Overture Magazine 2013-2014 March-April 2014 | Page 12

A Midsummer Night’s Dream B r o u g h t t o L i f e. When the BSO performs Mendelssohn’s classic incidental music, visions do appear.  By Martha Thomas About three-quarters of the way into Mendelssohn’s incidental music, Op. 61, to A Midsummer Night’s Dream, there’s a blast of trumpet and the orchestra strikes up a tune as familiar to audiences as the birthday song. Wedding March, Felix Mendelssohn’s celebration of the play’s multiple marriages, takes audiences by surprise, says BSO Music Director Marin Alsop, who will be conducting the piece May 29 –June 1. “There’s always a slightly comic moment when it turns up,” she says. W While the wedding march (familiar to many as the jubilant recessional played after a bride and groom have sealed their vows) is iconic, it’s just one element of Mendelssohn’s incidental music that will be recognized by symphony audiences. The composer wrote the opening Overture, op. 21, as a response to one of his favorite Shakespeare plays when he was 17 years old. He completed the work some 16 years later, in 1842. It’s filled with scampering sprites, regal flourishes, suspenseful buildups, and even references to the troupe of buffoonish traveling actors who perform one of the bard’s most hilarious plays-within-a-play, The Most Lamentable Comedy and Most Cruel Death of Pyramus and Thisbe. Most performances of Mendelssohn’s piece require audiences to imagine the stage action— the young lovers who escape to the forest, the fairy king playing tricks on his inamorata, the transformation of Bottom, the weaver, into an ass. But the BSO production will involve a handful of actors delivering the speeches in this fantastical comedy.