Randy to star in Amadeus(中英文详细介绍在第二页)

LJ上的:http://community.livejournal.com/queerasfolkfans/2236944.html

Berkshire Eagle:http://www.berkshireeagle.com/headlines/ci_3518769

从今年6月20号到7月8号....就在上次演equus的剧院...

Randy演莫扎特....

[ 本帖最后由 candyperfume 于 2006-2-21 11:40 编辑 ]

啊!
大喜讯!!

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Randy演莫扎特..........
哇........
好呀好呀~~~~

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不知道骡子上会不会这部片子的下载啊!!
而且莫扎特可不是好演的角色哦!!这可是考验一个人演技的时候!!

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em20em20看不到他的精彩表演

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小RAN  赞哦!

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oh my GOD!!!! 好想去看呀

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我~也~想~看~的~说~~~~

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看不到啊,看不到!怨念啊~~~~em34em20

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em19em19em19大喜讯~~~
em34em34em34看不到~~~

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原帖由 黑衣大主教 于 2006-2-18 14:45 发表
不知道骡子上会不会这部片子的下载啊!!
而且莫扎特可不是好演的角色哦!!这可是考验一个人演技的时候!!


这个...舞台剧...应该没得下吧?
啊啊啊啊~~~~~~想看啊啊啊~
不知道他到时候会不会弹钢琴啊?
http://img017.photo.wangyou.com/files/2006/3/2/259964/200611415717260.jpg

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em22 莫扎特~~~
em26果然不愧是我喜欢地人,连演地角色都是我喜欢地~~哇咔咔!!
Fortunately,the lad's genius.

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原帖由 sunnycup 于 2006-2-18 21:50 发表
em22 莫扎特~~~
em26果然不愧是我喜欢地人,连演地角色都是我喜欢地~~哇咔咔!!


宝贝,
米兔,
星星眼ing~~

我要去看!!!!!!!em04
我爱lp和tt

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能看到就好了

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candy  今天是偶这个ID一周年滴生日,这个消息来的简直太巧了.......


难道是偶感动鸟天................

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終於等到了................

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我要去看!

[ 本帖最后由 鄭喬方 于 2006-2-19 01:39 编辑 ]

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看樣子要想辦法出國囉!!

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他在戏里会把头发染掉吗?或是戴头套?

呵呵形象上肯定和现在很不一样吧。

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亲candy!!!!多谢!!!

randy是音乐系毕业的,90%可能性会钢琴。

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zt yahoo

Date: Sat, 18 Feb 2006 00:40:20 -0000
   From: "Mark" <mlytjc2@aol.com>

for those who have never seen the play or/or movie Amadeus (and the
play is substantially different from the movie in many ways) here is
some information from Wikepedia. The role of Mozart will be a very
diffferent part for Randy:

Amadeus is the title of both a stage play and an Academy Award
winning film written in 1979 by Peter Shaffer, both loosely based on
the lives of the composers Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Antonio
Salieri. Amadeus was inspired by Mozart and Salieri, a short play by
Aleksandr Pushkin (later adapted into an opera by Nikolay Rimsky-
Korsakov).

The title refers to a name that Mozart often used (he was baptized as
Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart) as a pen name. It
is a Latinization of the Greek Theophilos, which Mozart sometimes
also Germanized as "Gottlieb." All three names mean "God-lover"
or "Loved by God" and, aside from being a direct reference to Mozart,
the title serves as an ironic reference to Salieri's relationship
with God in the play and film

The play, and to a much larger extent the film, make use of Mozart's
music (as well as that of a few other composers, including Salieri).


Date: Sun, 19 Feb 2006 23:40:46 -0000
   From: "Mark" <mlytjc2@aol.com>

Randy as Mozart - His first scene in the play

I picked a copy of Amadeus this afternoon at Barnes and Noble.

Anyone interested in reading the play should purchase the  2001
Perennial(an Imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers) edition, which is
the most current, - the final of six versions (which includes the
screenplay) which Shaffer wrote over 20 years, culminating in the
1998-99 Broadway revival. The play is indeed very different than the
movie.

Here is the first scene where Mozart appears. This play is the
opportunity for a tour de force performance by Randy. The part calls
for him to deliver of number of lines in "expert" Italian and French
and to portray Mozart doing an "exhibitionistic" virtuoso performance
on a pianoforte.


Act One, Scene 5


CONSTANZE: [OFF] Squeak! Squeak! Squeak!

