A recent article (Branagh's Magic Flute to debut in Toronto, August 11) in The Guardian provides the following update:
Kenneth Branagh's The Magic Flute will get its world premiere at next month's Toronto International Film Festival [September 7 to 16]. The £27m picture, which will reportedly launch simultaneously at the Venice Film Festival [August 30 to September 9], transplants Mozart's opera to the first world war. Stephen Fry has provided a libretto translated from the German. The new version is unlikely to be a hit with traditionalist Mozart afficionados but Branagh has called it "a very exciting departure for me as a filmmaker". The movie is being funded by British philanthropist Sir Peter Moores [who spends a lot of money trying to bring opera to a broader audience].The always informative Internet Movie Database adds the following casting information: Joseph Kaiser as Tamino (he sang the role of Mark in last fall's production of Tippett's Midsummer Marriage at Lyric Opera of Chicago), Amy Carson as Pamina, and Broadway singer Benjamin Jay Davis as Papageno. Other sources report that the music was recorded by the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, led by James Conlon, last September. The sung parts were acted out with the singers lip-synching. The same sources reported that the Venice Film Festival, whose jury will be chaired by Catherine Deneuve this year, will screen Branagh's movie on September 7, in the Gran Teatro La Fenice. Nice. Who should represent Ionarts: Jens or me?
For more articles and a few gorgeous pictures of the shoot, go here.
Joe Kaiser was also recently seen at The Barns at Wolf Trap in the 2004 world premiere of John Musto's Volpone.
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