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A Lady with a Hand Mirror and An Operetta Singer, coloratura
A Lady with a Cake Box, s
A Lady with a Hat Box and A Foreign Singer, ms
A Man with Old Luggage, First Puppet, and An Operetta Singer, lyric tenor
A Man with a Paint Box (Mr. Owen), t
A Man with a Shoe Sample Kit and Second Puppet, bar
A Man with a Cornet Case and A Puppet Maker, b
Entertainers, mimes
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A number of people are gathered in the waiting room of a railway station.
One of them sings about the many uses of the hand mirror she always
carries. The other passengers ask Mr. Owen, a man with a paint box, what
he does; before he can answer, they are distracted by a puppet show, in
which two puppets talk about building a ship to sail away on. As the
puppet show ends and a 'foreign singer' begins to sing, one of the
passengers thinks he recognizes another, but he is mistaken. One of the
characters explains that he never uses new luggage, "lest it be stolen on
the way along." His luggage looks well used, but we are not sure
whether he was the one who used it. Another passenger has a cornet case;
he describes the instrument inside, but will not open the case. Another
passenger makes hats for the movies; the other passengers mistakenly
thinks she makes hat boxes.
The orchestra plays a medley, Souveniers de Bayreuth, of music from Tristan und Isolde, The Flying Dutchman and other Wagner operas. Another passenger reveals that he is a shoe salesman; the ladies are anxious to see his wares, but he, too, refuses to open his case. As two operetta singers begin another entertainment, the others ask Mr. Owen
about his painting. One of the ladies has a cake box, in which she says
she keeps her lover. Mr. Owen thinks that he saw them together, once; she
thinks he is mistaken. Mr. Owen taks about a magical ship he imagined
when he was younger. A puppet maker appears, talking about all of the
things that go into the making of puppets: people's faces, hats, shoes,
even luggage. The other passengers try to convince Mr. Owen to paint
their portrait. They wonder what is in his paint box; as they are trying
to push him into place to paint them, his box falls open, revealing that
it is empty. The puppet show concludes, and everyone but Mr. Owen leaves
to continue their journey. Mr Owen enters the puppet stage and sings
about the ship of his childhood dreams.
World premiere production:
Center Opera
World premiere: 14 October 1971
Cedar Village Theater,
Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Coloratura: Sarita Roche
- Soprano: Barbara Brandt
- Mezzo-soprano: Janis Hardy
- Lyric Tenor: Yale Marshall
- Tenor (Mr. Owen): Vern Sutton
- Baritone: Barry Busse
- Bass: Michael Foreman
- Mimes: Wendy Lehr, Bain Boehlke
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Conducted by Philip Brunelle
Stage direction by John Donahue
Set and costume design by John Barkla
Lighting design by Carlos Ozols
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Postcard from Morocco
Premiere production recording:
Minnesota Opera/Brunelle, 1972.
Compact disc: CRI CD 614 (reissued from Desto DC 7137/38 [LP]).
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last update:
1 Jan. 2003
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