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Mo And Sal: The Reel Story
A steaming pile of faketion
by George Beckerman

Not too many people know this, but…contrary to longstanding rumor, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s death was not caused by poisoning at the hands of his colleague and rival Antonio Salieri. Who done it?  Have patience.
 
Mozart was born on January 27, 1756 in Salzburg, which would be today’s Austria.  Anna Maria Mozart’s mother’s milk didn’t agree with baby Mo, so his breast nourishment was handled by his father, Leopold. Sadly, Mrs. Mozart never mastered the art of fileting which led to Leo’s tragic death by fishbone choking in 1787.  As a result, thirty-one year old Wolfie was left woefully short on vitamin D.
 
Young Mozart’s interest in music, particularly the piano, quickly became an obsession. Unfortunately, the Mozarts were so poor they couldn’t afford to so much as look at an upright. In those days, a fee was charged for even accidentally glancing at one. Thankfully, Anna Maria was so dedicated to nurturing her son’s talents that she built him a piano. For the keys, she used the teeth of walleye and yellow perch that she hooked from the Tauglbach River.  For the piano wire, Mother Mozart deployed horsehair. The local equine population always galloped away in fear when they saw her headed their way brandishing scissors.  Eventually, they asked the local horse barber to just give them The Vin Diesel. 
 
Other than being portrayed by F. Murray Abraham in the film “Amadeus”, not much about the brilliant Antonio Salieri is known. Sal’s signature piece was the opera “Tarare”, which the Viennese public preferred to Mozart's “Don Giovanni”.  Nevertheless, Mo received most of the critical accolades, which along with Saliere’s chronic halitosis, left a foul taste in his mouth.
 
Conspiracy theories are not a contemporary right wing invention. In the 1700’s one such was that Salieri planned to murder Mozart, steal his final composition and present it as his own. That false premise belied the character of Salieri who was as honest, upstanding and clean as the air that was inhaled in the days before greed turned dead, buried dinosaurs into fuel for cars.
 
To insure that her progeny’s “Requiem” stayed numero uno, Anna Maria invited Sal for dinner planning to have him choke on the same trout bone that killed her husband. Problem was that Salieri’s mother taught him to chew his food one hundred times before swallowing. So it was on to plan B for Mother Mozart. She would filet and then liquefy the trout, leaving the bones in Salieri’s drinking stein, while her son’s heirloom chalice of reduced fish remained boneless.
 
But Amadeus, with all his faults, was a staunch proponent of table etiquette.  He switched with Sal because he thought that a dinner guest should have the fancier drinking vessel. Mo was ironically about to perish the way of his choking father, but fortunately he was rushed to the nearest Urgent Care where health insurance covered eighty-percent of his throat de-boning.  An uninsured Mozart would later die at age thirty-five from a strep throat. Antonio Salieri outlived his rival by over three decades.
 
Moral: Die young and they make a movie about you starring the kid from “Animal House”. Live a long life, and you get F. Murray Abraham.