{CONSTANZE runs on from upstage, a pretty girl in her early twenties,
full of high spirits. At this second, she is pretending to be a
mouse. She runs across the stage in her gay party dress, squeaking,
and hides under the fortepiano.
Suddenly a small, pallid, large-eyed young man of 25, in a showy set
of clothes runs in after her and freezes -center-as a cat would
freeze, hunting a mouse. This is WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART. As we get
to know him through his next scenes, we discover several things about
him: he is an extremely restless man, his voice, light and high; his
manner, excitable and volatile.]

MOZART: Miaouw!

CONSTANZE: [Betraying where she is] Squeak!

MOZART: Miaouw!?Miaouw!?Miaouw!
[The composer drops on all fours and, wrinkling his face, begins
spitting and stalking his prey. The mouse - giggling with excitement -
breaks her cover and dashes across the floor. The cat pursues.
Almost at the chair where Salieri sits concealed, the mouse turns at
bay. The cat stalks her -nearer and nearer- in his knee breaches and
elaborate coat.]

"I'm going to pounce-bounce! I'm going to scrunch munch! I'm going to
chew-poo my little mouse-wouse! I'm going to tear her to bits with my
paws-claws!

CONSTANZE: No!

MOZART: Paws-claws - paws-claws - paws-claws! Ohh!

[He falls on her: she screams.]

I'm going to bite you in half with my fanfg-wangs! My little Stanzerl-
wnzerl-banzer!

[She laughs delightedly, lying prone beneath him.]

You're trembling!匢 think you're frightened of puss-wuss!匢 think
you're scared to death! [Intimately] I think you're going to shit
yourself!

[She squeals but is not really shocked. He emits a little baby-ish
giggle.]

In a moment it's going to be on the floor!

CONSTANZE: Ssssh! Someone'll hear you!

[He imitates the noise of a fart.]

Stop it, Wolferl! Ssh!

MOZART: Here it comes now! I can hear it coming!匫h, what a
melancholy note! Something's dropping from your boat!

[Another fart noise, slower. CONSTANZE shrieks with amusement.]

CONSTANZE: Stop it now! It's stupid. Really stupid!

MOZART: Hey - hey- what's "Trazom"?

CONSTANZE: What?

MOZART: T-r-a-z-o-m. What's it mean?

CONSTANZE: How should I know?

MOZART: It's Mozart spelled backwards - shit-wit! If you married me
you'd be Constanze Tranzom.

CONSTANZE: No, I wouldn't.

MOZART: Yes, you would. Because I'd want everything backwards once I
was married. I'd want to lick my wife's arse instead of he face.

CONSTANZE: You're not going to lick anything at this rate. Your
father's never going to give his consent to us.

[The sense of fun deserts him instantly]

MOZART: And who cares about his consent?

CONSTANZE: You do. You care very much. You wouldn't do it without it.

MOZART: Wouldn't I?

CONSTANZE: No you wouldn't. Because you're too scared of him. I know
what he says about me "If you marry that dreadful girl, you'll end up
lying on straw with beggars for children".

MOZART [Impulsively} Marry me!

CONSTANZE: Don't be silly

MOZART: Marry me!

CONSTANZE: Are you serious?

MOZART [Defiantly} Yes!匒nswer me this minute: yes or no! Say yes
then I can go home, shit in bed and shout, "I DID it!"

[He rolls on top of her delightedly. The MAJORDOMO of the house
stalks in, upstage.]

MAJORDOMO: [Imperviously} Her Ladyship is ready to commence.

MOZART: Ah匶es! Good! [He picks himself up embarrassed, and helps
CONSTANZE to rise. With an attempt at dignity] Come, my dear. The
music waits!

CONSTANZE: [Suppressing giggles] Oh, by all means- Herr Trazom!


[ 本帖最后由 qqqq2046 于 2006-2-21 22:59 编辑 ]

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Plot
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

There are some important differences between the screenplay and the
stage play, notably the number and treatment of scenes without
Salieri in them, the portrayal of Emperor Joseph II, Emanuel
Schikaneder, and Baron van Swieten, Mozart's relationship with the
Masons, and the finale.

Shared plot
Amadeus the theatrical production tells Mozart's story from the point
of view of the court composer Antonio Salieri, who is presented as a
caricature of jealous mediocrity. Salieri speaks directly to the
audience at many times during the play, his soliloquies serving to
move the timeline forward and back, and to narrate the goings on. In
the film, Shaffer employs an interlocutor (a young priest) for
Salieri to achieve this same function, but the film is told from a
more neutral, third-person perspective and there are more scenes
without Salieri in them (especially in the Director's Cut). Most of
the film, and much of the play, are presented in retrospective.

