Showing posts with label opera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label opera. Show all posts

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Itinerary


Place de la Bastille, Paris
July, 2026

So I am out of town, on a European trip I'm thinking of as the follies of summer 2026, because of the length of the trip (five weeks) and what I am seeing. I'm currently baking in Aix-en-Provence, where temperatures have been in the 90s. Maybe it will actually rain today and cool things off a bit? That would be nice. Also, I should check out the public pool that is less than four blocks from where I'm staying.

Here's where I am, roughly, and what I am seeing or have seen. I'm at the Festival d'Aix-en-Provence right now.

  • Francesco Filidei, Accabadora, 7 July (world premiere run and very beautiful)

  • R. Strauss, Die Frau ohne Schatten,  9 July

  • Béla Bartók, Bluebeard's Castle, 11 July (in concert)

  • Michael Spyres (recital) 13 July

  • Verdi, Les vêpres siciliennes aka I vespri siciliani 16 July (in concert; I wish it were staged, but this is a one-off and it's the only middle or late Verdi opera that I have never seen.)

  • Henze, El Cimmaron, 17 July


Amusingly, when I was on line for the security check for Accabadora, Barrie Kosky, the director of Frau, floated past me and chatted with some folks about a yard away; when I left Frau the other night, I had just cleared the Grand Theatre steps when Francesco Filidei, composer of Accabadora, crossed my path. I didn't recognize him fast enough to buttonhole him and tell him how much I'd love the opera; he'll just have to wait for my review. Or maybe he'll be at Bluebeard tonight.

The Frau run is ending in a couple of performance and was live streamed the other night when I saw it. It's a collaboration with a couple of European opera companies, so it'll be traveling. It is magnificent, I think the most psychologically compelling of the three productions I have seen since 2013. And there was a lot of great singing as well. (I do not remember much except the glorious orchestra and how loud one Gwyneth Jones was in 1989, with the late Christoph von Dohnyani conducting.)

After Aix, I am spending a few days on the coast in a beach town, hoping to go out on a boat where they give you lunch and you swim in interesting places. I've loved doing this in Hawaii, so.

Then it's on to Munich, where I'm spending eight days and seeing only three operas:
  • Rusalka, Dvořák
  • The Excursions of Mr. Brouček, Janáček (overnight runout to Bregenz, Austria)
  • Der Freischuetz, von Weber
My last major stop is Salzburg (I'll be in Munich the night before I head home):

  • Bizet, Carmen 30 July

  • Massenet, Werther Aug 1

  • R. Strauss, Ariadne auf Naxos, Aug

  • Messiaen, Saint François d’Assise  4 Aug

  • Rossini, Il viaggio a Reims 5 Aug. Also directed by Barrie Kosky, so I have high hopes for this comic rarity. And I will finally see Cecilia Bartoli, who has never sung staged opera in the Bay Area and hasn't given a recital there in decades.

  • Mozart, Cosi fan tutte, 6 aug. This will be my fifth Cosi since 2021.


It's a big Strauss year for me, between Daphne (Seattle), Elektra (SFO), Frau (Aix), and Ariadne (Salzburg); also, I'm seeing a few rarities like Brouček and Freischuetz.

How this got started: well, last fall I was thinking back on my many years of opera going and found myself wondering whether I'd ever see the Messiaen again. It left me utterly baffled in 2002, when San Francisco Opera presented the U.S. premiere. (So far it's the only U.S. production of the work.) An idle web search showed me the Salzburg performances; then Aix announced their schedule, and I had to do something in between, right?

Note that there will be radio broadcasts (delayed) of the Aix productions; the schedule is at Parterre Box and note that those times are all Eastern. Add or subtract accordingly. You've missed the livestream of Frau, which was available in Europe unless you have a VPN.

I'm reviewing all of this for SFCV or Parterre Box, so watch for links, eventually.

