When they started to sing I'd never experienced anything like it Their voices and the music were so beautiful
When they started to sing, I'd never experienced anything like it Their voices and the music were so beautiful.". MORE THAN 80 patients at a south London hospital have been recalled after fears that they could be at risk of contracting the hepatitis-B virus. Doctors fear that 88 patients at St George's Hospital in Tooting could be at risk after routine checks found equipment used to treat them might not have been sterilised properly. The problem is with the endoscopes - equipment used to investigate symptoms within the gastric tract. The hospital said that patients who visited the endoscopy unit between 13 and 19 August "may have been at a slightly increased risk of cross infection". All those patients are being contacted and offered a vaccination against the virus.Hepatitis B, which infects up to a third of the world's population, is usually transmitted through sexual intercourse, sharing needles or badly sterilised medical instruments.
Occasionally an acute infection can be severe, with abdominal pain and jaundice. And the cast includes some 260 soldiers as extras who "will participate in the performance both as mass performers and as guards", explained one newspaper.So has the icy and vindictive Chinese Princess Turandot been toned down for China? "No," insisted Mehta "In fact, some of it is quite bloodthirsty. Apart from two performances for all-Chinese audiences when the tickets are cut-price, the cost of a seat is between $150 and $1,250 - evenmore for anyone who also wants the 15-course post-performance banquet.Mehta said: "A production like this costs a lot of money ... Although classical music in the Western world always loses money, we can't afford to lose money here."Some 350 artists and technicians have been flown in from Florence, and there are three casts of principals for the nine performances, including Giovanna Casolla, Sharon Sweet and Audrey Slottler alternating in the title role.
Pizza Hut and Kentucky Fried Chicken are operating food concessions, and the publicity material advises that "international companies will find this event an ideal ambience in which to entertain and extend their contacts to their Chinese business partners". Ordinary workers may have to settle for watching the televised performance.The organisers are offering an event to remember. Below the long sloping, yellow-tiled roofs of the ancestral hall, and surrounded by the red walls of the Forbidden City, Zhang has recreated the imperial Ming court "as magnificent as the Forbidden City itself, to show the greatness of the great dynasty in China's ancient times". Four fake pavilions have been constructed to complete the set. In some scenes more than 1,000 people will be on the 270ft wide stage. Out went the existing Tang dynasty costumes.This attention to detail does not come cheap.
Zhang (the Oscar-nominated director of Raise the Red Lantern) insisted that the $600,000 gold and red hand- embroidered silk costumes, the stylised make-up, the body language of the Western principal singers, and the movements of the 100 Chinese dancers must all be authentically Ming dynasty, in keeping with the architecture of the Forbidden City. They wanted to make sure it was a Chinese opera, a Chinese presentation."And so it is This is a Chinese Turandot, devoid of fake chinoiserie. "Five years ago, I would have said it was impossible because they kept on saying no," said Mehta.Michael Ecker, executive producer from Opera on Original Site, the enthusiasts for staging operas in their authentic venues, said: "Zhang Yimou had to make a very detailed presentation of this project. Just to see this, it inspires you." But it took considerable effort to persuade the Ministry of Culture that staging the opera in the Forbidden City would be a good idea. When the lights go up next Saturday, after four years' preparation, Turandot's heart will finally yield to the Tartar Prince Calaf in precisely the historic setting envisaged by Puccini. Mehta, gesturing at the pavilions, said: "We don't need scenery.
All in all, under the masterful baton of the conductor Zubin Mehta, the $15m (pounds 9m) open-air production is a most improbable operatic extravaganza. And the director is Zhang Yimou, the renowned film-maker, some of whose films are still banned in China, and whose only previous experience of opera was the socialist epics permitted by Madame Mao during the Cultural Revolution. The story is Turandot, Giacomo Puccini's lavish opera about the cruel but beautiful Chinese Emperor's daughter who had her suitors beheaded if they could not answer her riddles - just the sort of plot which the Chinese tend to dismiss as a Western slur on their great civilisation. IT WILL be an event which sums up the Chinese century. The stage is the Forbidden City's ancestral temple, where emperors worshipped their dynastic forebears until the last incumbent, Pu Yi, was ejected in 1924, and which the Communists re-opened as the Workers' Cultural Palace. "Only senior management were invited."Shell to merge? page 18.
