This video is an excerpt from Opera Atelier's 2004 production of Lully's Persée. Opera Atelier is an opera and ballet company based in Toronto, Canada specializing in period productions of 17th, 18th, and early 19th century repertoire. Persée featured Artists of Atelier Ballet and conductor Hervé Niquet leading Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber Choir. Opera Atelier produces two operas each season at the historic Elgin Theatre.
@spiderlime Why not? It was common to cast males in evil or comic female roles in Baroque opera. For example: La Haine and her entourage of sisters in Lully's Armide is given to a basse-baritone and male chorus respectively, or Arnalta to a haute-contre in Monteverdi's Poppea. Gender switching was common in general up until classical opera... more famously: Cherubino in Mozart's Figaro.
Hello everyone, Opera Atelier is performing Persée very soon in Toronto, Canada (April 26 to May 3, 2014) and in Versailles, France (Mai 23 to 24). I'll be singing both parts again (Céphée and Méduse). Don't miss it! Cheers, Olivier
@LaPrimavera Oliver Laquerre is a great actor, and a good singer, and incidentally rather cute lol... My comment was not really a reproach, just my first feeling when i saw this scene! Even if I must say that about opera staging, I'm a merciless reactionary. I want to see EXACTLY what people were seeing in the time of the composer (I hate these pretensions of "rejuvenate" the operas ; or why not "rejuvenate" the music too?). But I have to abandon this dream, I know...
@LaPrimavera2006 Yes it's true, if you want Lully was bi-sexual, since he had married the daughter of Lambert, another composer, and had three sons and three daughters with her! But at this time almost all gays were in fact bi-sexual, the present classifications were not really applicable... And you're right, it doesn't matter at all : he produced some beautiful music and that what really is great about him. Well said!
I think Medusa is played by a man because she is supposed to be ugly. That was clearly the reason Platée is played by a man in Rameau's opera. Anyway, you need to fix the title. It took me a while to find it. It's supposed to be "J'ai perdu la beauté."
So, funny story: I had completely forgotten about this account, but I wanted to find a video of this aria and didn't remember that I had uploaded it 😅 sorry it took a decade, but the title is now fixed. Thank you!
please, don't forget that this is THEATRE, so everything that doesn't change the music or the story can be well accepted! the idea of having Medusa as a man is simply GREAT!!!!!
Subscriptions for Opera Ateliers 25th Anniversary Season are now on sale. Information can be found on our website. Go to Opera Atelier's You Tube channel for regular video updates from the company. Become a fan of Opera Atelier on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.
Yes, yes, I know all this, it's true. By the way, Lully himself was gay, what everybody knew very well in his time. I know a little song made about him when he died, I really can't report it here... Other than that, Olivier Laquerre is my conception of a "cute" guy but let's say "grand", if you want......
Ce n'est que quelque jours aprés que j'ai pu deceler que c'est Olivier Laquerre, bariton, dirigee par Herve Niquet avec le >Tafelmusic de Toronto; video de 2004. Il a ete fortement questioné en considerant la mise en scene comme une exageration sorte de "drag queen". Je trouive ça tres "short minded".
Moi je trouve que ce marçeau est tout a fait splendide: O. Laquerre est absolument fidele a l'esprit du text et la choreographie me parait excelentes. Les notes sur les drag queens sont absurdes. @@joangarcia-alsina2932
The more I see all this stage performance, the less I like it. It may be authentic in some aspects, but to me it seems a little affectated (gestures etc.); they know what to do with their hands, faces and so on, but they don't know what to do with their acting.
I am not informed but it seems that Lully actually intended to have a man playing Medusa, so that she looked relatively "ugly", and that makes sense. Still, I also don't like these modern approaches on opera. It could look better, though, if the costumes and the stage were more accurate to the original, even with a man in the place of Medusa.
whatever possible reason was there to cast medusa as a man? quinault missed on an opprtunity to create some tension between perseus and medusa there. a diffucult move to accept in an otherwise fine opera.
Magnifique chant. Diction parfaite. Très belle réussite. bravo
This video is an excerpt from Opera Atelier's 2004 production of Lully's Persée. Opera Atelier is an opera and ballet company based in Toronto, Canada specializing in period productions of 17th, 18th, and early 19th century repertoire. Persée featured Artists of Atelier Ballet and conductor Hervé Niquet leading Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber Choir. Opera Atelier produces two operas each season at the historic Elgin Theatre.
hermoso, suntuoso, sublime. Como seria en los tiempos de Luis XIV
Wonderful singing, excellent acting, beautiful stage and choreography - a joy to hear and see. I know the whole Persee by heart now.
@spiderlime Why not? It was common to cast males in evil or comic female roles in Baroque opera. For example: La Haine and her entourage of sisters in Lully's Armide is given to a basse-baritone and male chorus respectively, or Arnalta to a haute-contre in Monteverdi's Poppea. Gender switching was common in general up until classical opera... more famously: Cherubino in Mozart's Figaro.
Cherubino was likely sung by a castrato. Anyway, I get what you're saying.
