Episode #817
Hot Fuzz, Tristan, Spring Awakening
Friday, April 27, 2007
This week in Studio 360, we’re in love – painfully in love. It’s Tristan and Isolde, Richard Wagner’s epic-length opera about young passion. Kurt Andersen talks with video artist Bill Viola about a new multimedia production of the work on stage in New York. We’ll also hear from the creators of the new cop caper Hot Fuzz, and groove to the sounds of the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble, whose 8 horn players are the sons of one legendary Chicago trumpeter.
Still image from "Hot Fuzz"
(Courtesy of Rogue Pictures)
Hot Fuzz
England still isn’t safe from filmmaker Edgar Wright. First it was invaded by zombies, in his cult hit Shaun of the Dead, and now by quick-on-the-draw super-cops. Hot Fuzz is a high-intensity Hollywood-style cop caper set in a quaint village. Kurt talks with Edgar and stars
Hatin' Poets
National Poetry Month is over next week, and no one is more relieved than Dean Young and Tony Hoagland -- two of America’s most highly regarded poets. They think that maybe poets should be paid NOT to write poetry. We eavesdrop on their phone ...
Sitting through Tristan
German composer Richard Wagner turned the love story of Tristan and Isolde into an epic opera. Epic as in, nearly 5 hours long, with almost no plot. Sometimes even the stars of the show nod off. But Amy O’Leary also talked with one woman who was aroused ...
Bill Viola
Video art pioneer Bill Viola is known for his mesmerizing scenes of figures moving in super-slow motion. His work is the backdrop for a landmark production of Tristan and Isolde that ran in Paris and Los Angeles and opens next week in New York. Bill tells Kurt ...
Hypnotic Brass
There are plenty of places you’d expect to find a brass band: on a football field, in a parade, backing Prince at the Superbowl. But on a subway platform? Sarah Lilley listened in on a band of brothers from Chicago who stop commuters in their tracks.





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