Such is the title of the first scene of Prokofiev's opera of War and Peace, pausing so briefly at the Kennedy Center and becoming my first opera.








Four hours in length, more than 400 actors and musicians and then…
In an operation that involved a container ship, 2 cranes, 6 weeks on the open seas, 17 trucks, 57 workers, 137 crates of costumes and wigs, 8,000 nuts and bolts and 20,000 pounds of hanging scenery, the gargantuan Mariinsky Opera and Orchestra production of Sergei Prokofiev's opera has been imported from St. Petersburg and reassembled on the stage of the Kennedy Center Opera House.
All this, and there were only going to be two shows. The numbers sold me. I was surfing late late Wednesday when the Post story on the wild spectacle arrived. I'd never seen an opera before, and I knew I had to get a ticket. Rushed to the Kennedy Center's site, got the last cheaper orchestra seat where I could still see the translations above the stage.
Blitzer caught the first show. I saw the second all Sunday afternoon.
Who knew the peace came before the war? Maybe you, if you've read the book. I have not! But what peace and, when it arrives, what war. The strength of the leads played into the depth of the staging, in the opening spring-at-night scenes into palace dances into snowy flights into burning towers into execution meadows into a final, mortal sleep.
The tons of scenery and stage-wide revolving platform were powerful but set mood, just as the love story fit under the empire battle. Only when they disappeared too much did life slow. Thankfully, not often.
Favorite moments: Andrei grasping the fallen pillow as he sang. Their New Year's Eve dance away from the crowd. Anatol's evil. Bezukhov's good. The last minute of act one and first minute of act two. The long, beautiful intermission outside on the Potomac. Napoleon rising as the stage turned. The Russian struggle revealed as it turned further. The cannons pointed at my part of the opera house. The giant red puppet. Natasha's voice. Fire becoming snow. The dropped flags. The bravos.
So: "Life is not over at 31! We must believe with all our strength in the forces of spring, happiness and joy, if we wish to be happy ourselves."
