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Anonymous dearieme said...

I've been in a Scottish audience - theatre rather than opera, admittedly - where people stood up and left. Even people who won't rise to that are perfectly capable of leaving at the interval. And once I was in a theatre audience for a comedy sketch show where people simply booed a great deal.

I've heard booing at the opera in Berlin. Mind you, it was an Italian opera.

May 28, 2011 at 6:20 AM

Blogger mike shupp said...

Well, there's applause and there's applause. General rule, the leading singers and the orchestra conductor always get one solo bow, no matter how lackluster the performance (toss in another for the pair of singers, another for the cast as a whole, and maybe yet another for the three principal artists). Multiple appearances before the curtain, however, won't happen unless the performers are genuinely persuaded by the volume and manner of applause that their public does indeed wish to bestow a compliment.

At least, that's the way it has always looked to me.

May 28, 2011 at 7:02 PM

Blogger Donald Pittenger said...

dearieme -- I notice that some Seattle opera attendees leave for good during one intermission or another. But it's hard to tell why. Previous commitment? They attend opera to show off, so put in a token appearance? They're too sensitive to handle the near-obligatory death scene at the end? Or just maybe they don't like the performance.

Mike -- Interesting point. A curtain call is a must, but its duration is a variable. I will pay attention to this in the future.

May 29, 2011 at 7:04 AM

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