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On stage
HUNGARY PLAYS HOST TO WORLD-RENOWNED ENTERTAINMENT
WRITTEN BY Nancy Laforest
Some of the world’s biggest names in entertainment
will soon be appearing on local stages, selling out venues and
heating up crowds in the colder months. Captivating and fanciful,
these performances in dance, music and illusion promise to lift
the spirits of anyone whose late autumn lacks luster.
GOLD AT THE MTA
An allusion
to some of the magic from the past, the Hungarian Academy of
Sciences (MTA) is currently featuring an exhibit of Transylvanian
gold, not seen in Hungary since 1626. Gábor Bethlen, prince of
Transylvania at the time, gave Swedish King Gustav Adolf II,
who was to become his brother-in-law, some extremely luxurious
wedding presents. Now part of the Swedish-Hungarian season of
collaboration, the girfts have been returned and are on display
at the MTA’s headquarters through Dec. 10. They will then go
to the Hungarian National Museum. Undoubtedly the most impressive
wedding gift, displayed in the center of the low-lit room, is
a horse-kit complete with chevalier weapons and dating to the
late 1500s. A saddle of gold, slightly chipped and showing its
age, is displayed next to a thick horse blanket embroidered with
gold. Other accessories include daggers and cases for arrows,
engraved and detailed with innumerable precious stones, namely
turquoise and rubies. These pieces, originating from the Turkish-Ottoman
empire, were extremely extravagant for the time, when notions
of the East were fashionable, still mystical and distant. Gold
coins, maps and supplemental articles dating back 400 years help
evoke the overall feeling of the époque.
DAVID COPPERFIELD
Who better
than world-renowned David Copperfield to bring some mystique
and excitement to those cold winter nights? “An Intimate Evening
of Grand Illusion,” acclaimed as the world’s biggest entertainment
event, combines spellbinding technological effects with Copperfield’s
legendary taste for theater. Setting box-office records throughout
the world, few seats still remain for the Dec. 4-5 performances
at the Budapest Sport Arena. No newcomer to popularity, the magician
began enchanting spectators at age 12. By 16, he was teaching
a course in magic at NYU and soon after had his own award-winning
television show, which was broadcast worldwide. Currently, the
conception and preparation of each feat takes Copperfield an
average two-and-a-half years to perfect. In this particular performance,
the magician will take the stage with a venomous African scorpion,
defying death and promising to pump adrenaline. Having previously
walked through the Great Wall of China, the daredevil will now
perform a similar feat and cross a wall of steel, then go on
to share the secrets for devising winning lottery numbers. With
his extreme mental powers and elements of anxiety and danger,
Copperfield’s latest grand illusion focuses on the realization
of dreams. A chosen few from the audience will be transported
from the stage to the destination of their dreams, appearing
moments later anywhere from Honolulu to the Himalayas. Some lucky
13 spectators will also take part in one of Copperfield’s most
difficult feats and be reunited with someone they’ve loved and
lost through the experience of time travel.
RIVERDANCE
Riverdance,
the Irish performance phenomena, will be awing spectators in
Hungary for the first time this month. The nearly 80-member cast
and crew will open their visit to Hungary in Debrecen Nov. 18,
and move to the Budapest Sport Arena Nov. 20-21. Not to be confounded
with the Lord of the Dance, the Riverdance production is an energetic
and sensual fusion of live Irish and international music, song
and dance. Moya Doherty’s conception, which began as a seven-minute
interval act for the 1994 Eurovision Song Contest in Dublin,
has evolved into a two-hour show and has sold out venues since
its 1995 world premier. Three Riverdance companies currently
exist, one touring Ireland, another in North America and the
Avoca, which is touring Europe. The main choreography of the
dances traces the path of a river and represents the cycle of
life. The current theme of the production, Journey, describes
how the Irish wave of immigration to America helped spread their
culture throughout the world. Drawing on Irish traditions while
also featuring flamboyant flamenco dancers and ballerinas from
Moscow, Riverdance expresses the beauty and powerful dynamism
of intertwining cultures. With this theme now present in Hungary,
and with the troupe’s overwhelming press reviews, these three
performances are expected to be nothing less than spectacular.
DIANA KRALL
Gracing Budapest
on the last leg of her tour, jazz sensation Diana Krall will
be performing Dec. 9 at the Budapest Congress Center. With concert
tickets selling out as quickly as her albums, Krall has been
touring since April to promote her latest album entitled, “The
Girl in the Other Room.” The first to feature some of Krall’s
original compositions, The Girl in the Other Room is an emotional
tribute to her mother, who passed away two years ago. Composed
of cathartic piano playing and songs dealing primarily with gratitude,
homecoming, loss and longing, it will be interesting to see how
Krall’s enchanting voice and captivating style can transfer these
themes to the stage. Presenting songs by Tom Waits and Joni Mitchell,
and shamelessly crossing back to her roots of bop and swing,
the 40-year-old will undoubtedly awe audiences with the diversity
of her acoustic repertoire. Krall began her love affair with
the piano at age four and performed her first show at 15 in her
hometown of Nanaimo, western Canada. In the last 10 years, she
has released more than 10 albums, won two Grammy awards and several
Canadian equivalents, the Junos. The starlet has managed to position
herself as the top-selling jazz vocalist, ground-breakingly reaching
pop star status with her innovative renditions of jazz standards.
With top-rate musicians in her entourage and an unforgettable
voice, Krall’s charismatic performance promises to warm up hearts
and popsicle toes of those quick enough to buy tickets.
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