普選,唔係一人一票,投票選特手咁簡單。普選,其實仲有好多野。
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A very fine performance, indeed.

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Act I, Scene One: Donna Anna’s Courtyard
It is night and Leporello, pacing outside the house of the Commendatore, grumbles about his unpleasant work, having to serve someone like Don Giovanni. His musings are interrupted as a raging Donna Anna flies out of her house pursuing the masked Don Giovanni, who has just tried to seduce her. When the Commendatore comes out to defend his daughter, Don Giovanni kills him in a duel. Anna returns with Don Ottavio, her fiancé, and finds her father’s body.
Act I, Scene Two: Plaza Major
Don Giovanni, on the prowl again, encounters Donna Elvira, a lady whom he had abandoned. Don Giovanni asks Leporello to distract her, which he does by reading from a catalogue of his master’s love affairs. Don Giovanni escapes.
At a peasant gathering, Zerlina and Masetto are celebrating their coming marriage. Don Giovanni is smitten by the pretty girl and gets Leporello to drag Masetto off while he makes his advances on Zerlina. His progress is interrupted by the reappearance of Donna Elvira, who spoils his plans by warning Zerlina about the libertine.
Momentarily thwarted, Don Giovanni meets Don Ottavio and Donna Anna, the latter now in mourning. Anna recognizes his voice and knows he is the man who tried to seduce her. She swears vengeance and enlists Ottavio’s help. She leaves and Ottavio sings about how much he loves her.
Act I, Scene Three : Don Giovanni’s Garden
At his palace, Don Giovanni plans a new party. In the garden, Zerlina asks Masetto to forgive her apparent infidelity, and Don Giovanni invites them in. Elvira, Anna, and Ottavio appear, masked and cloaked. Giovanni tells Leporello to invite them in as well, while the three vow to punish the libertine. Inside, as the orchestra strikes up a minuet, Giovanni asks Leporello to distract Masetto and takes Zerlina off. When the girl cries for help, Anna, Elvira, and Ottavio confront Giovanni.
Act II, Scene One : Don Giovanni’s Garden
It is night. Leporello asserts that he is fed up with his master’s behavior. Giovanni appeases Leporello with a few coins and then orders him to exchange cloaks and hat with him, so that Giovanni may better woo Elvira’s maid. Elvira appears, and Leporello, feigning his master’s voice at Giovanni’s command, manages to take her off into the night. The Don is now free to serenade the maid.
When Masetto appears leading a band of peasants to punish Giovanni, the disguised rake gives them instructions to spread out, but keeps Masetto with him. He then beats Masetto and escapes. Zerlina hears Masetto’s moans and gently comforts him.
Act II, Scene Two : Donna Anna’s Courtyard
Elvira has followed the disguised Leporello to Anna’s house, and now Anna, Ottavio, Zerlina, and Masetto, all of them mistaking servant for master, join in denouncing him. Frightened, Leporello finally unmasks and manages to escape. Ottavio goes to get the authorities to arrest Giovanni. Meanwhile, Elvira feels sorry for Giovanni, as the noose tightens.
Act II, Scene Three: The Cemetary
Leporello finds Giovanni in a deserted cemetery, where a statue of the slain Commendatore suddenly addresses Giovanni in tones of impending doom. Giovanni orders the frightened Leporello to invite the statue to supper. The Commendatore accepts.
Before going to arrest Giovanni, Ottavio again pleads his love to Anna, but she asks him to postpone their marriage so she may mourn her father properly.
Act II, Scene Four: Don Giovanni’s House
In the banquet hall, Leporello serves supper as a stage orchestra provides musical accompaniment. Utterly distraught, Elvira enters and begs Giovanni to repent, but he dismisses her contemptuously. As she leaves, she screams in terror — the stone guest has arrived. Leporello hides. The statue speaks: “Don Giovanni, you have invited me to supper.” The statue invites Giovanni to supper in return, which Giovanni accepts by giving his hand to the statue. The moment the statue seizes his hand, Don Giovanni feels pain and terror, and eventually is dragged down to hell. The other principals appear and sing the moral of the story: As you live, so shall you die.
source: http://www.wbopera.org/0304/Giovanni/story/index.html
不過我最喜歡的莫札特,是「魔笛」喎。
### 我是一個愉~快~的捕鳥人,整.天.只是笑~的捕鳥人,我大~名~鼎~鼎~到處傳,每.一.個.城,每.一.個.人。###
嘩小時候的記憶呢,真係厲害!
Labels: 國事天下事
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Labels: 我最愛閱讀
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