This fall, just in time for Halloween, CU Boulderâs Eklund Opera Program is set to bring Johann Strauss, Jr.âs glittering masked ball operetta to Macky Auditorium.
âDie Fledermaus,â consistently popular with audiences for a century and a half, follows a group of Viennese friends from boudoir to ballroom to jail as they party the night away dressed in disguise, learning lessons about themselves and each other along the way.
Saturday, Oct. 22, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 23, 2 p.m.
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âItâs a light, fun piece that anyone can enjoy,â says Eklund Opera Director Leigh Holman, who also directs the production. âItâs perfect for this time of year, right when everyone is getting ready for the holidays, because it feels very festive.â
âDie Fledermausâ premiered in Vienna in 1874, at the height of a prosperous era for the Austrian city. The Habsburg reign was in full swing, Vienna was nicknamed âthe city of dreams,â and its cultural goings-on were the envy of every other city in the Western world.
Perhaps thatâs why âDie Fledermausâ was the âHamiltonâ of its time, selling out shows in every city to which it traveled: Its frothy, funny, champagne-soaked plot captured the period zeitgeist so well that the Viennese saw themselves in the characters on stage.
âOperettas were as popular during that time period as they are today,â Holman says. âPeople loved âDie Fledermausâ because there was dancing, lots of good jokes, physical humor and colorful setsââa welcome break from the eraâs increasingly serious and dramatic grand operas.
It may be surprising to learn, then, that Strauss never intended to write operettas. Nicknamed the Waltz King and famous for his dances, he was content to stick to what he knew, says Nicholas Carthy, Eklund Operaâs Music Directorâthat is, until his wife and a theatre director gave him a little push by spreading false rumors around town.
âIn 1870, much to Straussâs surprise, a newspaper report appeared to the effect that the score of a comic opera was sitting, finished, on the desk of the master, waiting to be performed,â Carthy says. âIt took him three attempts to get it right, but in 1874 came the piece that was to establish him once and for all in the world of operetta: âDie Fledermaus.ââ
Holman says sheâs never directed âDie Fledermausâ before, but she fondly remembers playing Prince Orlofsky in a production of the operetta at the University of Tennessee at Martin. The part of Orlofskyâa nobleman so comically cosmopolitan that no scandal shocks him anymoreâis whatâs called a trouser role, meant to be sung by a woman playing a man.
âIn Straussâ time, the trouser roles would have been considered very risquĂ© and alluring to men in the audience,â Holman says. âBack then, most women were wearing full-length ball gowns, and it would have been exciting to see a womanâs ankles and a clear outline of her body.âÌę
Seeing a woman in pants may not be cause for excitement in 2016, but âDie Fledermaus,â with its festive atmosphere, famous Straussian waltzes and funny one-liners, is just as thrilling as it was a century and a half ago.
Thereâs an extra thrill in it for anyone involved in the performing arts at CU, as they may recognize several prominent guests on stageâincluding Theatre & Dance Director Bud Coleman, Eklund Opera program namesake Paul Eklund, College of Music Associate Dean for Graduate Studies Steven Bruns and a handful of CU Boulder board members. On opening night, CU Boulder Chancellor Philip DiStefano even makes an appearance.