By Michael Feingold
06 Jun 2003
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| A scene from La Boheme. |
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| Photo by Sue Adler |
And not just at Lincoln Center's two stately opera houses, where Puccini is standard fare, but also eight times weekly on Broadway, where movie whiz Baz Luhrmann's updated production added sparkle to the season.
Scoffers who thought La Bohème couldn't thrive on Broadway just don't know their Broadway. Not only do two of La Bohème's major box-office rivals, Aida and Rent, display stories borrowed wholesale from operatic masterpieces (the latter from La Bohème, itself), but operatic scores and singers, as well as scenarios, have been welcomed on Broadway for decades — and Broadway shows have returned the favor by moving into the world's opera houses.
Even Puccini's been there before: Vivacious Irene Bordoni warbled his salon song "Mia Luna" (with new English lyrics by her husband, producer E. Ray Goetz) in the 1925 romp Naughty Cinderella, following a tradition of interpolating favorite operatic arias into Broadway shows that goes back at least to The Tycoon (1860). Oscar Hammerstein's Carmen Jones (1943) transported Bizet to wartime black America; in its wake, Charles K. Friedman's My Darlin' Aida (1952) moved Verdi's opera from ancient Memphis to the one in Civil War Tennessee.
So when the next great Heldentenor turns up in a midtown show, take Ira Gershwin's advice: Lohengrin and bear it.
—Chief theatre critic of The Village Voice, Michael Feingold has translated many plays and operas, including the Broadway versions of Brecht and Weill's Threepenny Opera and Happy End.



