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4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
the Queen of Opera, 15 May 2003
Author:
petershelleyau from Sydney, Australia
This British EMI Records documentary directed by Alan Lewens and Alistair
Mitchell and narrated by Rosalie Crutchley features to-camera interviews,
performances from Callas, audio from her Julliard Master Class, and
newsreels. It also conveys the sadness of the decline of Callas' career,
more sorrowful perhaps because of it's greatness and her purposeful
squandering of her talent for love.
It is suggested that Callas voice was faltering in her 1962 recitals and
1964 comeback of the opera "Norma", and that if she hadn't met Onassis and
chosen the "jet set high society" life, she may have addressed the vocal
problems. Rejected by Onassis in favor of Jackie Kennedy, who had refused
to
marry her or allow her to have a child, it is said that Maria's broken
heart
and loss of an audience's rapport is what killed her. Faced with a heart
attack, she chose not to fight.
Franco Zeffirelli points out that artists, like athletes, only have a
short
life, and in comparing Callas to Michelangelo and Nijinksy, believes that
audiences (and specifically critics) should have been grateful for the
opportunity to hear her sing, at all. Accompanist Robert Sutherland claims
that her voice was just overworked.
Others interviewed here are tenors Zani Kambanis and Giuseppe di Stefano
(who describes director Luchino Visconti's dislike of his practical
jokes),
Lord Harewood (whose 1968 Conversations shows Callas in white make-up),
agent S.A. Gorlinsky, producer Andy Anderson, EMI recording manager Peter
Andry, Variety critic Jack Pitman, conductor Carlo Maria Giulini, and
friend
Edith Gorlinsky.
We see Japanese subtitled footage of the last concert in Tokyo, a newsreel
deconstructed as evidence of press distortion, rare evidence of Callas'
sense of humour about her troubles, and her barely concealed contempt when
speaking to a stalking reporter. No explaination is given for her
mid-career
weight loss, apart from her wanting to be "beautiful", and we are told
that
part of Onassis' appeal was his sexual technique.
Callas voice is shown off best in a performance of Carmen's "Habanera" for
black and white television, where she also looks great.
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