| Jerry
Springer - The Opera CBS NEWS - December 10, 2002 |
|
The
line of cold, anxious performers stretches around the corner of a theater
in London's famed West End. Making up and warming up, nearly 100 hopefuls
are here to try out for a production to be staged next season at Britain's
prestigious National Theater.
It's to be an opera, reports CBS News Correspondent Richard Roth on The Early Show. But it won't be Carmen. It's Jerry. The Jerry Springer show, famous for its lurid life stories and its loutish audience, is coming to the London stage, transformed, as "Jerry Springer - The Opera." The artistic potential in this story was irresistible, according to composer Richard Thomas. “Eight
people screaming at each other, the audience screaming at the eight
people screaming, and I suddenly thought this is a gift as an opera,
I thought, imagine that just sung,” says Thomas. Thomas
says he's looking for offbeat talent. |
And
if you're thinking opera is not opera if it is not Verdi or Puccini,
the National Theater thinks you're wrong. The opera
opens in April 2003 at the Lyttelton Theatre and it won't be over ,
obviously, until the jilted-wife-who-became-a-homewrecker-and-couldn't-stop-cheating-on-her-lazy-boyfriend
sings. No one on the creative team, which includes first time director and co-writer Stewart Lee, has worked at the National Theatre before. It is both Thomas' and the National Theatre's first new opera. In this production the National Theatre team, led by Nicholas Hytner, will collaborate with Allan McKeown (original producer of "Auf Wiedersehen, Pet") and comedy producer Avalon ("The Frank Skinner Show," "Fantasy Football," "The All New Harry Hill Show"). |
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Source
- CBS NEWS |