Showing posts with label Glimmerglass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glimmerglass. Show all posts

Monday, August 21, 2017

Glimmerglass

David and I are spending a long weekend at the Glimmerglass Opera Festival near Cooperstown, NY.

The first people we ran into last night as we arrived for the performance of Porgy and Bess were Jane Bryden and Chris Kruger. Jane was my 'boss' when I taught at Smith, having called me right after John's death and asking me teach there. I told her she had just saved my life, since I had had to stop all my teaching three years before to stay at home to care for John. Serendipity!

The performance of Gershwin's masterpiece was simply sensational. A glorious outpouring of beautiful sound from the entire cast.

Image result for meroe khalia adeeb photos  Meroe Khalia Adeeb

When Clara, sung by Meroe Khalia Adeeb, opened the opera singing 'Summertime', I thought, 'Bess will have a hard time topping this when she sings it later on'. And she did.

Image result for talise trevigne photos Talise Trevigne

Bess, sung by Talise  Trevigne, had a beautiful voice but lost her low register by the end of the opera. She paid for her lovely high notes.

Musa Ngqungwana

Porgy, sung by Musa Ngqungwana, had an enormous voice and, unfortunately, very poor diction.

Image result for simone z paulwell soprano    Simone Z. Paulwell

Serena, sung by Simone Z. Paulwell, stole the show with 'My man's gone now'. Ravishing voice.

Eric Shane, filling in as Jake,  was sensational.

The conductor was John DeMain.

The rest of the cast were equally fine.

I first saw Porgy in the fifties with Leontyne Price and William Warfield.  A hard act to follow.

Again, as in the Lyric Opera production, Porgy was on a crutch. In the New York production he was on his knees on a little wagon drawn by a goat. At the end when he says 'Bring me my goat', intending to follow Bess to New York, where she has fled with Sportin'  Life (also a fine singer, Frederick Ballentine) and starts off to make the trip on his knees, it was much more dramatic than 'Bring me my crutch!', as if he planned to walk.

Overall a terrific evening! 

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It looks like I will have to eat my words!!

For years I have had disparaging things to say about most countertenors. I admit it. I just don't like to hear men singing in falsetto.

But last night, at Glimmerglass, in the performance of Handel's Xerxes, I had a major change of heart. The cause of this was John Holiday Jr. who sang the title role. He is simply amazing. And for almost the first time in my life I experienced a man singing in falsetto without thinking 'Why are you doing that???' It seemed perfectly logical. It also seemed perfectly marvelous.



Image result for john holiday jr  

I have had a long history with countertenors as well as with Xerxes.

First- countertenors.

When I was studying with Mrs. William Neidlinger in New York in the fifties, Russell Oberlin was also one of her students and we became friends. Russell was really the first American countertenor and had a most unusual voice. He could sing to tenor f above high c in true voice before going into falsetto.  Not many men can do that. He had no low notes to speak of. We did a series of concerts together with the wonderful flutist, Frances Blaisdell, which included some pieces written for the three of us by Louie White. Russell was my idea of a countertenor.

Now-Xerxes.

Image result for lorraine hunt lieberson

 Back in the nineties Lorraine Hunt, later Lieberson, worked with me for a solid month on the role of Xerxes at Rood Hill Farm. Some kind neighbors up the hill offered her their house for the month of September. John and I went to LA for the performances where we heard countertenor Brian Asawa singing the role of Arsamenes opposite Lorraine's Xerxes. I said to John 'He sounds like Helen Traubel!' And he did!

Well so does Mr. Holiday! What a wonderful voice and a fine actor.

Now I think I have eaten enough words.

There's not much to say about the plot of Xerxes. Mixed-up engagements which finally are worked out to everyone's satisfaction. Great music by Mr. Handel. And great singing by this entire cast!

Allegra de Vita sang Arsamenes, an interesting switch from LA where the woman sang Xerxes and a man Arsemenes. 

Calvin Griffin was Elviro, Emily Pogoreic was Romilda, Katrine Galka was Atalanta, Abigale Dock was Amastris, and Brett Michael Smith was Ariodates.

They were all excellent singers!

The staging by Tazewell Thomas left a lot to be desired. Mostly walking around looking for a way to get off stage when their aria was finished. I don't remember what Steve Wadsworth did in LA but it was more interesting than this.

The conductor was Nicole Paiement.

But thanks to Mr. Holiday's amazing singing, I have had a delicious meal of words as well as some very happy memories.

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I doubt that Donizetti's The Siege of Calais will ever be my favorite opera especially in the production done at Glimmerglass Saturday afternoon. The 1376 siege was moved up to contemporary times making the King of England pardon six citizens who were to be shot in order to save the rest of the town. Maybe that was popular in the 14th century, but I doubt he/she would get away with that these days.

This is the whole point of the opera. Calais is under siege, the mayor agrees to be one of six who are sacrificed along with his son in order to save the city, and I just told you the ending. They don't get shot.






Adrian Timpau sang very well as the Mayor. He has a large resonant voice and acted well.

Photo: Fay Fox

Leah Crocetto as his wife has a voice that is beautiful in places but screamy at the top. Creamy and screamy!Not good for this role.
  
