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Terry Gilliam
Terry Gilliam

WOS Radio: Edward Seckerson Talks to Terry Gilliam

Date: 13 April 2011

Terry Gilliam - the sole American member of the original Monty Python troupe - has lost none of his devilish ability to provoke. For his operatic debut with Berlioz' The Damnation of Faust at English National Opera he has threatened to turn the English surtitles into the original French. If you thought his fantastical and highly theatrical movies had exhausted his ability to shock and surprise, think again.

In this exclusive OperaCast Giliam tells Edward Seckerson (whilst doodling his thoughts on a huge sheet of cartridge paper) that Berlioz' curious hybrid of an oratorio - which he eventually called "a dramatic legend" - appealed in a filmic way because so much of the dramatic narrative happens between its elaborate tableaux. So he's storyboarded the entire staging and, like Mephistopheles himself, his capricious imagination has gone into overdrive. What, one might ask, has Faust sold his soul for this time around? Think Goethe, think German art and history from the late 19th century to the mid-20th. And never forget, says Gilliam, that the London Coliseum was once a variety theatre. Go figure.

To listen to the full recording of the Q&A, click the 'play' button below; or to subscribe and download from iTunes, click here.




- by Edward Seckerson

Related Content

Booking Tickets & Show Listings
The Damnation of Faust Listing Page
Internal Links
Theatregoers get metaphysical with Gilliam's Faust - 20th May 2011 blog
The Damnation of Faust starstarstarstarstar - 7th May 2011 reviews

External Links
English National Opera's Homepage
Terry Gilliam's Homepage



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