Tuesday, June 02, 2026

Whitney George's The Curious Case of Doctor Jekyll & Mr. Hyde

Poster for "The Curious Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," by Whitney George


Composer Whitney George has what she calls a Gothic chamber thriller, The Curious Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, playing in New York City from June 10 - 13. It sounds like a lot of fun, if you like that kind of thing, which I do, and I wish I could go!

It's at the Shiner Theater of the Sheen Center for Thought & Culture; the four performances include a matinee.

Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday performances at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday performance at 1:30 p.m.
Tickets start at $40.
18 Bleecker Street  New York, New York, 10012



 

Monday, June 01, 2026

A Tale of Two Opera Houses




War Memorial Opera House
View from the Stage
Photo courtesy of the War Memorial

If you read this blog, you know that my home opera house is San Francisco's War Memorial Opera House. The WMOH opened in 1932 – yes, there's a significant birthday coming up; watch for a nice funding raising campaign* – and seats roughly 3200 people in sections called Orchestra, Box, Grand tier, Dress Circle, Balcony Circle and Balcony.

In the photo above, you can see that the orchestra is fairly deep and there's a significant overhang of the box level over the back of the orchestra. In the level above the boxes, the Grand Tier is in front, then, across an aisle, the Dress Circle rises above it.

Above that, there's the Balcony Circle, and behind it, the Balcony. 

For marketing and sales purposes, each of the levels is subdivided in various ways, to provide different price points depending on the desirability of the seats.



Metropolitan Opera House
View from the Stage
Allegedly Opening Night, 1966

The photo above is New York's Metropolitan Opera House, which opened in 1966. The Met seats 3800 people across six similarly named levels, but each named level gets its own separate physical tier. The Orchestra is extremely deep, with the back of Orchestra level a lot farther from the stage than the back of the WMOH orchestra level is from the stage. 

At the Met, the Parterre level houses the main box level, though, interestingly, every level up to the Balcony has boxes along the sides of the house. So, the Met levels are Parterre, Grand Tier above that, Dress Circle above that, Balcony above that, and waaaaay up there, the Family Circle. I do not have height measurements for the interior of the two houses, but the Met's Family Circle, and probably the Balcony would be above the roof of the WMOH.

Basically, any time you're in one of the tiers, even the $$$$ boxes, you're farther from the stage at the Met than at the WMOH.

I recently took in the Met's productions of Tristan und Isolde and Innocence, sitting in the Family Circle for my first Tristan and the Dress Circle for my second, in the Dress Circle for Innocence. I bought my own tickets, because, without a paid review, it was not clear when I asked for them that I would be able to get press tickets. 

Hoo boy, the sheer size of the house created quite the distance, physical and emotional, from what was happening on stage.

For Innocence, the Met used Simon Stone's production, which was created for the 2021 Aix-en-Provence world premiere, and which has been used by the commissioning opera companies. The Met was a "sponsor" of the production, and I admit, I don't know exactly what that means.

It's the production we saw in San Francisco, the one with the giant rotating set; I attended the dress rehearsal and opening night (I can't recall what I did with my subscription ticket), then watched a performance from backstage and wrote about it for SFCV

Everyone sang well, but I was shocked at how little impact the singing actually had. I've seen the Danish bass Stephen Milling several times and he's always been magnificent, pulling off such feats as stealing the show while singing Hagen in Götterdämmerung. But here? It could have been any good bass on stage; there was nothing like the dramatic or vocal impact Milling brings to everything he does. I was far more moved by Kristinn Sigmundsson in SF.

So, this was the last time I'll be up in the tiers at the Met; in the future, no matter the cost (if I can't get press tickets), I'll be in the orchestra somewhere, where I'll be able to actually connect with the music and singers.

More about Tristan, eventually.



 

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Opera Parallèle 2026-27 Season

Opera Parallèle has a fascinating season planned for 2026-27. Here's the repertory and descriptions of the three operas they'll perform; full cast information will follow in August.