At the opening of the tale, Salieri has not met Mozart in person, but
has heard of him and his music. He adores Mozart's compositions, and
is thrilled at the chance to meet Mozart in person, during a salon at
which both of their compositions will be played. When he finally does
catch sight of Mozart, however, he is deeply disappointed to find
that Mozart's personality does not match the grace or charm of his
compositions: Mozart is crawling around on his hands and knees,
engaging in an immature dialogue with Constanze Weber (who would
later become his wife). As Mozart himself later explains: "I am a
vulgar man. But... my music is not."

Salieri cannot reconcile Mozart's boorish behavior with the massive
genius that God has inexplicably bestowed upon him. Indeed, Salieri,
who has been a devout Catholic all his life, cannot believe that God
would choose Mozart over him for such a gift. Salieri rejects God and
vows to do everything in his power to destroy Mozart.

Throughout much of the rest of the play and film, Salieri masquerades
as Mozart's ally to his face, while at the same time doing his utmost
to destroy his reputation and any success his compositions may have.
On more than one occasion it is only the direct intervention of the
emperor himself that allows Mozart to continue (interventions which
Salieri opposes, and then is all too happy to take credit for when
Mozart assumes it was he who intervened). Salieri also humiliates
Mozart's wife when she comes to Salieri for aid, and smears Mozart's
character with the emperor and the court. A major theme in Amadeus is
Mozart's repeated attempts to win over the aristocratic "public" with
increasingly brilliant compositions, which are always frustrated
either by Salieri or by the aristocracy's own inability to appreciate
Mozart's genius.

At this point, the film and the play diverge.

Stage play version
In the play, only Baron van Swieten (who early in the story inducts
Mozart into the Brotherhood of the Freemasons) continues to support
Mozart. Indeed, by the end of the play, Mozart is surviving solely
because of the charity of his brother Masons. Finally, Salieri
convinces Mozart (who by this time is half-crazed from frustration
and poverty) to compose an opera based on the mythos of the Masons.
As a result, Mozart produces the comedy Die Zauberfle. Van Swieten
is horrified to see that Mozart has, in his opinion, parodied the
venerated traditions of Freemasonry. He summarily removes Mozart from
the Masons. Meanwhile, Mozart's partner in the production of Die
Zauberfle, Emanuel Schikaneder, cheats Mozart out of most of his
share of the ticket proceeds.

Now thoroughly destroyed and without recourse, Mozart simply wastes
away and dies, still at work on his Requiem


Film version
In the film, however, the above does not occur. Instead, the film
uses that time to focus on Mozart's relationships with his father,
Leopold (whom he worships and fears), and his wife, which are rather
tense and erratic, respectively. As the film moves on, Mozart learns
of his father's death and composes the operatic masterpiece Don
Giovanni, in part as a tribute to him. Salieri avows that it was the
finest opera he had ever seen, yet he uses his influence to make sure
it closes after only five performances.

Following this, Salieri hatches a plan to conscript Mozart to compose
a requiem, after which Salieri will kill him and claim the
composition as his own. Even better, he reasons, he will then
perform "Salieri's Requiem" at Mozart's own funeral, thus
demonstrating to the world the inspiration that his true and devoted
friendship with Mozart had given him. Salieri dons a disguise and
anonymously commissions the composition from Mozart.

Meanwhile, Mozart's friend Emanuel Schikaneder has put on a parody of
Don Giovanni at a local music hall, which Mozart finds charming. It
has also been a great success. Schikaneder convinces Mozart to write
an opera "for the people," who will appreciate his work more than the
staid aristocrats for whom he usually composes. Mozart agrees, and
composes Die Zauberfle, all the while continuing to work on his
requiem. Zauberfle is a big success, but during the initial
performance, Mozart (who is conducting from the keyboard) falls ill
and is taken home by Salieri. There, Salieri pushes Mozart to
continue work on his requiem, despite the fact that Mozart is barely
conscious.

