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Reviews for Worth Noting: Editorials, Letters, Essays, an Interview, and Bibliography

 Worth Noting magazine reviews

The average rating for Worth Noting: Editorials, Letters, Essays, an Interview, and Bibliography based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2021-07-11 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Kameron Duncan
A good examination of Friedkin's career that unfortunately ends while he was still in a significant slump.
Review # 2 was written on 2008-01-18 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Tracy Mahoney
Read the STOP SMILING interview excerpt with filmmaker William Friedkin LIKE AN ACT OF GOD: WILLIAM FRIEDKIN By James Hughes (This interview originally appeared in STOP SMILING The Chicago Issue) On Tuesday Dec. 27th, the Library of Congress selected The French Connection (1971) as one of 25 films to be added to the National Film Registry. The film, which also won the Oscar for Best Picture, was directed by Chicago native William Friedkin, whose career in television and film spans six decades. Friedkin got his start directing live television for WGN-TV in the mid-Fifties before advancing to documentaries (The People vs. Paul Crump, 1962), network television ("The Alfred Hitchcock Hour") and feature films (The Exorcist, Sorcerer, Cruising, To Live and Die in LA). A director known for his versatility, Friedkin has also achieved noteriety as a director of operas. In his interview with STOP SMILING — a discussion that focuses largely on his days growing up in Chicago — Friedkin took the time to discuss his thoughts on the opera, and his impressions of working on some of the world's premier stages. Stop Smiling: In the past few years you've been active in the opera, directing several productions throughout the world. William Friedkin: I just came back from Italy, where I did Aida for the Turin Opera. I'm now preparing Salome for Munich, and two operas for the Kennedy Center in the fall. I have several others in the works. I've been directing operas since about 1998. Again, I got into it quite by accident. I love it. It's a wonderful experience in all ways. SS: Is there a difference between how your productions are staged in the U.S. and Europe? WF: The different opera houses have different standards. The toughest place I ever worked was Israel, at the Tel Aviv Opera where I did Samson and Delilah. It's sort of a kibbutz mentality, where there's no one in control. Everyone has to have a say, which is not how I work. SS: Regarding your approach to opera, you told the New York Times: “I don't think you need to perform it as though Victoria were still on the throne.” What then should the approach be of a contemporary opera director? WF: The context for that is this: I try to fulfill the intentions for the composer first, as I understand them. My philosophy with an opera is the surgeon's credo, which is first, do no harm. Nevertheless, I realize that an opera like Aida was written and first performed in 1871 and was lit by gaslight, and Victoria was on the throne. I'm not going to do it so faithfully that I'm going to light it with gaslight. In fact, in some of Verdi's instructions to the singers, he tells the female singers to be careful crossing the stage at one point — that they lift their skirts up – so they don't get burned by the gaslight. My reference to that is, where I try to be faithful to the intentions of the composer, I still can't do it like he was alive. You're doing it now with contemporary sensibilities and equipment. That doesn't mean that I would take Aida, which is set in ancient Egypt during the reign of the pharaohs, and move it to Iraq and set it in the CNN bureau, or something to that effect. I don't think you need to change the time period to make a story relevant — it's about emotions that are extraordinarily relevant. Read the complete interview excerpt...


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