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I am trying to find some information on opera costumes. I have no knowledge of opera or of any characters (other than Phantom which will be played to death I am certain). I am looking for some advice and names of some opera characters. Oh, and just a note of clarity, I am a dude; so no dresses, etc; my friends have already have a hee-hawing good time suggesting that route! Thanks a bunch in advance.

Signed,

Uncultured and Desperate

2006-12-08 01:32:23 · 6 answers · asked by CB1305 2 in Society & Culture Holidays Halloween

6 answers

You could dress up as Rigoletto. Rigoletto is the main character from the Verdi opera "Rigoletto" which is a very famous and well known opera. Rigoletto was a court jester so it should be fairly easy to pull a costume together.

2006-12-08 01:51:08 · answer #1 · answered by Coco28 5 · 0 0

Well, it's too bad you won't go the Diva route. I suggest you Google images of Figaro (character in, I think, two Mozart operas). You could go with the Viking look and be Siegfried from Wagner's Ring Cycle. Also Google images of "The Barber of Seville" and "Rigoletto". Then, head out to Goodwill or another second-hand clothes store because you will probably be able to find some stuff that you can work with to create your costume.

2006-12-08 01:41:45 · answer #2 · answered by FL LMT 3 · 0 0

My suggestion to you is to research male opera singers such as Pavaroti he has a distinctive beard and belly you could have a lot of fun dressing up as him.If you want more of a theme you can research the Opera Madame Butterfly and dress up as the Navy officer whom fell in Love with his unfortunate Japanenese bride.

Here is the story for your info
http://www.culturevulture.net/Opera/Butterfly.htm
(info taken from above website for informational purposes)

Madame Butterfly originated in a story by John Luther Long and was adapted for the stage by David Belasco. The play premiered with great success in New York in 1900, then quickly crossed the Atlantic for a London production where it was seen by Giacomo Puccini. Puccini's first version of the opera failed at La Scala in 1904, but a revised version was successful the same year, the version that we hear today, one of the most frequently produced operas in the entire repertory.
Butterfly is different from many operas. It is intimate, devoid of spectacle, taking place completely within a house in Nagasaki. There is one straight plot line, without subplots. Girl wins boy, girl loses boy, girl commits hara kiri. What makes the piece work are the characterizations of Butterfly and her Captain Pinkerton, both in the drama and in the rich and luscious Puccini score.
From when we first meet Pinkerton, a dashing officer in the United States Navy, it is clear that the man is a philandering heel, infatuated with the fifteen year old Butterfly, cognizant of her fragility, but "not content with life unless he makes his treasure the flowers on every shore." He says as he compares her to a butterfly, "I must pursue her even though I damage her wings."
The stage for the tragedy is set. We meet the beauteous Cio-Cio San, not a complete innocent - she has been a geisha, after all - but nonetheless fragile, unworldly, and in love with the handsome sailor. She deceives herself, despite abundant warnings, as to Pinkerton's motives.
The tale unfolds with well written dialogue, sung to music which captures the feelings of love and yearning and pain, raising the entire experience into the realm of great art, transcendently moving. This simple plot provides the vehicle for the arias of love and loss and hope and despair, the stuff of which the very best operatic music is made.
CV most recently heard Butterfly live at a San Francisco Opera production, a production made worthwhile by the fine dramatic interpretation of soprano Catherine Malfitano. We have just watched the newly released video of the 1995 filmed version from French director Frederic Mitterrand, starring Chinese soprano Ying Huang and tenor Richard Troxell. The singing is fine, the soundtrack quality is first rate. Mitterrand has opened up the visuals with some scenic shots, nicely unforced. His skillful camera placements allow changing vantages for viewing the interpersonal reactions of the leads, particularly effective in the ensemble numbers. There is one jarring, inexplicable note, when Mitterand has Cio-Cio San's uncle, a priest who comes to curse her for giving up her religion for the American, appear out of the sky, like a spirit, instead of the very real figure in the libretto.
CV has seen more Butterflys over the years than he can count. So long as this opera is well sung, we will go back again and again. It still is fully capable, as the video proved again, of drawing tears.
- Arthur

2006-12-08 01:36:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yahoo shopping/costumes

2006-12-08 13:46:14 · answer #4 · answered by Ralph T 7 · 0 0

Dress up as "Otello" from the Shakespearean opera
http://www.mauroaugustini.com/Jagosofia%202.jpg
http://www.teatroromea.org/var/plain/storage/images/programaci_n/programaci_n_futura_no_publicada/enero_junio_06/otello/12874-1-esl-ES/otello_large.gif

2006-12-08 01:58:51 · answer #5 · answered by sadie_oyes 7 · 0 0

Go as Amadeus....do a google search and several sights will have photos......but you got to have his hair!

2006-12-08 01:40:22 · answer #6 · answered by J Somethingorother 6 · 0 0

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