From BroadwayWorld.com
NEW YORK (AP) — Philip Glass has been commissioned by the New York City Opera to compose an opera that imagines the final months in the life of Walt Disney.
The announcement was made Monday by the opera's incoming General Manager Gerard Mortier.
The opera, "The Perfect American," is based on a recent novel by the American-born writer Peter Stephan Jungk. It will open City Opera's 2012-2013 season and honor the composer's 75th birthday.
Mortier scrapped the traditional 2008-09 season while the company's home at Lincoln Center undergoes a $200 million renovation. Instead of staged operas, the company is presenting concert performances around the city.
As part of the 2009-10 season, City Opera will present Glass' "Einstein on the Beach," which was first staged in New York in 1992. The season will focus on 20th-century works.
The story of Disney in "The Perfect American" is told by a fictional Austrian cartoonist who worked for Disney in the 1940s-50s.
Wow. Philip Glass and Walt Disney in one sentence. Who would have thought? I'm very curious about this project. I can't imagine what Glass will make of it. Should be great. As always :) )
(Talking about Disney: (well, not the man persé) Glass' recent scores for Neverwas and Les Animaux Amoureux wouldn't sounds displaced in a Disney movie...)
Posted by: Léon Mulder | September 29, 2008 at 05:06 PM