Word has it that last night’s premiere of Don Giovanni had at least one patron up in arms over the show’s apparently risque content. Here’s one attendee’s version of what happened at last night’s premiere:
“The opera itself was awesome. It’s very, very cool. Nmon Ford, who’s cut and has just a beautiful body, plays Don Giovanni. At one point he comes out while the supporting cast is frolicking in the water, and as he’s trying to seduce one of the women in the water, he completely takes his clothes off except for like a g-string. And the other people in the opera have on white cotton bloomers, so when they get wet you can pretty much see right through them. At one point, this guy whose wife is in love with Don Giovanni opens up a trunk full of polaroid pictures, hundreds of them, like proof that Don Giavanni’s a womanizer, and he shows her the pictures and then he just throws them all over the place. As intermission I picked up a couple of them and I saw they were rea photos of nudes, like girls on girl, guys on girls, that sort of thing. They were kind of blurry, but you could still tell what was going on. So as were were walking out, this guy comes out and he’s screaming about ‘pornography,’ about how they get these young actors who need the work and put them in thse ‘pornographic roles.’ He was just ranting and raving in the lobby, then he got on his cellphone, and he started very loudly about calling the police and chief Greenberg. He was going to write a letter or get in touch with the police and Spoleto. And this guy wasn’t old or anything — 50-ish, maybe even late 40s, just some conservative right-wing fool. He didn’t stay for the second half, obviously. So it’s a little racy. But it’s incredible, it really is. And this is my first opera, besides Peony Pavilion last year.

To be able to transform a space… and make it more memorable than a dream is Memminger as it stands now…
Spoleto gives all of us the ability to visualize an artist’s dream in a real performance space that transcends the unreal…
I bet many people will remember it for the rest of their lives … a true hope of any director/choregrapher..that creates a new work
Now the challenge will be how to transform the place into something unique each an every time something is showcased there in years to come…
May the force be with us… Spoeleto and all of Charleston
Comment by Jill Eathorne Bahr — May 30, 2005 @ 3:35 am