Oh my precious little pop tarts, how fabulous!
Hello everyone,
Opera Atelier is performing Persée very soon in Toronto, Canada (April 26 to May 3, 2014) and in Versailles, France (Mai 23 to 24). I'll be singing both parts again (Céphée and Méduse). Don't miss it!
Cheers,
Olivier
Olivier, this performance is borderline GENIUS! Thank you
I admire you so much. Greetings form mexico
bravo e bello!! complimenti!! saluti da roma!
@LaPrimavera
Oliver Laquerre is a great actor, and a good singer, and incidentally rather cute lol...
My comment was not really a reproach, just my first feeling when i saw this scene!
Even if I must say that about opera staging, I'm a merciless reactionary. I want to see EXACTLY what people were seeing in the time of the composer (I hate these pretensions of "rejuvenate" the operas ; or why not "rejuvenate" the music too?).
But I have to abandon this dream, I know...
@LaPrimavera2006
Yes it's true, if you want Lully was bi-sexual, since he had married the daughter of Lambert, another composer, and had three sons and three daughters with her!
But at this time almost all gays were in fact bi-sexual, the present classifications were not really applicable...
And you're right, it doesn't matter at all : he produced some beautiful music and that what really is great about him. Well said!
Bon le titre mélange passé simple et passé composé... Mais c'est un détail^^.
Sinon il y a Medusa's eyes de Symphony x...
very nice! thanks for this medusa!!!!
The Medusa is Olivier Laquerre.
merci !
J'ai perdu la beauté (pas l'appetit)
qui me rendit si belle, je n'ai plus ces cheveux si beaux...
HE IS AMAZING!!!!
I love this opera and the production here is wonderful. Is a full recording available anywhere? Opera Atelier would do well selling DVDs i think.
@spiderlime Who said there couldn't be sexual tension between 2 men?
I think Medusa is played by a man because she is supposed to be ugly. That was clearly the reason Platée is played by a man in Rameau's opera.
Anyway, you need to fix the title. It took me a while to find it. It's supposed to be "J'ai perdu la beauté."
So, funny story: I had completely forgotten about this account, but I wanted to find a video of this aria and didn't remember that I had uploaded it 😅 sorry it took a decade, but the title is now fixed. Thank you!
@@makingfetchhappen lol just searched this video (a fav of mine) as "Je perdu la beute"
And the title is still not fixed lol
@@xdranzer0004 lol you're right. One mistake is replaced with another.
who is the singer
Charming travesti!!
Olivier Laquerre
please, don't forget that this is THEATRE, so everything that doesn't change the music or the story can be well accepted! the idea of having Medusa as a man is simply GREAT!!!!!
No it is not
@@RubenAngelesOficial well it was Lully's original idea... the role was first interpreted by the baritenor Claude Desvoyes
Well you pretty much just revealed your ignorance about the opera since this was how the role was intended to be sung 🤦♂️
Subscriptions for Opera Ateliers 25th Anniversary Season are now on sale. Information can be found on our website.
Go to Opera Atelier's You Tube channel for regular video updates from the company.
Become a fan of Opera Atelier on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.
Yes, yes, I know all this, it's true.
By the way, Lully himself was gay, what everybody knew very well in his time. I know a little song made about him when he died, I really can't report it here...
Other than that, Olivier Laquerre is my conception of a "cute" guy but let's say "grand", if you want......
Whos the composer? Please
Jean-Baptiste Lully. French court composer of king Louis XIV in Versailles.
C'est domage ignorer le tres bon baritone, la belle orchestre et la mise en scene. Domage,.
Ce n'est que quelque jours aprés que j'ai pu deceler que c'est Olivier Laquerre, bariton, dirigee par Herve Niquet avec le >Tafelmusic de Toronto; video de 2004. Il a ete fortement questioné en considerant la mise en scene comme une exageration sorte de "drag queen". Je trouive ça tres "short minded".
Moi je trouve que ce marçeau est tout a fait splendide: O. Laquerre est absolument fidele a l'esprit du text et la choreographie me parait excelentes. Les notes sur les drag queens sont absurdes. @@joangarcia-alsina2932
c'est un peu trop lent le tempo manque de punch
Nice...
But here, I would say that aesthetics are rather inclined towards the Gaypride than towards Versailles...
I like the concept of a drag-queen Medusa.
@@julienpento3636 that would have absolutely nothing to do with the original work.
The more I see all this stage performance, the less I like it. It may be authentic in some aspects, but to me it seems a little affectated (gestures etc.); they know what to do with their hands, faces and so on, but they don't know what to do with their acting.
you would have been right had medusa originally been a man. she was'nt.
I am not informed but it seems that Lully actually intended to have a man playing Medusa, so that she looked relatively "ugly", and that makes sense. Still, I also don't like these modern approaches on opera. It could look better, though, if the costumes and the stage were more accurate to the original, even with a man in the place of Medusa.
whatever possible reason was there to cast medusa as a man? quinault missed on an opprtunity to create some tension between perseus and medusa there. a diffucult move to accept in an otherwise fine opera.