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  After an overture played on baroque period instruments, this opera  about the persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire opens with  a televised press conference by the business-suited Roman governor  of Antioch. This paradox epitomizes a bold and spectacularly  successful interpretation that merges modern visuals with  18th-century music performed in period style.   The music (glorious, vintage Handel) is entrusted to William Christie,  one of the most respected living conductors of early music. His  phenomenal cast is musically and theatrically right on target. The  staging, by Peter Sellars, has Roman legionaries garbed as a SWAT  team with automatic weapons. The Roman governor is a totally  political animal with a drinking problem. Dawn Upshaw and the  amazing David Daniels, Christian victims, are executed not in a pit  of lions but strapped to tables for lethal injections.    This treatment not only gives dramatic impact to music that began  life as an oratorio; it universalizes the subject into an indictment of  any government that persecutes minorities.  --Joe McLellan
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