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'Waiting for the Barbarians': world premier of Philip Glass opera


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ERFURT, Germany, Sept 7 (AFP) - Erfurt, a small city in the eastern German state of Thuringia, will put itself on the world opera map this week with the premiere of a new work by American minimalist composer Philip Glass.

"Waiting for the Barbarians," a harrowing allegory of oppressor and oppressed based on the novel by 2003 Nobel laureate John Maxwell Coetzee of South Africa, opens Saturday at the new Erfurt Theatre.

The theater, under the direction of Guy Montavon, commissioned the work, Glass' 15th opera.

The story's main protagonist, the Magistrate, is a loyal servant of the Empire, running the affairs of a tiny frontier settlement in an unnamed country for years and ignoring the ever-present threat of war with the "barbarians", a nomadic people demonised by his own regime.

Shocked by the Empire's cruel and unjust treatment of prisoners of war, the Magistrate commits a quixotic act of rebellion that brands him an enemy of the state, rendering him an object of public humiliation and torture.

Montavon said that the two-hour opera, with a libretto by Christopher Hampton, contains 20 scenes and follows the novel closely. Six performances are scheduled.

British baritone Richard Salter takes the lead role, while the cruel Colonel Joll will be sung by US baritone Eugene Perry, who has starred in a number of Glass operas.

"Glass's music is very harmonic and very listenable," Montavon said.

The composer sees the work as a criticism of the Iraq war led by US President George W. Bush.

Which made it all the more surprising, Glass said, that the opera was invited to Austin Texas for its US premiere in January 2007.

"We were very surprised by the invitation", he told Germany's DPA news agency.

"But Austin isn't Texas," he said, adding that Bush's policies were not as hotly disputed now as during the height of the war in Iraq.

Glass praised the Erfurt theatre for staging the work and for its commitment to contemporary music theatre in general.

He also lauded the theater's musical standards, noting that the chorus and orchestra were able to recreate his sound world without any difficulty.

"This sort of openness is not always found in other opera houses," he said.

Erfurt managed to entice US maestro Dennis Russell Davies -- who has conducted many Glass premieres -- for the production.

"He is the best midwife for my pieces," the composer said.

The sets are by Russian theatre designer, George Tsypin, and the costumes are by German designer Hank Irwin Kittel.

Glass said he likes to maintain links with opera houses that have performed his works and he could imagine returning to Erfurt in future.

Opened in September 2003, the Erfurt Theatre took four years to build. It comprises a main auditorium with 800 seats and a smaller studio stage with 200 seats.

It is the first new theatre built in what was East Germany since 1960, and is the biggest new theatre built anywhere in Germany since 1995.

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AFPEntertainment-Germany-US-music-opera

COPYRIGHT 2005 Agence France-Presse. All rights reserved.

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