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Olga Neuwirth, Orlando. Wiener Staatsoper, December 2019.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2020

Extract

The Vienna State Opera made headlines around the world last December, boasting that it had finally commissioned a full-scale opera by a female composer. Olga Neuwirth, known for her difficult, unrestrained character (both musical and personal), was a curious and adventurous choice for the Wiener Staatsoper, the embassy of a conservative cultural landscape and gatekeeper of highbrow art. Choosing Virginia Woolf's seminal novel about a poet who lives through the ages and who one day miraculously changes sexes was a fitting choice for this maverick, whose work blurs the lines between genius – in all its anachronistic complexities – and fremdschämend, the well-established German equivalent of the facepalm, always scoring particularly high on listicles of ‘quintessential German words’.

Type
FIRST PERFORMANCES
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2020

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References

1 Andrea Buring, ‘“Orlando”: Olga Neuwirths Androgyne Klänge’, Euronews, 18 December 2019, de.euronews.com/2019/12/18/orlando-olga-neuwirths-androgyne-klange.

2 ‘Olga Neuwirths “Orlando” – Streit mit Erbengemeinschaft: Lied muss aus Oper gestrichen werden: BR-Klassik’. BR, 8 January 2020, www.br-klassik.de/aktuell/news-kritik/olga-neuwirth-danke-fuer-diesen-guten-morgen-orlando-wien-staatsoper-100.html.