Thanks John--it sounds like a fascinating thing to have seen.
The point that De La Grange makes about a neurotic being incapable of running the Vienna Opera for 10 years is interesting. It makes sense, I guess, but I think we all know about famous, difficult people who sustained control over institutions or their own careers for long periods.
In the case of Mahler, I think an obsessive determination was a key. As I read Vol 2 of De La Grange, I get an detailed view of Mahler's approach to the Opera: he insisted always on quality, as he perceived it. He insisted on good singers, and making fair ones better by giving them opportunities, the same went for the Opera orchestra, and the Philharmonic orchestra--pushing everyone to their artistic limits at the service of the music. Always at the service of the music. Even critics who disliked the man, often had to admit he achieved incredible results as a conductor and producer. Mahler made plenty of enemies in Vienna, but he left an indelible artistic mark there. Being despised did bother him quite a bit, as we often read in this account, but his determination kept him going.
I recently had some brief discussion about why we like Mahler's music so much. There are as many opinions as there are contributors. It seems impossible to put in simple, easily defined terms. All I could say for myself is that, like you and the other John here and others, I take the music mosty on its own terms. The life is interesting, but for me it adds little to how I experience the music. For me, Mahler's work exemplifies the best of everything I like about music. Around the same time I discovered Mahler, I also discovered Wagner. While I think Wagner is one of the all-time greatest, I still enjoy Mahler more. Listening recently to Die Meistersinger, I was astonished to note how often the music reminds me of Mahler. (The "peasant dance" in Act III, for example, sounds like a powerful influence for The Resurrection Symphony, Movement II, but there are many other, subtle examples). Mahler loved this work and insisted on performing in without cuts in Vienna (to great success). Sometimes Mahler sounds to me like a more modern Wagner. While I still have a high regard for Wagner, I admit he has sometimes goes on too long for my taste. That's something I could never say about Mahler--
Thanks again for you contribution
Jay