Actor Allusion/Theatre/Opera: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Examples of [[Actor Allusion|Actor Allusions]] in [[Opera]].
Examples of [[Actor Allusion]]s in [[Opera]] include:

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* In Mozart's ''[[Don Giovanni]]'', there is a scene where the Don's musicians are playing music from real, then-contemporary composers while he eats dinner. Among them is a tune from Mozart's previous opera, ''[[The Marriage of Figaro]]''; "Non piu andrai". Giovanni's servant, Leporello, remarks "I know this one all too well." He ought to have; the actor playing him was the original Figaro.
* In Mozart's ''[[Don Giovanni]]'', there is a scene where the Don's musicians are playing music from real, then-contemporary composers while he eats dinner. Among them is a tune from Mozart's previous opera, ''[[The Marriage of Figaro]]''; "Non piu andrai". Giovanni's servant, Leporello, remarks "I know this one all too well." He ought to have; the actor playing him was the original Figaro.


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[[Category:Opera]]
[[Category:Actor Allusion]]

Revision as of 15:20, 6 February 2022


Examples of Actor Allusions in Opera include:

  • In Mozart's Don Giovanni, there is a scene where the Don's musicians are playing music from real, then-contemporary composers while he eats dinner. Among them is a tune from Mozart's previous opera, The Marriage of Figaro; "Non piu andrai". Giovanni's servant, Leporello, remarks "I know this one all too well." He ought to have; the actor playing him was the original Figaro.

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