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Mozart's
Letters, Mozart's Life (2000) |
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Mozart created music imbued with
humanity and glittering with sheer sensual beauty, instantly accessible and eternally
fresh, profoundly satisfying both emotionally and intellectually. A prodigy who performed
and composed for the courts of Europe from the age of six, his genius was of the caliber
called "gifted," the term used when extraordinary talent cannot be explained by
rationally understood causation.
It is that extraordinary quality that Peter Shaffer used as the fulcrum
for both his play and his Academy Award winning screenplay which, while drawing on the
life of Mozart, is not intended as a literal biography. Shaffer calls it "a fantasia
on themes from Mozart's life." Titled neither Wolfgang nor Mozart,
but Amadeus, the composer's middle name which means "beloved of God,"
Shaffer sets up a fictionalized dramatic conflict between an at once profane and blessed
Mozart (Tom Hulce) and the imperial court composer Antonio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham), a
musical mediocrity who aspired to fame and greatness, only to be shadowed during his
lifetime and forever after by the greatness of his contemporary.
Told from Salieri's point of view, the story follows the arrival of
Mozart at the court of Vienna where Salieri, along with his fellow musical sycophants,
curries favor with Emperor Joseph II. Mozart, portrayed as vulgar and with a high-pitched
laugh, wins his way repeatedly by virtue of his captivating music, flaunting both social
and musical convention. Salieri fumes and then plots, knowing in his heart the gulf
between his own ordinary capabilities and the unending magic that flows from Mozart's
brilliance. The contrast between them is also a riff on the theme of
mortality/immortality. Mozart dies young and is buried in a pauper's grave, but lives on
through his music; Salieri lives to an old age of bitterness as he observes his own
musical oeuvre disappear from public interest.
The writing, the characterizations, and the physical production of Amadeus
are conceived with a finely drawn degree of exaggeration, enough to satirize the
pompousness of the court and the royal hangers-on, as well as to heighten the contrast
between Mozart's great art and his bumpkin-like behaviors. But both Shaffer and director
Milos Forman (Man on the Moon, Ragtime)
stop well short of broad comedy, maintaining a sufficient sense of reality to sustain the
serious dramatic premise. The same exaggeration heightens nearly to melodrama Mozart's
relationship with his stern and humorless father.
The soundtrack, which has been remastered for the release of the
director's cut, integrates Mozart's music into the context of the story. Excerpts from
some of the operas, performed by leading operatic singers, were fully staged for the film
in the restored 18th century Tyl Theater in Prague where Mozart himself conducted the
premiere of Don Giovanni over two centuries ago. But The Magic Flute,
which Mozart wrote for the people's theater, was staged in a reconstructed version of
that far less elegant space. (It's icing on the cake to have a perfectly
recorded performance of the young June Anderson as Queen of the Night.)
The music, of course, is on an equal footing with the drama, but is
also crucial to its development. With each new composition, with each new musical triumph
for Mozart, Salieri's desperation grows, his prayers intensify, and his hubris swells. F.
Murray Abraham (Finding
Forester, The Name of the Rose) deservedly won the Academy Award for his
performance as Salieri, a performance that soars with literate intelligence and
emotional intensity. (That Salieri, as a musician, could so fully appreciate and keenly
articulate his rival's accomplishments is a pointed irony here.) Tom Hulce (Parenthood, Fearless) finds the passion in the genius and his performance
suggests that the here exaggerated coarseness of Mozart was perhaps an integral part of an
uninhibited nature that also allowed boundless creativity to flow.
The lavish eye-filling production, filmed mostly in Prague, aimed for
historical authenticity in a period of Baroque extremes of fashion. Forman's direction is
impeccable, sustaining the unique tone on which the production hinges. Even with twenty
added minutes in the new director's cut, Amadeus at just over three hours is not
a minute too long--an unmitigated pleasure, one to be savored in a theater with a first
rate sound system. The DVD is a must for every music and film lover, but it cannot
substitute for the grandeur of Amadeus on the large screen.
- Arthur
Lazere