Saturday, 17 March 2007

Cultural dimension of tomorrow's leadership, Future Summit, The Australian, 17 March, 2007.

Cultural dimension of tomorrow's leadership -- FUTURE SUMMIT 2007 - CREATING A BETTER FUTURE: [1 All-round Country Edition]

Stapleton, JohnWeekend Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 17 Mar 2007: 26.
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Victorian Opera's general manager [Anne Frankenberg], 39, says technology is helping elite art forms such as opera assume their rightful place in the lives and living rooms of ordinary people. Frankenberg was one of 50 people given a Future Summit Leadership award last year.
To demonstrate her thesis that opera has often been revolutionary and remains so today, Frankenberg points to Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro, and to Australian Richard Mills's The Love of the Nightingale. The Marriage of Figaro, which packed in the crowds like an AFL match, was radical for its day because it was about servants rather than royalty: servants who were smarter than their bosses.
Centuries later, Mills's Nightingale has also been packing in the crowds. It is, says Frankenberg, a powerful, shocking and transcendent opera about violence, revenge and the silencing of innocence that creates astonishing emotional effects and leaves the audience wanting to change the world. Yet it is a reworking of an ancient Greek story about a young woman who is raped and then has her tongue cut out to stop her revealing the name of her attacker.

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