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Larger than life

April 2024

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BBC Music Magazine

Before Milos Forman’s Amadeus came Peter Shaffer’s theatrical take on Mozart and Salieri, staged in 1979 at London’s National Theatre. lifts the curtain...

- James Inverne

Larger than life

Peter Shaffer's Mozartian murder play Amadeus, the latest from one of the West End's most dependable hitmakers, was arguably the London theatre event of 1979. But its early off-stage shenanigans rather echoed the manipulations of a Mozart opera, with celebrated but capricious director John Dexter the abusive Count Almaviva (Marriage of Figaro), perhaps, and Shaffer the seemingly supine Countess.

Reportedly buttoned-up and nervous in Dexter's presence, bubbling with frustration away from it, all one needs to know about the relationship of playwright and director can be deliciously gleaned from Dexter's published annotations on then-National Theatre director Peter Hall's own published diary entries concerning Amadeus: '28th March 1979 Shaffer: "I would never hold a pistol to John's head. At the moment I would use a pistol to blow his head off. But I wouldn't hold it to his head."

Dexter: "TOO COWARDLY AND AFRAID OF A KICK IN THE BALLS." It's not quite what one expects from the making of an elegant, classically structured play, shot through with intrigue and moral disintegration - or perhaps it is. Dexter's demand that he should have a box office percentage even of other people's future stagings finally proved too much for Shaffer. Breaking with his tormentor, he gave the play instead to Hall, for the National Theatre's Olivier Theatre.

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Shout, exult, arise, praise these days! Glorify what the Almighty today has done!' Early on the morning of 25 December 1734, these words resounded from the choir stalls of the Thomaskirche, Leipzig, to a jubilant accompaniment of festive timpani, pealing trumpets and scampering violins. Seated at a keyboard, the church's director of music Johann Sebastian Bach marshalled the musicians in a performance of the cantata Jauchzet, frohlocket! Auf, preiset die Tage, which preceded the sermon in the morning service.

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