SALT & SEA – WORLD PREMIERE

November 14–21

The company’s 17th anniversary will open Nov. 14–21, with the world premiere of Salt & Spirit, a new theatrical work rooted in the musical traditions of the Gullah-Geechee people of the Carolinas. This evocative production draws on a rare collection of resurfaced Gullah spirituals from the late nineteenth century, reimagining ancestral songs through a contemporary theatrical lens that blends classical, jazz, and traditional influences.

 Developed and performed by tenor Victor Ryan Robertson and arranger/pianist Adrianne Duncan, in collaboration with Opera Parallèle Creative Director Brian Staufenbiel, Salt & Spirit brings these powerful songs into a richly theatrical world. Inspired by Robertson and Duncan’s song cycle, Gullah Meditations, this moving tribute to cultural memory, resilience, and storytelling honors the enduring spirit carried through Gullah-Geechee song.

The Gullah-Geechee people are descendants of enslaved Africans who worked on rice, indigo, and cotton plantations along the lower Atlantic coast. The unique nature of their enslavement on islands and in isolated coastal areas allowed them to retain many aspects of their ancestral culture in ways which are clearly visible in their contemporary arts, cuisine, music, and language.


THE DIVING BELL AND THE BUTTERFLY — WEST COAST PREMIERE

March 11–14, 2027

Following the company’s great success with Everest, Opera Parallèle is very pleased to be reunited with the creative team of composer Joby Talbot and librettist Gene Scheer for their poignant opera, The Diving Bell and The Butterfly, set for March 11-14, 2027. This West Coast debut will feature a newly created chamber orchestration by Ben Foskett, commissioned by Opera Parallèle.

Based on the true story of French journalist Jean-Dominique Bauby, this powerful work explores resilience, memory, and the triumph of the human spirit. Following its 2023 world premiere at The Dallas Opera, the creative team sought to bring this story to more intimate settings, deepening the audience’s connection to Bauby’s journey. With this reorchestration for chamber ensemble, Opera Parallèle enhances the story’s authenticity and emotional impact, bringing Bauby’s voice even closer.

The opera follows Jean-Dominique Bauby, who, after suffering a massive stroke, is left with “locked-in syndrome”—fully conscious but unable to move or speak, except for blinking his left eye. Trapped inside his own body, Bauby embarks on an astonishing journey of resilience, dictating his memoir of 1997, letter by letter through blinks. The opera vividly captures his struggle, memories, and imagination, weaving an emotional and immersive musical tapestry that explores the force of individual courage and the victory of communication against all odds.

Opera Parallèle’s award-winning Nicole Paiement will be on the podium and highly praised Brian Staufenbiel will direct this new production. This two-act opera will be sung in English with English supertitles.


TAKING UP SERPENTS — WEST COAST PREMIERE

May 2027

Taking Up Serpents explores themes of faith, superstition, morality, kinship, and destiny with an eclectic folk-inspired score by critically acclaimed Indian American composer Kamala Sankaram, and an original story informed by librettist Jerre Dye's family roots in the Deep South.

From “one of the most exciting composers in the country,” (The Washington Post), Kamala Sankaram’s one-act chamber opera Taking Up Serpents, will have its West Coast debut following past productions at Washington National Opera, the Glimmerglass Festival and Chicago Opera Theater.

The story regards Kayla, a 25-year-old young woman who works at Save-Mart in Gulf Shores, Alabama, and gets a phone call from her estranged mother informing her that her father, a fire-and-brimstone Pentecostal snake handling preacher, has been dangerously bitten by one of his snakes and lies dying in a hospital. Kayla’s journey home forces her to confront her troubled upbringing in this dramatic story.

Nicole Paiement will conduct the orchestra and singers in a new production created and directed by Brian Staufenbiel.

Friday, November 07, 2025

Hansel und Gretel at Opera Orlando: Two Free Performances on Nov. 8

 


Opera Orlando Hansel und Gretel
(photographer not credited)

Gingerbread on stage? Must be Englebert Humperdinck's Hansel und Gretel, one of my favorite operas (I love it pretty much unreservedly), though honestly it is terrifying and very much reflects widespread hunger in Germany at the time it was composed.

