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Robert Wilson / Philip Glass - Einstein On The Beach

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    🎵 Music 🎵
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    Philip: Bob was the first
    of us to go to Broadway.
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    It was a short run,
    but it was Broadway.
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    And it was very quickly after that
    that we began talking
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    about a piece,
    we didn't know what the piece would be.
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    We came up with the title
    Einstein On The Beach.
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    🎵 Violin Music 🎵
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    I thought of Einstein as a God of our time.
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    We know stories about him
    and we come to the theatre
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    sharing something together.
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    And in a sense there was no need
    to tell a story because we already
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    knew a story.
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    How this man who,
    was a pacifist also,
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    contributed to the splitting of the atom.
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    🎵 Loud Fast Music 🎵
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    Speaker: Einstein was a milestone in that
    it brought an even wider acclaim
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    and gave him a whole new audience
    and gave opera a whole new audience.
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    🎵 Fast Violin Music 🎵
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    I think it's the first time in the history
    of opera in which the opera music
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    was composed around the stage sets.
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    🎵 Fast Violin Music 🎵
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    Woman: I think I've seen Einstein
    40 times or something like that.
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    It's one of the great theatre works
    of the 20th century.
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    If Bob had done nothing but that,
    and he's done so much more.
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    Robert: When we first made Einstein,
    I went to the Metropolitan Opera
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    and asked them if they would do it.
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    I went to the National Endowment for the Arts
    and asked them if they would
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    support an opera
    and they said,
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    'That sort of thing should not be
    in the conventional theatre,
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    you should do that in a loft downtown.'
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    So I though, well, let's see.
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    I think it should be right in our major opera houses,
    and everyone was afraid
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    that we wouldn't get an audience.
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    There wouldn't be a public that would
    come for something like that.
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    At the Met it wouldn't be for 'their audience.'
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    I tried everywhere to raise this money.
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    I went to Paris, France.
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    Einstein On The Beach,
    it was a commission by Michel Guy,
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    who was the Minister of Culture at the time.
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    Philip: The word had gone out
    that there's something unusual had taken place.
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    Jane Hermon was in charge
    of special events at the Met.
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    So Jane Hermon came over to see the piece.
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    She said 'Well, maybe as a special event
    we could bring it to the Met.'
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    Robert: But they wanted me, Robert Wilson,
    Byrd Hoffman Foundation
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    to produce it on their day off.
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    They would allow me to rent the house
    on a Sunday with triple time wages.
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    I was bankrupt,
    I had no money,
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    I said, 'Let's go for it.'
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    🎵 Opera Singing 🎵
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    Benedict: Phil, Bob,
    they were both absolutely dying to see the work
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    seen by American public.
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    It's fine for them to have the European public,
    but for an American it's not enough.
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    They want the American,
    they want them to recognize their work.
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    Robert: I sold tickets from $2 to $2,000.
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    We sold out in two days.
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    And I put the $2 tickets
    next to the $2,000 tickets.
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    [From Stage]
    This court of common pleas is now in session!
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    Woman: We all went as a family
    and we were all quite impressed
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    and I had never been to the Met before
    and we were sitting in like the directors box.
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    And we all felt very special and important.
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    🎵 Loud Fast Music 🎵
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    Woman: My father was a heavy smoker,
    and Einstein was very long without an intermission.
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    And my father sat there throughout
    the whole thing without getting up
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    and taking a break, which was amazing.
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    And then at the end of it when people
    were standing and clapping and cheering,
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    I just looked at him
    and there was tears
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    and such pride in his face
    that it was quite amazing.
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    [Audience Cheering and Clapping]
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    David: The fact that it was at the Met
    was a--really was a downtown going very uptown.
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    What was I think shocking
    for many people was to see the ideas
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    and the aesthetic
    and the--these I guess you could call them
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    downtown elements that Bob was
    embodied in many ways,
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    done with a professionalism that equal
    to anything else on Broadway or at the Met Opera.
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    That was--it was a way of saying
    'We are equal.'
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    Robert: My father said,
    'Why, this is very impressive!'
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    He said,
    'You must be making a lot of money!'
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    And I said
    'No dad, I'm not.'
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    I said 'I produce this work,
    it cost a million dollars to produce it.
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    I raised $850,000,
    I'm $150,000 in debt.'
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    '$150,000 in debt?'
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    And I said, 'Yes sir I am.'
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    And he said, 'Son, I didn't know you
    were smart enough to be able
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    to lose $150,000.'
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    That's probably the nicest thing
    he ever said to me.
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    And I said, 'Dad, it wasn't easy,
    it was a lot of work.'
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    'It was really hard, you know.'
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    Philip: We always think of fame
    and fortune as of they go together,
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    but they don't really.
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    The fame may come first
    and the fortune may come
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    and may not come.
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    Eventually it can come, perhaps,
    but it doesn't always come.
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    But, uh, Bob did something smarter than--
    he stayed in Europe.
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    The big success of Einstein was in Europe,
    there was no one in America
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    that really wanted to work with Bob or me.
Title:
Robert Wilson / Philip Glass - Einstein On The Beach
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
08:12

English subtitles

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