Peter Sellars (born September 27, 1957) is an American theatre director, noted for his unique stagings of classical and contemporary operas and plays. Sellars is a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he teaches Art as Social Action and Art as Moral Action. He has been described as a key figure of theatre and opera for the last 50 years.[1]
In the summer of 1980, Sellars staged a production in New Hampshire of Don Giovanni, with the cast, costumed and presented to resemble a blaxploitation film as part of the Monadnock Music Festival in Manchester, New Hampshire. Opera News described it as "an act of artistic vandalism". In the winter of 1980, Sellars's production of George Frideric Handel's Orlando, again at the American Repertory Theatre, was set in outer space. Later, Sellars studied theatre and related arts in Japan, China, and India.[3]
In 1981, Sellars worked on a project with Andy Warhol and Lewis Allen that would create a traveling stage show with a life-sized animatronic robot in the exact image of Warhol.[4] The Andy Warhol Robot would then be able to read Warhol's diaries as a theatrical production.[5] Warhol was quoted as saying, "I’d like to be a machine, wouldn’t you?"[6] Sellars planned to show the Andy Warhol Robot at the Kennedy Center and American National Theater and Academy.[7]
In August 2006, he directed a staged performance of Mozart's unfinished opera Zaide as part of the Mostly Mozart Festival at Lincoln Center in New York. In late 2006, Sellars organized the New Crowned Hope Festival in Vienna, Austria as Artistic Director (the festival was part of Vienna Mozart Year 2006). He directed the premieres of Saariaho's oratorio La Passion de Simone and Adams's opera A Flowering Tree, also in Vienna.[22][23]
In 2007, Sellars delivered the "State of Cinema" address at the 50th San Francisco International Film Festival on April 29. He introduced the screenings of Mahamat Saleh Haroun's Daratt and Garin Nugroho's Opera Jawa, two of the New Crowned Hope films. The festival also screened Jon Else's documentary, Wonders Are Many, which features an account of Adams's and Sellars's creation of the first San Francisco production of Doctor Atomic. An extensive commentary by Sellars is included in the 2007 DVD of Grigori Kozintsev's King Lear by Facets Video.[citation needed]
Sellars was criticized for straying too far from composers' intentions in 1997 by György Ligeti.[32]
In 1998, Sellars was awarded the Erasmus Prize for "combining in his original creations the European and American cultural traditions".[33] In 2001, he was awarded the Harvard Arts Medal.[34] In 2005, Sellars was awarded The Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize, given annually to "a man or woman who has made an outstanding contribution to the beauty of the world and to mankind's enjoyment and understanding of life."[35] In 2014, alongside Chuck Berry, Sellars was awarded the Polar Music Prize.[36]
The German soprano Elisabeth Schwarzkopf said of Sellars, "I have seen what he has done, and it is criminal. As my husband used to say, so far no one has dared go into the Louvre Museum to spray graffiti on the Mona Lisa, but some opera directors are spraying graffiti over masterpieces."[37]
Sellars's long-time collaborator John Adams has called him an "intensely serious and sophisticated artist with the moral zeal of an abolitionist."[38]
The Palestinian-American academic, literary critic and political activist Edward Said described Sellars as an "extraordinarily gifted man". In a 1989 review of Sellars's productions of Don Giovanni, Così fan tutte and The Marriage of Figaro, Said wrote that the "turns that Sellars rings on Mozart's courtly operas make you wonder why wooden delicacy and affectations of authenticity have satisfied us for so long. We learn through Sellars that they never did satisfy us, not just because their silly conventions leave Mozart untouched but also because they protect the laziness and incompetence of most opera companies." In 1996, Said characterized Sellars's Covent Garden staging of Hindemith's Mathis der Maler as "compelling and brilliant in conception" and "deliberately uncompromising in its appeal to a late-twentieth-century audience".[39]
^Maurin, Frédéric (2002). "Did Paris steal the show for American postmodern directors?". In Bradby, David; Delgado, Maria M. (eds.). The Paris Jigsaw: Internationalism and the City's Stages. Manchester University Press. p. 244. ISBN0-7190-6183-0.
McClary, Susan. The Passions of Peter Sellars: Staging the Music. University of Michigan Press, 2019. ISBN 9780472131228
Interview with Sarah Mahler Kraaz, "Peter Sellars, St. Matthew Passion, Opera." In The Bloomsbury Handbook of Music and Art, edited by Sarah Mahler Kraaz and Charlotte de Mille. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2024, page 311–315. ISBN 9781501377716