 Kristin Hoebermann 2014

Aleks Romano as the son sang very well. It seems odd to have a woman doing a 'pants' role at this period, although Strauss did it for Octavian (a throwback to Mozart). 

The rest of the cast sang well, which is what I have come to expect at Glimmerglass.

The conductor was Joseph Colanen.

Wonderful male chorus singing! 

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Oklahoma is a grand old musical!

Even I am too young to have seen the original Broadway production in 1943 (I was 13 and still in Battle Creek) but it paved the way for a new type of musical. No more just a line of chorus girls and a lot of jokes, but a real plot where the music carries the story rather than merely decorates it.

I did see the revival in 2002, which was excellent, and, of course, the film.

Sunday's performance was very good but not quite up to Broadway standards. It's hard for young singers training for opera to come off as Broadway singers. In the days of the original Broadway production, you really had to SING to be on Broadway. No mics! But it's hard for opera singers to sound like their Broadway counterparts.

    Image result for jared ott     Jared Ott

The two who came off the best, vocally and dramatically, were Jarett Ott as Curly and Michael Hewitt as Jud Fry. Both are splendid actors and have wonderful voices. Michael was a bit too good looking to seem ominous as Jud, but brought it off fine.

Image result for michael hewitt    Michael Hewitt

Vanessa Becerra as Laurey had a lovely voice but was a bit under-powered, often being covered by the orchestra. 

Image result for vanessa becerra soprano   Vanessa Becerra
 
This is unusual at Glimmerglass, where the balance between the singers and the orchestra is usually perfect. The conductor was James Lowe. Maybe he just got carried away with this, the final performance of the season.

Ado Annie was not well cast.

All in all it was a very enjoyable show and Jarett and Michael should have careers ahead of them.

Image result for judith skinner   Judith Skinner

Judith Skinner was good as Aunt Eller and had the right voice for the part.

Over all, a wonderful weekend of music in an idyllic setting. 

Monday, August 8, 2016

Glimmerglass!

David and I returned last evening from an exciting four days at the Glimmerglass Opera Festival. This included four operas and a vocal recital. Quite a musical feast.

And speaking of feasts, the first opera/musical theatre we saw was Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street by Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler. This has been one of my favorite pieces of musical theatre for a long time. I saw the original production on Broadway with Len Cariou and Angela Lansbury as well as the Boston version with Dorothy Louden as Mrs. Lovett.

This version was well cast as far as the singing and acting went. Greer Grimsley sang a strong Sweeney but could have been more menacing, Luretta Bybee was a perfect Mrs. Lovett, equaling Angela Lansbury in every way, Anthony Hope was sung by Harry Greenleaf, a wonderful young tenor and Johanna by Emily Pogorek, an equally fine soprano.

Image result for harry greenleaf     Harry Greenleaf

The only disappointment was the set and costuming. Two enormous flats painted Beige with a sort of six foot tall chair rail at the bottom. Mrs. Lovett was in a teal waitress outfit that would look right at the old Woolworth's soda fountain counter, then in act two, in an evening gown. Others in the cast were sometimes in costumes appropriate to 1847 when the book was written and which choice was made in the original production. There was no raised platform for Sweeney's barber shop, meaning that when he cut the throats of various people, instead of being slide down through the floor to the oven, got up and walked away after they were supposedly dead. The Scenery designer obviously never saw the original production.


Friday afternoon we saw an amazing recital by Stephanie Blythe. I had never heard her in person before and she blew me away literally! What an enormous voice. Her program consisted of a song cycle, Vignettes: Ellis Island, by Alan Smith, who was her collaborator at the piano. This was followed by a sort of community sing led by her called Sing, America.This sounds a little hokey, but she brought it off in great style with an enthusiastic audience joining in the fun. She is a lively sensitive  performer who, in my opinion, can do no wrong!

Image result for stephanie blythe      Stephanie Blythe

That evening we saw The Crucible by Robert Ward and Bernard Stambler, based on the play of Arthur Miller. This is a powerful work, contemporary but tonal, that details the Salem witch trials of the 17th century. All the singing and acting was exceptional, especially Brian Proctor, Jamie Barton, and Jay Hunter Morris. Glimmerglass must have someone with an incredible ear doing the casting. They also have a marvelous troupe of apprentices who perform many of the roles in their productions.


Saturday evening brought La Bohème of Puccini. Michael Brandenburg as Rodolfo has the power and range for the role but I would prefer a lusher voice in this role. Raquel Gonzalez started the evening with a very fast flutter in her voice which eased up as the opera proceeded. Hunter Enoch was excellent as Marcello and Rhys Lloyd Talbot was good, if a little light weight for Colline.

Image result for rachele gilmore soprano      Rachel Gilmore

Sunday matinée was The Thieving Magpie by Gioachino Rossini and Giovanni Gherardini. Lots of great coloratura singing especially by Rachel Gilmore and Dale Travis. For some reason Musa Nggungwana chose to sing very lumpy runs as the Mayor. Perhaps he was directed to do so for reasons of dramatic character, but it was not good singing.

Image result for dale travis tenor   Dale Travis
 
The whole weekend was a delightful time to wallow in opera and hear a number of very good singers. I wish all the best to the young artists who are just at the beginning of their careers and are showing so much promise.  Sing On!