Regardless, Opera Orlando is offering two free performances tomorrow, Nov. 8. Here are the details:

FREE performances of family-friendly Hansel & Gretel

WHEN: Saturday | November 8, 2025 at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

WHERE: Grand Avenue Neighborhood Center

800 Grand Street | Orlando, FL 32805

TICKETS: Email Info@OperaOrlando.org

Sung in English.

Maybe it's been cut ("reimagined") as only four characters are mentioned in the press release. (Hard to believe they're omitting the Sandman and Dew Fairy, but what do I know?) Regardless, here's the cast, which includes a mezzo witch! I have seen it only with a male witch:

  • Alexandra Kzeski as Gretel 
  • Mezzo-soprano Ruoxi Bian as Hansel
  • Mezzo-soprano and education director Sarah Purser as the Witch
  • Baritone Logan Tarwater as the Father

Monday, November 03, 2025

Hello, Star at Opera Parallèle

 


Hello, Star
Chorus; Aniyjah Garrett as Young Celeste; Aisha Campbell as Celeste's Mother
Photo by Stefan Cohen, courtesy of Opera Parallèle


A few weeks ago, both SFCV and The Chronicle had previews of Opera Parallèle's newest Hands-On-Opera, a community opera based on Stephanie S. V. Lucianovic and Vashti Harrison's beautiful children's book Hello, Star. You can read them here:

I saw the last of three performances of Hello, Star and I was charmed and delighted by the work and the performance. Jarrod Lee created a wonderful libretto from a very short picture book and Carla Lucero's score was just about perfect: beautiful and so suggestive of the cosmos. Between the two of them, the opera is singable, absorbing, suitable for the young singer performing the role of Celeste, with lovely choral writing.

Lucero and Lee did a brilliant job with a small ensemble, an amateur chorus, a child singer in a major role, and a short length. The opera has all the wonder of the book.

The singers were all terrific; the chamber ensemble sounded bigger than it was. And L. Peter Callender's direction was great, working on a tiny stage and making every look, every gesture, every movement count. The costumes, by Alia Brown, were lovely; Giulio Cesare Perrone's two-side set was clever and also charming. 

Here's the cast:
  • Christabel Nunoo, Adult Celeste
  • Aniyjah Garrett, Young Celeste
  • Aisha Campbell, Mother/Trainer
  • Bradley Kynard, Big Star
Congrats to all; I wish I could have seen this more than once, and I hope that Hello, Star will receive many more performances.

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Rigoletto, Santa Fe Opera

 


Duke Kim (Duke of Mantua) and Kayla Nanto (Countess Ceprano)
Rigoletto, Santa Fe Opera
Curtis Brown for Santa Fe Opera

In my review, I said that Duke Kim was made up such that he looked like a cross between Prince and Raul Julia as Gomez Addams. If you don't believe me, web search is your friend. Last year, Greer Grimsley, in The Righteous, looked like a cross between Barry Sonnenfeld, director of The Addams Family and Addams Family Values, and Michael Tilson Thomas. Maybe these pop culture references are a thing at Santa Fe.

Monday, August 18, 2025

House Debut


La Bohème, Act 1
Santa Fe Opera, July, 2025
 Soloman Howard (Colline), Long Long (Rodolfo), Efraín Solís (Schaunard), Szymon Mechliński (Marcello), photo by Curtis Brown for the Santa Fe Opera


Not at the Santa Fe Opera, which I've been attending since 2008, when I saw Adriana Mater, Billy Budd, and Radamisto, but at Parterre Box, which published my review of Santa Fe's La Bohème today. Grateful thanks to Harry Rose for the opportunity to write for Parterre Box, although it's bittersweet: Parterre Box's intended reviewer, Patrick Mack, died unexpectedly earlier this year.