At this point, Schikaneder shows up at Mozart's door, and faithfully
gives Mozart's share of the opera's proceeds to Salieri, who shoos
him away. Salieri then returns to Mozart and gives him the money,
saying that it came from the man who commissioned the requiem, and
that there will be more if Mozart can finish the piece hastily.
Mozart therefore asks Salieri to assist him in completing the
composition, as he is too sick to write. Salieri transcribes what
Mozart tells to him, and the beauty of Mozart's Requiem is slowly
revealed to the audience (and Salieri himself). After some time,
Mozart pauses to thank Salieri for being such a good friend,
admitting that he had always felt, deep down, that Salieri did not
like his music. Touched in spite of himself, and apparently
regretting his initial plot, Salieri candidly replies: "I tell you,
you are the greatest composer known to me."

The next day, Mozart is dead. He is buried in an unmarked mass grave,
his Requiem still unfinished.

Reality vs. fiction

Shaffer took dramatic license in his portrayals of both Mozart and
Salieri. There is some debate as to just how much. There seems to
have been some antipathy between Mozart and Salieri, but, the idea
that Salieri was the instigator of Mozart's demise has no academic
credence. While there may have been real rivalry between Mozart and
Salieri, there is also evidence that they enjoyed a relationship
marked by mutual respect for one another's talents.

Many classical music critics and experts feel that Shaffer's
portrayal of Mozart as petulant and loutish is unfair. On the other
hand, surviving letters by and about Mozart give examples of his
brutal and sometimes profane sense of humor, his arrogance, his
stubbornness, and penchant for juvenile indulgences. Also, extant
records show Mozart was not a good money manager and suffered from
large debts, as potrayed in Amadeus. Finally, Mozart's relationship
with his father as portrayed in the film seems to be accurate,
judging from the subtext of their letters to each other.

Recent studies suggest that Mozart died of some form of rheumatic
fever (possibly aggravated by overwork and heavy drinking), and not
from any poison. A similar fate befell Felix Mendelssohn who also
demonstrated prodigal gifts for composing - and, like Mozart, did not
survive to his 40th birthday.

Salieri is portrayed in Amadeus as sexually frustrated from a vow of
celibacy that he took in childhood. In real life, he made no such
vow; he was married and the father of eight children.

Performance and filming
The 1980 Broadway performance of the play starred Ian McKellen as
Salieri and Tim Curry as Mozart. Both actors were nominated for Tony
Awards, and McKellen ended up winning. The play itself was also
nominated for costume design (John Bury), and it also won awards for
director Peter Hall, best play, lighting designer, and scenic
designer, both of which were done by John Bury as well.

The play was revived in 2000, and recieved Tony Award nominations for
best revival and best actor (David Suchet).

In 1984, Milo?Forman directed the screen version of Amadeus, which
featured F. Murray Abraham and Tom Hulce as Salieri and Mozart; as in
the Broadway production, both lead actors competed for the annual
award for Best Actor. The film won eight Academy Awards that year,
for Best Picture, Best Actor (F. Murray Abraham), Director (Milo?
Forman), Art Direction (Patrizia von Brandenstein and Karel Cerny),
Costume Design, Best Makeup, Best Sound, and Adapted Screenplay
(Shaffer). It was the inspiration for Falco's song "Rock Me Amadeus."

A young Kenneth Branagh was originally cast to play Mozart in the
film, but was replaced by Hulce at the eleventh hour.

The film version was shot on location in Prague and Vienna. In fact,
Forman was able to shoot scenes in the Tyl Theatre, where Don
Giovanni had debuted two centuries before. Several other scenes were
shot at the Barrandov Studios.

[ 本帖最后由 qqqq2046 于 2006-2-19 01:58 编辑 ]

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MISC from lj

tickets you can call the number any time:

866-811-4111

Go to http://www.berkshiretheatre.org/index.php to see more

The play "Amadeus" is NOT a musical. There are bits and pieces in it of Mozart playing the piano, but not too much. It's a very depressing play, if you know of how Mozart died.

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原帖由 qqqq2046 于 2006-2-18 23:49 发表
candy  今天是偶这个ID一周年滴生日,这个消息来的简直太巧了.......


难道是偶感动鸟天................


还真是很巧~恭喜4Q了,也许Randy的下一个剧目会到中过来呢,祈祷吧~~~

randy是音乐系毕业的,90%可能性会钢琴。

这样啊,我原来还以为他是表演系的呢。。。怪不得他那么喜欢唱歌跳舞什么的~~好想去看看他
弹钢琴啊~em23

[ 本帖最后由 candyperfume 于 2006-2-19 09:04 编辑 ]

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好想去看,RANDY啊,弹钢琴的RANDY,想像ING。。。。。。

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