ALL COMPOSERS
ALL OPERAS
TIMELINE
 
Amahl and the Night Visitors
Amelia Goes to the Ball
The Aspern Papers
The Ballad of Baby Doe
The Boor
The Canterbury Pilgrims
The Consul
The Cradle Will Rock
Cyrano
David Rizzio
The Death of Klinghoffer
Doctor Atomic
Evangeline
A Full Moon in March
Gallantry
The Ghosts of Versailles
Goya
A Hand Of Bridge
Harvey Milk
Miss Havisham's Wedding Night
I Was Looking at the Ceiling and Then I Saw the Sky
Judith
The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
The King's Henchman
Lord Byron
The Medium
Merry Mount
Nixon in China
Peter Ibbetson
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Porgy and Bess
The Pipe of Desire
Postcard from Morocco
A Quiet Place
The Ruby
The Sacrifice
The Saint of Bleecker Street
Six Characters in Search of an Author
Solomon and Balkis
The Stronger
Susannah
The Tender Land
Treemonisha
Trouble in Tahiti
Vanessa
A View from the Bridge
The Visitation
A Water Bird Talk
Will You Marry Me?

The Death of Klinghoffer

Music by John Adams
Libretto by Alice Goodman
U.S. Opera
(U.S. Opera Home Page)

About The Death of Klinghoffer

The Death of Klinghoffer, John Adams' second opera, takes as its subject the hijacking of the cruise ship Achille Lauro in 1985. Again the concept for the opera was suggested by director Peter Sellars. The L.A. Opera shared the work's commission but never presented it.

Cast of Characters

The Captain, bar
First Officer/"Rambo", b-bar
Swiss Grandmother/Austrian Woman/British Dancing Girl, ms
Molqui, t
Mamoud, bar
Leon Klinghoffer, bar
Omar, ms
Marilyn Klinghoffer, c
Choruses of Exiled Palestinians and Exiled Jews, etc.

Synopsis

The Death of Klinghoffer is told in a very different style than Adams' previous opera, Nixon in China. While based on historical events, Klinghoffer does not always treat them in a traditionally narrative manner, and the events we see are not always those we expect. Several important events in the historical narrative--including Klinghoffer's death itself--are not seen onstage, but only commented on after the fact. In addition, many of the characters sing their versions of the action as reminiscences, as for example in the Captain's opening aria, "It was just after 1:15," which recounts the original appearance of the hijackers on board. Meanwhile, each scene ends with a number in which the chorus reflects on the events that have occurred. The opera begins with a prelude consisting of two of these choruses, one sung by a Chorus of Exiled Palestinians and the other by a Chorus of Exiled Jews.

Act I begins with the Captain of the Achille Lauro narrating the events of the original hijacking; most of the passengers had disembarked for a tour of the Pyramids when the hijackers first appeared; the remaining ones were rounded up in the ship's restaraunt. Another version of the hijacking story is told by a Swiss Grandmother, one of the passengers, and then by the ship's First Officer, who also tells that a passenger had been shot in the leg, apparently accidentally when a bullet ricocheted off the floor. Molqui, one of the terrorists, sings an aria ("Give these orders") explaining the situation to the passengers and promising them safety. Scene 2 introduces another of the terrorists, Mamoud, a more dangerous and violent man than his companion. The Captain reflects on the fact that every ship is a kind of prison. ("I have often reflected") Another passenger relates how she locked herself in her cabin and stayed there through the entire episode, undiscovered. Mahmoud sings an aria about freedom, contrasting with the Captain's earlier song. ("Those birds flying")

The chorus that opens Act II, "When Hagar was led into the wilderness," recounts the Biblical story of Hagar and Ishmael, representing the beginnings of Arab-Israeli tension. Molqui is frustrated at the lack of a reply to his demands; he is afraid people will die. Mamoud says only, "Now we will kill you all." It is only now we see Leon Klinghoffer for the first time. Explaining that he is normally a person who likes to avoid trouble, he nevertheless goes on to condemn the hijackers, accusing them of simply using their ideologies as a license to fulfill their real desire--to kill. ("I've never been/A violent man") He is replied to in equally harsh terms by another hijacker, called "Rambo." ("You are always complaining") Another passenger tells her story, including her impressions of Klinghoffer. Finally we hear from the last of the terrorists, Omar, a young idealogue who is hoping to die in his cause. At the end of the scene, Omar and Molqi fight, and Molqui takes Klinghoffer away.

The next scene opens with Klinghoffer's wife Marilyn, talking about disability, illness, and death; she assumes that her husband has been taken to the ship's hospital. In fact, during her aria, he is killed, offstage, by the terrorists, who are now threatening to kill another passenger every fifteen minutes; the Captain tells them to kill him instead of a passenger. As the terrorists negotiate with shore, Leon Klinghoffer's body appears and sings a "Gymniopédie". In the final scene, after the crisis has been resolved and the passengers have disembarked, the Captain tells Marilyn Klinghoffer about her husband's death. ("Mrs. Klinghoffer, please sit down"/"You embraced them!")

Performance History

World premiere production:
Théâtre de la Monnaie
World premiere: 19 Mar. 1991
Brussels, Belgium
  • The Captain: James Maddalena
  • The First Officer; "Rambo": Thomas Hammons
  • Swiss Grandmother; Austrian Woman; British Dancing Girl: Janice Felty
  • Molqi: Thomas Young
  • Mamoud: Eugene Perry
  • Leon Klinghoffer: Sanford Sylvan
  • Omar: Stephanie Friedman
  • Marilyn Klinghoffer: Sheila Nader
Conducted by Kent Nagano
Stage direction by Peter Sellars
Choreography by Mark Morris
Set design by George Tsypin
Costume design by Dunya Ramicova
Lighting design by James F. Ingalls
Sound Design by Jonathan Deans
Projection design by John Boesche
Opéra de Lyon
French premiere: 13 April 1991
World premiere production
Brooklyn Academy of Music
U.S. premiere: 5 Sep. 1991
World premiere production

Discography

The John Adams Earbox (including Ceiling/Sky and excerpts from Nixon in China and The Death of Klinhoffer). Various artists, 1999. Compact disc (10 discs). Nonesuch 79453. buy
The Death of Klinghoffer. Opéra de Lyon/Nagano.
Compact disc: Elektra Nonesuch 9 79281-2. buy

last update: 1 Jan. 2003