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FREE ESSAY ON PETER SHAFFER'S AMADEUS

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Symbolism in Peter Shaffer's "Amadeus"
An analysis of the symbolism in Peter Shaffer's play "Amadeus". -- 1,250 words; MLA

"Amadeus"
An analysis of the contrast between the characters of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Antonio Salieri in Peter Shaffer's movie "Amadeus". -- 971 words; MLA

Kent Thompson's "Amadeus"
A review of Kent Thompson's production of Peter Shaffer's play "Amadeus". -- 1,699 words;

"Amadeus" and "Julius Caeser"
A review and comparison between the plays "Amadeus" by Peter Shaffer and "Julius Caesar" by William Shakespeare. -- 2,630 words; MLA

Film Critique of "Amadeus"
This paper assesses and analyzes the film "Amadeus" based on the play by Peter Shaffer. -- 1,205 words; APA

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PETER SHAFFER'S AMADEUS

I believe that there are two ways to critique Peter Shaffer's Amadeus. 
The first, and the easiest for me, is as an artistic work only. 
As an artistic endeavor, Amadeus is a triumph. Particularly stunning is 
F. Murray Abraham's performance as the tortured Court Composer Antonio 
Salieri. Abraham portrays a talented yet mediocre musician who, having 
revered God all his life, shows us clearly that pride goeth before the 
fall. It is Salieri's greed for fame, and pride in his own moral 
goodness that lead him to denounce Mozart as a fiend. When God 
continues to shower favor upon mozart, Salieri renounces God, and vows 
that he will be the instrument to thwart God. Salieri's Fall from Grace 
is brilliantly documented, and Abraham's performance utterly believable. 
Tom Hulce does a splendid job portraying Shaffer's Mozart. His wild 
antics and child-like behavior are charming, his laugh infectious and 
singular, and his mannerisms unique. However, it is the moments when a 
different Mozart is glimpsed -- the tender father, the infuriated court 
composer, and the dying genius -- that Hulce's talent shines through. 
To play a buffoon well is one thing, and to show a serious side to that 
buffoon another. To do it all convincingly is the key to the range of 
Hulce's abilities. 
Additionally, the film is beautifully shot, the costumes enchanting and 
the set design marvelously detailed. The lighting in the final scene 
(depicted above), with its contrasting dark shadows and harsh glare, is 
especially creative. This Academy Award-winning film was crafted with 
great skill, and is worthy of the acclaim it received. 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The second way to analyze this film is as a factual account of history, 
and here is fails miserably. It is true that Peter Shaffer himself 
calls it a fantasia based on fact. It is not a screen biography of 
Mozart, and was never intended to be. The argument, of course, is to 
say that this film gave many people that first real exposure to Mozart, 
and as a result, gave them untruths upon which to base their knowledge. 
That is to say, to the everyday person who knows nothing of Mozart, 
there is no reason to think the events described in Amadeus are 
anything but the truth. Why perpetuate rumors and myths, when the truth 
is available? 
I choose not to enter into this argument. There are valid points to be 
made on either side. I will, however, point out some of the more 
glaring mistakes: 
* While the movie shows the dying Mozart dictating his Requiem to 
Salieri, it actually was his pupil and assistant Sussmayr who helped him 
with it and finally completed the score. The existence of Sussmayr, as 
well as that of Lorenzo da Pointe, is nowhere mentioned in the movie, 
though they each played a far more critical role in Mozart's life than 
many of the characters who are shown in the film. 
* Constanze Mozart may have been prone to spending time at the spa in 
Baden, but she hever packed up and ran out on her husband, as she is 
made to do in the movie. Nor did she ever throw Mozart's father out of 
the house. 
* The Mozarts had two surviving children, not one as depicted in the 
film. Additionally, four children died in infancy. 
*Salieri never planted a servant girl in the Mozart household as a spy, 
nor was it he who commissioned Mozart to compose the Requiem. 
* Neither Mozart nor Salieri ever conducted an entire performance with 
two hands; the late 18th century practice generally was to conduct from 
the keyboard. This is one of a number of stylistic gaffes in the movie. 
(from Amadeus: A Mozart Mosiac) 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, a third element overpowers all of these concerns as to the 
worth of Amadeus. The presentation of Mozart's music, brilliantly 
performed by the Academy of St. Martin-In-The-Fields and conducted by 
Neville Marriner, is breathtaking. Whatever other criticisms there are 
to make of this film, it cannot be denied that it brought about a 
resurgence of Mozart's works into popular culture. 
A personal favorite is the Serenade for Winds, K. 361, 3rd movement. As 
Salieri describes, this piece is exemplary of Mozart's true genius: 
simplicity crafted into the complex. The interweaving melodies become 
impossible to separate, and yet never cross the line to cacophony. I can 
remember, as a young music student, hearing Salieri describe the beauty 
of this piece -- the clarity of the oboe, and the lovely tune of the 
clarinet -- and becoming just as entranced myself by its long, 
mesmerizing journey to a final cadence. 
Also impressive is the inclusion of the Requiem, K. 626, in its 
entirety. The death-bed composition scene in Amadeus may be a bit 
unbelievable, but the use of various movements to accompany Mozart's 
dying, Constanze's return, and Salieri's passion is clever. 
The movie begins with the furious Symphony No. 25 in G minor, K. 183, 
and ends with the deceptively simple Piano Concerto in D minor, K. 466, 
2nd movement. So begins and ends Mozart's life, in Peter Shaffer's 
Amadeus, and perhaps so begin and end we all: starting off in a fury of 
noise and vigor, and in the end, slipping away quietly with time-taking 
ease.
Bibliography
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