I'm expecting more reviews. John Allison, editor of Opera Magazine, saw a different performance from the one I saw. Note that registration is required for Opera Now and a subscription is required to read Opera Magazine.
  • Lisa Hirsch, Parterre Box. Did the well-nigh perfect La Bohème at San Francisco Opera make me crankier than I otherwise would have been about this production? You bet. (NB: will get embarrassing errors, both mine, fixed post-haste.)
  • Thomas May, Memeteria; continues at Opera Now; he is much more positive about this production than I was.
  • John Allison, Opera Magazine (link to follow; his Santa Fe reviews will not be published for a while)
  • Heidi Waleson, Wall Street Journal (paywall)
  • William Burnett, Opera Warhorses
  • Harlow Robinson, SFCV

Merola Grand Finale

 


Chea Kang as the Sandman
Hansel und Gretel
Photo: Kristen Loken, courtesy of Merola Opera

The Merola Grand Finale took place this past Saturday, August 16, at the War Memorial Opera House. As always, there was a ton of great singing. Chea Kang, above, was particularly wonderful as Humperdinck's Sandman, from Hansel and Gretel. Between her singing and Elio Bucky's canny direction, I couldn't take my eyes off her.

Media roundup, links to follow for the other writers:

Tuesday, August 05, 2025

Recent Articles

I've published a couple of articles in SFCV that I never posted specifically about:

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Opera Saratoga 2025

I cannot attend Opera Saratoga's summer season, but it's awfully interesting looking. I would love to see La vie Parisienne; Offenbach's operettas are not done much in the U.S., and the English National Opera's Orpheus in the Underworld in November, 2019, was fantastic. Also, "vividly immersive thriller" is quite intriguing!

La Vie Parisienne at Universal Preservation Hall
Friday, June 20, 2025 at 7:30 pm
Sunday, June 22, 2025 at 2:00 pm
Thursday, June 26, 2025 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, June 28, 2025 at 7:30 pm

She Loves Me at Universal Preservation Hall
Saturday, June 21, 2025 at 7:30 pm
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 at 7:30 pm
Friday, June 27, 2025 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, June 28, 2025 at 2:00 pm
Sunday, June 29, 2025 at 2:00 pm

In a Grove at Ferndell Pavilion in Saratoga Spa State Park
Music by Chris Cerrone, libretto by Stephanie Fleischmann
Described as a "vividly immersive thriller," so yeah I'd love to see this.
Wednesday, May 28, 2025 at 5:00 pm & 7:00 pm
Thursday, May 29, 2025 at 5:00 pm & 7:00 pm
Rain date: Saturday, May 31, 2025 at 5:00 pm & 7:00 pm

Mass for Women in Bathrooms at Universal Preservation Hall
Sunday, June 22, 2025 at 7:30 pm
Friday, June 27, 2025 at 2:00 pm

Saturday, February 08, 2025

Adriana Mater


Cover art c/o Deutsche Grammophon
Black & white photo of Kaija Saariaho
Text on photo:
Kaija Saariaho
Adriana Mater
Esa-Pekka Salonen
Fleur Barron Axelle Fano Nicholas Phan  Christopher Purves
San Francisco Symphony    San Francisco Symphony Chorus
DG logo

The world premiere recording of Kaija Saariaho's Adriana Mater was released a few weeks ago by Deutsche Grammophon. It's drawn from performances at the San Francisco Symphony in June, 2023, just days after Saariaho's death from glioblastoma. The performers are listed above in my description of the artwork accompanying the release; I think that alt text doesn't actually work on Blogger.

The performances were a deeply emotional event for the performers and director Peter Sellars. Salonen and Saariaho had been friends since their school days and Sellars directed the premieres of her first two operas, L'amour de loin and Adriana

The recording is currently available only as a download, but physical media will become available next year.

UPDATE, February 8, 2025: This recording won a Grammy for Best Opera Recording. You can stream it on major platforms. I haven't seen anything yet about physical media; I'll buy the CDs if that format is available.

