theatre has a fascination with youth right now. Young German playwrights have more commissions than they can deal with.  “Only five years ago, new playwrights were relegated to weeklong runs in basements and small black-box auditoriums. Today, German theater companies feel pressure to include at least one new play in every main-stage season. Indeed, one director grumbled that theaters are ‘just desperate for pretty young flowers to put in their hats.’ ” – New York Times

THE BIG APPLE’S HOLLOW CORE

There was a time when all American theatre seemed to flow from New York. Now, because of the economics, new work – particularly new plays – almost never start in New York. “What does manage to find its way there can be as odd and eccentrically selected as an ill-sorted group of birds who get blown hundreds of miles from their native habitats by a hurricane.” – Dallas Morning News

DRIVEN TO ACT

John Gielgud’s career stretched out over three-quarters of a century. Why so many movies in his last decades? “It seems that he was also driven towards film by the increasing difficulty of remembering lines. It further transpires that much weight must be given to the financial pressure of Gielgud’s extravagant domestic establishment in Buckinghamshire, which made him chary of refusing any part – even to the extent of making two films with Michael Winner and the ghastly Caligula (1980). – The Telegraph (UK)

THEATRE MAN

Boston’s new theatre impresario dynamo has big plans for the city. In just a few short months he’s already made a mark. “We’re seeing the emergence of a diverse not-for-profit theater community – though I wish to God we could figure out what to call it. In Chicago, it’s the off-Loop community. In New York, it’s off-Broadway. We don’t have a name for it, but it’s very positive.” – Boston Globe

ART STARS

Britain’s hip new artists have become glamorous celebs. “This isn’t so surprising when you consider the new wealth giving a golden glow to new British art. It’s become a nice little earner.” But do they lose some their hipness by traveling in these new circles?  – The Sunday Times (UK)