- Luciano Damiani
Luciano Damiani (1923-2007) was an Italian stage and costume designer, who worked both for theatre and opera productions.
Theatre and opera productions
Damiani studied painting and only by chance started working for the stage. Soon he became a close collaborator of
Giorgio Strehler atMilan 's "Piccolo Teatro". International fame came with his famous stage designs for Goldoni's "Le baruffe chiozzote" (Piccolo Teatro, 1964, staged by Strehler) and for Mozart's "Die Entführung aus dem Serail " at theSalzburg Festival 1965 (staged by Strehler, conducted byZubin Mehta ). This production soon became legendary and was revived several times until 1975.In 1966 Damiani created his first stage design for
La Scala ("Cavalleria rusticana ", staged by Strehler, and conducted byHerbert von Karajan ). This production was filmed and eventually shown onPBS 's "Great Performances ".His debut at the
Vienna State Opera was a controversial "Don Giovanni " in 1967 (staged byOtto Schenk , conducted byJosef Krips , withCesare Siepi as the Don). In accordance with Schenk Damiani emphasized the opera's comic and ironic elements and chose to use elements of Northern Italian rather than Spanish architecture which surprised many viewers resulting in controversies between Damiani and Krips. When Damiani appeared before the curtain he was both applauded and booed by the audience.In the late 1960s Damiani loosened his collaboration with Strehler. He started working predominantly with other directors and even started directing himself. In 1969 he directed as well as designed "
Aida " for theArena di Verona Festival (revived in 1970). Though from time to time Damianai returned to the Piccolo Teatro and Strehler. He designed the sets for a noted1974 production ofAnton Chekhov 's "The Cherry Orchard ". In 1974 both Strehler and Damiani returned to the Salzburg Festival for an ill fated production of "Die Zauberflöte " conducted by Karajan.Also in 1975 Damiani started his collaboration with
Luca Ronconi with "The Birds" byAristophanes for Vienna'sBurgtheater . In 1978 at La Scala Damiani designed the stage for Ronconi's production of Verdi's "Don Carlo " conducted byClaudio Abbado . Verdi's "Macbeth" was staged by Damiani and Ronconi forBerlin 's Deutsche Oper in 1980 (conducted byGiuseppe Sinopoli ).In the early 1980s Damiani opened his own small theatre in
Rome , the "Teatro di documenti", where he directed and designed many plays. Only occasionally he agreed to work for other theatres and opera houses. He returned to Vienna's Burgtheater in 1988 for Schiller's "Wilhelm Tell" staged byClaus Peymann . In 1996 he again worked for the Salzburg Festival designing "La Traviata " (conducted byRiccardo Muti and staged byLluis Pasqual ).Damiani is generally regarded as one of the leading stage designers of the 20th century.
Production designer for "Man of La Mancha"
Damiani designed the sets and costumes for the 1972 film, "Man of La Mancha", based on the hit Broadway musical. Star
Peter O'Toole , who portrayed bothMiguel de Cervantes and his literary creationDon Quixote in the film, was only one of several who reportedly criticized Damiani's sets as being "too depressing"; however, it should be noted that the creators of the stage musical intended the physical look of it to be rather plain, as they specified in articles written for the original souvenir program of the show, so the drabness of the film's sets may have been quite intentional. Those who criticized them may have been expecting the standard "pretty" set designs usually found in movie musicals.The single stage set for the original stage production, suggesting the interior of a prison, consisted of a plain
four leaf clover -shaped stonelike slab, with a hugedrawbridge -like staircase to allow prisoners to enter and exit. There was also a grille overhead to allow light into the prison, and a trap door in the floor. Every other scenic element was only imagined or vaguely suggested, as in an improvised play (audiences never actually saw the windmill that Don Quixote tilts at, and a single mattress with a cushion served as a bed).The film, being more "realistic", expanded the use of scenery, with more literal use of it. Don Quixote's fight with the windmill was actually shown, in an elaborately staged sequence, instead of taking place offstage as in the play. The two largest sets in the film consisted of the interior of the prison, and the courtyard of a shabby inn, respectively. Don Quixote's actual bedroom was also shown, as was the kitchen of the inn. There was also a vastly more colorful town square featured in the opening scene - a scene not included in the original stage version, which showed a religious festival. Three different directors,
Albert Marre ,Peter Glenville , andArthur Hiller were hired at separate times to make the film, with Marre and Glenville both being fired early in the project, and Hiller responsible for the final result. However, according to associate producerSaul Chaplin , it was not Hiller who was responsible for the final physical look of the film."Man of La Mancha" was Damiani's only film.
A production of Verdi's "Macbeth" with Damiani's set designs is available on DVD, as is the film version of "Man of La Mancha".
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