The Year in Theater: Magic Flute’s Magic Revealed
CFA students on creating the set of classic opera
This year, Boston University’s actors, directors, and playwrights brought an exciting year of theater to campus. From the College of Fine Arts school of music’s Opera Institute and school of theatre production of The Magic Flute to the weeklong InCite Arts Festival produced by the College of Fine Arts, the performances showcased a wide array of BU talent. This week, BU Today is revisiting the year in theater at Boston University.
Magic Flute‘s Magic Revealed
“Boston is such a Mozart town,” says Jeremy Barnett (CFA’09), the scenic designer for the February production of Mozart’s The Magic Flute by the College of Fine Arts. “It’s an opera that’s easy to enjoy, whether you’re an opera person or not.”
More than 200 years after the opera premiered in Vienna in 1791, The Magic Flute’s music, images, and story continue to enthrall audiences. But the images that make up the production, ranging from dark forests with looming, surrealistic trees to golden temples with arches and columns that push the literal boundaries of the stage, are only part of the story. “The real magic is how it’s assembled,” says technical director Brian McVicker (CFA’09). “It’s the engineering solutions that become a huge part of getting a show up.”
Barnett was given the task of designing the set for The Magic Flute, prompting him to take a careful look at the plot and setting. “In a show like this, that has so many different scenes, you look very carefully at the space, at how the world moves from one place to another,” he says. “Those transitions are very important — are you ushering those characters through the world of the opera?”
The final set, realized with the help of McVicker and the construction team, explodes with imaginative shapes and bold colors — a fitting tribute, Barnett hopes, to the character of the show. “Why do people keep coming to this?” he asks. “Because the music is phenomenal. Because it really is uplifting. This is a piece that just makes you feel good; it’s very positive. And at the same time you feel like you’re getting something out of it. It’s not feel-good fluff — it’s life-affirming.”
The Magic Flute, a collaboration between the CFA school of music’s Opera Institute and the school of theatre, ran from February 21 to 24 at the Boston University Theatre, 264 Huntington Ave., Boston.
Devin Hahn can be reached at dhahn@bu.edu.
Photo by Vernon Doucette
This story originally ran February 21, 2008.
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