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Sing Faster: The Stagehands' Ring Cycle - Hammer Museum
src: hammer.ucla.edu

Sing Faster: The Stagehands' Ring Cycle is a 1999 documentary film directed by Jon H. Else, and distributed by the American Public Broadcast Service as part of its Independent Lens series. The film documents the work - and leisure activities - of a crew of stagehands (members of IATSE Local #16) at the San Francisco Opera, as they prepare and rehearse for a production of Richard Wagner's complete Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring Cycle). The cycle, a set of four operas with a combined run-time of seventeen hours, is regarded as the most ambitious production an opera company could mount.


Video Sing Faster: The Stagehands' Ring Cycle



Synopsis

The film documents preparations for the production at one month prior to opening night, two weeks prior, and on opening night itself. Stagehands rehearse cues for lighting, fog, and the choreographed movement of large set pieces, some requiring twenty people to position - including a two-ton, smoke-belching, articulated dragon head. During scenes, the stagehands relax by playing cards, watching television, and knitting, occasionally wishing for the cast to "sing faster" so that they can go ahead with their work between scenes. Throughout the film, principal stagehand Ken "Spike" Kirkland provides a synopsis of the operas, with his own commentary. In the film's finale, a sixty-second time lapse sequence shows the full opening night performance.


Maps Sing Faster: The Stagehands' Ring Cycle



Production

The majority of the film was shot on a single 16mm camera, using Fuji 500 ASA film, in a 4:3 aspect ratio. The time-lapse shots were recorded with an Arriflex camera mounted to a rail of the theater balcony. Music from the stage production itself was paired with the footage of the stagehands' work. Though the footage was shot in 1990, the film was not completed until 1998.


Ring Festival: The Challenges of Singing Wagner - Hammer Museum
src: hammer.ucla.edu


Release and reception

The film was released on January 22, 1999 at the Sundance Film Festival, where it received the Filmmaker's Trophy.. It was later broadcast as part of the first season of the PBS series Independent Lens on September 27, 1999.

In 2000, the film won an Emmy "for outstanding informational or cultural programming".

Reviewer Allan Ulrich, writing for The San Francisco Examiner, declared that "one could scarcely imagine a more energizing or enlightening introduction to Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen than Jon Else's 60-minute documentary". Oxford University Press called the film "as much fun for opera-haters as for opera-lovers".


Scree Time: Week of May 21 | International Documentary Association
src: www.documentary.org


References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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