 

Sunday, December 01, 2024

Opera 2024

Here's a list of all of the operas I saw in 2024, posted now rather than on December 31 because I won't be seeing any operas between now and the end of the year. (I have already ruled out an East Coast trip for Die Frau ohne Schatten at the Met.) I mean....Gurrelieder doesn't count, right? I'll be basking in its glory at the LA Phil in a couple of weeks. An asterisk indicates that the opera was new to me. 

  • Bulrusher, West Edge Opera*
  • Jacqueline, West Edge Opera*
  • The Finch Opera, Opera Parallèle*
  • Balls, Opera Parallèle*
  • Fellow Travelers, Opera Parallèle*
  • The RighteousSanta Fe Opera* (world premiere)
  • The Magic Flute, San Francisco Opera, Opera San José
  • Don Giovanni, Merola Opera, Santa Fe Opera
  • The Abduction from the Seraglio, Festival Napa Valley
  • Cosi fan tutte, Royal Opera, SFCM
  • Innocence, San Francisco Opera* (U.S. premiere)
  • Partenope, San Francisco Opera
  • Der Rosenkavalier, Santa Fe Opera
  • L'elisir d'Amore, Santa Fe Opera
  • The Daughter of the Regiment, Livermore Valley Opera
  • Tristan und Isolde, San Francisco Opera
  • The Handmaid's Tale, San Francisco Opera* (West Coast premiere)
  • Carmen, San Francisco Opera
  • Un ballo in maschera, San Francisco Opera
  • Bluebeard's Castle, San Francisco Symphony
  • Erwartung, San Francisco Symphony
  • The Merry Wives of Windsor, Pocket Opera*
  • Florencia en el Amazonas, Opera San José*
  • Dido and Aneaes, Festival Opera
  • La voix humaine, Festival Opera
  • La Bohème, Opera San Jose
  • La Flora, Ars Minerva* (U.S. and modern premiere)
Does Pierrot Lunaire count? It's dramatic but not like Erwartung. I saw it twice this year and had never seen it before.

Saturday, November 23, 2024

Carmen, San Francisco Opera


Drogen and members of the SF Opera Chorus.
Also: Christian Van Horn as Escamillo
Photo: Cory Weaver / San Francisco Opera


I saw the latest SF Opera Carmen last night, and came home mostly wishing I'd swapped my ticket as soon as I could for the Tristan matinee, the livestream of which I watched. An even better move might have been to swap for whichever La Bohème cast I don't have already, because, really, both casts are quite attractive.

It's not that the Carmen was bad, although neither was it really good. I am definitely Carmen-ed out, in the sense that I've seen it too damn many times.  Last night's performance never grabbed me and made me pay attention.

It is true, in defense of everyone involved, that I was extremely tired, because it was my sixth performance in ten days, or something like that. I had also written a long article for Opera and done the last interview for a different long article that I'm filing in a few days. I got soaked in the rain, which was dispiriting. So: tired.

The performers I saw were all more than competent. Conductor Benjamin Manis seemed good; energetic in the right ways and right places, if not exactly French, to the extent that I'm able to pin down what that means. I'll note that André Cluytens's 1950-ish recording of the opera is often cited as the height of French style. Certainly you can't go wrong with the excerpts? complete recording? by the great Régine Crespin.

But there wasn't a whole lot of fire on stage, by which I mean heat and chemistry between Don José and Carmen, the combustion that would explain his obsession with her and the lengths he will go to possess her. 

I'm putting it that bluntly because when a person stalks and then murders his ex to keep her from moving on to a new partner, we recognize that as domestic violence. I have no sympathy at the beginning of the opera in this staging, when he's clearly going to be executed for murder. 

The opera should be played for what it is; José should become more and more dangerous, starting early on. And that's not what I saw. Maybe it's Jonathan Tetelman (José), maybe it's the direction, maybe it's both. I do not buy that Carmen is a demon who drives men to murder. I do buy that jealous men kill their ex-partners; it's in the newspapers on a weekly basis.

