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Context Theatre / TheRiseAndFallOfTheCityOfMahagonny

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1[[quoteright:241:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/10076a_6020.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:241:[[StylisticSuck Oh mooooooon of Alabaaaamaaaaa,]] [[GratuitousEnglish we nooooow must say goodbyyyeeeee...]]]]
3
4->''Why, though, did we need a Mahagonny?\
5Because this world is a foul one\
6With neither charity\
7Nor peace nor concord,\
8Because there's nothing to build any trust upon.''
9-->-- from the translation by W.H. Auden and Chester Kallmann
10
11A satirical, somewhat minimalist anti-Nazi opera by Creator/BertoltBrecht and Music/KurtWeill (authors of ''Theatre/TheThreepennyOpera''). ''Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny'' (''The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny'') was first performed in 1930, though a concept version, ''Mahagonny-Songspiel'', had been presented three years earlier.
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13The play tells the story of the city of Mahagonny, founded by Leocadia Begbick, Fatty the Bookkeeper and Trinity Moses, bandits running away from the law. Because gold is "easier to take from men than from rivers", Mahagonny is a place where men coming from working in the gold mines can have peace and pleasure. The first act deals with the arrival of the prostitutes (including Jenny from Oklahoma), and Jimmy Mahoney (Paul in the first drafts, Jimmy [=McIntyre=] in the Los Angeles Opera's latest performance) and his friends: men seeking the heart of a heartless world. In the second act, the characters end up having to deal with the consequences of their decadence.
14
15The concept was meant to parody the "state of freedom" (Heilstaat) that the Nazi party was trying to create when the play was written. In the first act, the characters aim to live a life of uncomplicated luxury within the dictatorship of the three criminal founders (a parody of Hitler's plans for Germany). When this is determined to be too "inhuman", the characters instead decide in the second act to live a life of violence, decadence and greed, taking whatever they can take in life (a commentary on what the Nazi ideology would inevitably become). Predictably, the Nazi party was ''not'' amused, shut down the performance in 1933, and Brecht and Weill fled Germany soon after.
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17''Mahagonny'' is referenced throughout Creator/LarsVonTrier's ''[[Film/{{Dogville}} Manderlay]]''. It's also one of Creator/DannyElfman's favourite musical scores. With ''Mahagonny'', Brecht and Weill ended up ''heavily'' influencing Music/StephenSondheim's works, both in style and structure.
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19Rock fans may know it from the ''Alabama Song'' from Music/TheDoors' album ''[[Music/TheDoorsAlbum The Doors]]'', which is lyrically and melodically directly inspired by the work.
20----
21!! ''The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny'' contains examples of:
22* AccentUponTheWrongSyllable: the protagonist is called Jimmy Mahonney, pronounced MAH-Honee, so some American versions, to keep it along the music, rename him Jimmy [=MacIntyre=]. (The original Irish pronunciation is indeed MAH-honee, even though the usual American one is Ma-HOH-nee)
23* AmericansAreCowboys: When this was first produced, a production note specifically insisted "Wildwest- und Cowboy-Romantik" was to be averted.
24* BandOfBrothels: The prostitutes are one of the factions at the end.
25* BoomTown
26* {{Bowdlerise}}: The "Love" scene, and the recurring chorus that anticipates it.
27* CasualtyInTheRing: Alaska Wolf Joe.
28* CrapsackWorld
29* DeathByGluttony: Jacob dies because eating is what he enjoys the most, so he eats to death.
30* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Mahagonny has been compared to the Weimar Republic and the revolt by Jimmy to do whatever you want as the rise of Nazism.
31* DoomedProtagonist: Jimmy never had a chance.
32* DownerEnding: Mahagonny gets destroyed by the struggle of different factions and the fail of providing desired commodities to all.
33* DrunkenSong: The one Jimmy sings at the saloon to mourn the death of his friends.
34* {{Expy}}: Jenny from ''Theatre/TheThreepennyOpera'' would even be considered a straight-up transplant of Jenny of Havanna, if the stories took place in the same universe. Both parts were originated by Miss Creator/LotteLenya.
35* GratuitousEnglish: The Alabama Song and the Benares Song.
36* GriefSong: There's pretty much one at the end of each act respectively for a typhoon, the death of Joe and Jacob and the death of Jimmy and Mahagonny.
37* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Jenny from Oklahoma... kind of. She's a nice girl, but in the end, she isn't willing to spend her own money to save Jimmy.
38--> '''Jenny''': "The things people ''expect'' from us girls these days..."
39* HangingJudge: Trinity Moses appears to be a bit over enthusiastic on condemning people
40* HopeSpot: The song ''The God of Mahagonny''.
41* IntercourseWithYou: Essentially every song sung by or related to the chorus of prostitutes.
42* KangarooCourt
43* ListSong: Jimmy sings what he would rather do than be in Mahagonny (eat his own hat, drive to a farm in Georgia) while his friends try to talk him down singing another list song about all the things he could be doing in Mahagonny.
44* LonelyPianoPiece: Jimmy's execution.
45* OutlawTown
46* {{Prospector}}: Jimmy, Jacob, Billy and Joe.
47* RichBitch: Leocadia Begbick.
48* SevenDeadlySins: The reason that the characters get killed; Joe by anger, Jacob by gluttony and Jimmy by greed. Lust, avarice and sloth get a song while pride is noticeably absent.
49* SuddenlyEthnicity: "I am from Havana. My mother was a white woman." ("Ich bin aus Havana. Meine Mutter war eine Weisse.") The role was originally written without a specific actress in mind, but was given to Miss Creator/LotteLenya (an Austrian redhead) for the original performance.
50** Nowadays, how surprising this is depends on the casting. It's not much of a shock that Music/AudraMcDonald's Jenny (pictured above) presumably had an Afro-Cuban father.
51* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: Toby Higgins.
52* SoiledCityOnAHill
53* TenorBoy: Jimmy is a tenor, and Fatty seems to be the least evil of the three bad guys.
54* WretchedHive
55* YourDaysAreNumbered: A 2010 Berlin performance toys with this. In the original play, two characters die from sheer decadence: one by overeating and one by losing a boxing match. In the 2010 performance, the stage directions were projected onto a screen and often ignored or even protested by the characters, following Brecht's philosophy of "Verfremdung". So when Jacob sees that the stage directions say he has to die, he first starts protesting, then laughing, then whimpering, then falls over helplessly and ''stays there for the rest of the act while other characters are swimming in money around his corpse''. He's joined by the boxer character (Joe) soon after. The performance is... unsettling.
56* WhereTheHellIsSpringfield: It is implied to be set in the U.S., but it's anything but clear which part of the country Mahagonny is located--it's apparently in a good place to catch ships coming south from Alaska, and also fairly close to Pensacola. Brecht has stated that this was on purpose, to make the story universal.

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