(The
principals in rehearsal, with Dr Pamela Tancsik (centre) and Musical Director
Richardt Wissink (top left). Pic by Illa Thompson)
Dr Pamela Tancsik adapts and directs
Marikana to Mahagonny – an adaptation of the seldom performed masterful
operatic songplay by iconic German powerhouse music makers – Kurt Weill and
Bertolt Brecht which plays for a short season at DUT Courtyard Theatre from August
27 to 31 nightly at 19h30.
Tancsik has adapted the opera to reference
the Marikana tragedy – the aftermath of which is the opening scene – told
through song set against the backdrop of the watershed documentary, Miners Shot Down by Rehad Desai.
Marikana
to Mahagonny is a new staging of Mahagonny Songplay – a precursor to the
opera, Rise and Fall of the City of
Mahagonny (adapted from the German: Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny)
a political-satirical opera composed by Kurt Weill to a German libretto by
Bertolt Brecht.
The lack of hope, social decay, moral
collapse and focus on money above all else as referenced in the original opera
struck a chord with Tancsik who draws comparisons with contemporary South
Africa.
Tancsik was herself in a production of Mahagonny Songplay in 1999 in its
original German, conducted by Dr David Smith with Suzy Stengel.
Kurt Julian Weill, active from the 1920s,
was a leading German composer for the stage who was best known for his fruitful
collaborations with Bertolt Brecht. Weill's score uses a number of styles,
including ragtime, jazz and formal counterpoint notably in Benares Song, and the Alabama
Song (covered by multiple artists, notably Ute Lemper The Doors and David
Bowie). The starting point of the production was a series of poems penned by
Brecht, Hauspostille, which were adapted to music by Weill in order to enter a
festival competition in 1927 in Baden-Baden.
“The music is really complex and
interesting. It was considered a new sound – using strong jazz influences and a
Gershwin feel. It is vivace – fast and not easy to play or perform as was
created for a full orchestra, now condensed down to a solo piano,” explains
Musical Director, Richardt Wissink.
The full scale opera, Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny was first performed on March
9, 1930, in the Neues Teater in Leipzig. The opera was banned by the Nazis in
1933 due to its socialist content, and did not have a significant production
until the 1960s.
The sung-through dark scenic cantata for
eight principal actors and a chorus, supports a socialist / communist ideology
and is hugely critical of capitalistic greed: in Mahagonny, poverty is not just
a condition the poor bring upon themselves, but a crime to be punished.
The cast features DUT drama students. Marikana to Mahagonny will be staged at
DUT Courtyard Theatre nightly at 19h30. Tickets at the door / in advance on 031 373 2194.