The singing was all decent, though I didn't find debuting Eve-Maud Hubeaux, as Carmen, particularly alluring. She is French and of course her French in the spoken dialogue was excellent. The character vamps a lot, exposes ankles and legs up to the knee, and I can't help but wonder whether a more restrained portrayal might be sexier. Also, did you feel a chill when she sang "la mort" (death)? Neither did I.

Jonathan Tetelman was okay, though, again, maybe not sufficiently obsessed. Louise Alder (Micaela), also making her SFO debut, was fine. Christian Van Horn was a pretty good Escamillo, but the horse he rode in on upstaged him. Live animals on stage are almost always a bad idea, and when they are even prettier, if much more placid, than the people around them, well, then. Resist the temptation. If your Escamillo needs a walking 1500-pound prop to make the right impression, consider firing the director or recasting the part. I do not think Van Horn needed the horse.

The Adler Fellows who filled out the smaller roles provided much-needed variety: Arianna Rodriguez (Frasquita), Nikola Printz (Mercedes), James McCarthy (Zuniga), Christopher Ogelsby (Dancaïre), and Samuel Kidd (Morales). Also excellent in a smaller role, Alex Boyer, who isn't an Adler, as Remendado.

There is some kind of problem with the staging, the timing of the supertitles, or the audience itself: I heard much much more inappropriate laughter than is usual, as in, maybe every ten minutes the audience laughed at something that most definitely wasn't funny. Sure, there are moments of lightness, but this opera is a tragedy. I wasn't taking notes, but after the first few occurrences of questionable laughter, I wished I had been.

Of the commentators here, only Michael Zwiebach is really happy with what he saw....but I have people telling me "I heard good things about it!" I'm vaguely wondering where they heard this.

Monday, November 18, 2024

Adler Fellows Concert, 2024


Soprano Olivia Smith (far right) sings an aria from Gounod's Romeo et Juliette
Benjamin Manis conducts
"The Future is Now," Friday, November 15, 2024
Photo: Kristen Loken/San Francisco Opera

"The Future is Now," SF Opera's annual showcase for the Adler Fellows, was a great night for the young singers. Here's what we have in the way of write-ups so far:

Monday, September 16, 2024

Challenge to the Reader

 


Christopher Oglesby, left, as the Chief Magistrate and Mei Gui Zhang, right, as Oscar
Act I, Verdi's Un ballo in maschera
Photo by Cory Weaver, courtesy of San Francisco Opera

Found in various reviews of Verdi's Un ballo in maschera at San Francisco Opera:
  • Lisa Hirsch, SF Chronicle: "In a weak staging, Oscar, the king’s page, can be an annoyance, but not here."
  • Michael Anthonio, Parterre Box: "I belong to the camp that thinks Oscar is one of the most annoying characters in opera. Still, on Friday, Mei Gui Zhang made the role much more bearable with her dazzling coloratura and carefree mannerisms." 
  • Michael Strickland, SF Civic Center: "In the photo above, Gustavus is accompanied by his young male page, Oscar, a trouser role that can be one of the most annoying in all of opera, but soprano Mei Gui Zhang was an absolute delight as she continually interrupted serious scenes with silly trills."
We're all in agreement about the potential for Oscar being an annoyance and also that Mei Gui Zhang was not personally annoying. Long ago, a friend mentioned that he finds Cherubino, from Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro, extremely annoying, and it's certainly true that the page––it's always a page––gets into all kinds of trouble during the opera.

So here's the challenge: who do you consider to be the most annoying character in opera? Please show your work.

Friday, July 19, 2024

Fellow Travelers at Opera Parallèle

 


Opera Parallèle, with Jaymes Kirksey, Guest Conductor, and Brian Staufenbiel, Stage/Creative Director, in a dress rehearsal of “Fellow Travelers.” This image from left to right: Joseph Lattanzi, as Hawkins Fuller, Cara Gabrielson, as Lucy, Victoria Lawal, as Mary Johnson, and
Jonathan Pierce Rhodes, as Timothy Laughlin
©2024 Stefan Cohen/Photo Courtesy of Opera Parallèle


Gregory Spears's opera Fellow Travelers had its Bay Area debut last month. Reviews:

Monday, July 15, 2024

Livermore Valley Opera 2024-25

Livermore Valley Opera (LVOpera) has a two-opera season coming up for 2024-25. They're doing two classics: Donizetti's The Daughter of the Regiment, a comedy with an extremely silly plot redeemed by surprisingly lovely and complex music, and Mozart's Don Giovanni, which needs no introduction. 

I've only been out to LVOpera once, for an excellent production of Verdi's Otello. Yes, I regret missing their recent production of Carlisle Floyd's Of Mice and Men. LVOpera performs in a 500 seat theater, and I really like the intimacy of seeing opera in a theater of that size.

Here are some details about LVOpera's upcoming season. 

Location (all performances): Bankhead Theater 2400 First Street, Livermore, CA 94550

Cost: Adults $25-$110. Tickets can be purchased through the company's website at www.LVOpera.com. Special ticket pricing: $25, ages 20 and younger; $45, ages 21-40. Bankhead Ticket Box Office: 925-373-6800.

Alexander Katsman conducts all performances.

The Daughter of the Regiment 

Véronique Filloux, Marie; Chris Mosz, Tonio; Lisa Chavez, Marquise of Berkenfield; Eugene Brancoveanu, Sulpice; Deborah Lambert, Duchess of Krakenthorp; Gilead Wurman, Hortensius.

Performances:

  • September 28th, 2024 @ 7:30pm
  • September 29th, 2024 @ 2:00pm
  • October 5th, 2024 @ 2:00pm
  • October 6th, 2024 @ 2:00pm

Don Giovanni

Titus Muzio III, Don Giovanni; Murrella Parton, Donna Anna; Cara Gabrielson, Donna Elvira; David Walton, Don Ottavio; Samuel Weiser, Leporello; Kirk Eichelberger, Commendatore; Phoebe Chee, Zerlina; Joseph Calzada, Masetto

Performances:
  • March 1st, 2025 @ 7:30pm
  • March 2nd, 2025 @ 2:00pm
  • March 8th, 2025 @ 2:00pm
  • March 9th, 2025 @ 2:00pm

Monday, May 27, 2024

Breaking News from San Francisco Opera


War Memorial Opera House
Photo by Lisa Hirsch


Well, not exactly, since there isn't a press release yet. What we have, though, is an article from The Guardian. The article starts by discussing John Berry, former artistic director of the English National Opera, but as it progress, it turns out that he's developing an opera about the opiod crisis, and eventuall you learn that Missy Mazzoli, composer of the magnificent Breaking the Waves, is writing the music to a story by Karen Russell and Royce Vavrek. Vavrek was the librettist for both Breaking the Waves and Du Yun's Pulitzer Prize-winning opera Angel's Bone.

And even deeper in the article, you learn that the San Francisco Opera is among the commissions of the new opera. It will have its premiere in 2026, though it's not clear from the article where the first performances will take place.


Tuesday, November 14, 2023

San Francisco Opera: Omar

 


Jamez McCorckle and members of the San Francisco Opera Chorus
Omar, Act 2
Photo: Cory Weaver/San Francisco Opera

I filed my Omar review early this morning, after wrestling with it quite a bit: I have two different saved version of it, and when I filed, I was somewhat unhappy with it. My editors tightened it up, but I realized I was more equivocal about it than my review conveyed. So I added a bit to make that clearer. Still, the length of my review kept it less focussed than it could have been.

Previously:
  • Maura Hogan, The Post and Courier
  • Alex Ross, The New Yorker. "...the strength of the conception lies less in its narrative energy than in its ritual atmosphere."
  • Charles McNulty, LA Times theater critic. He notes right off the bat that Omar is "too fluid to be classified in discrete musical or dramatic genres."
  • Edward Ball, NY Review of Books