Premiere performance of “Dr. Sun Yat-sen” in Santa Fe

THE SANTA FE OPERA PRESENTS:

Dr. Sun Yat-sen

Huang Ruo

2014 Dr. Sun Yat-sen Large (final)

One of the most enthralling historical operas, Dr. Sun Yat-sen by the distinguished Chinese-born American composer Huang Ruo makes its American premiere.

Charles MacKay calls Ruo “one of the most gifted and imaginative composers writing today,” whose music has galvanized critics and audiences internationally with its thrilling blend of Eastern, Western, folk and classical styles. Dr. Sun Yat-sen depicts the epic struggle to overthrow China’s ancient monarchy and build a modern national identity for one of the world’s oldest civilizations. The acclaimed tenor Warren Mok recreates the title role. The conductor will be the exciting Carolyn Kuan, in demand with opera and ballet companies throughout the world. James Robinson directs.

8:30 pm July 26
8:00 pm July 30; August 8, 14

Synopsis

 Composer Huang Ruo
Librettist Candace Mui-ngam Chong

Sung in Mandarin

MUSICAL PROLOGUE
(a wedding dress is wrapped, boxed, and taken on a journey by dancers)

ACT I
Charlie’s House, Shanghai

Charlie Soong, a Chinese revolutionary, is hosting a gala in his home, ostensibly to raise money to build a church, but actually to gather funds for his colleague and leader of the Chinese Revolutionary Alliance, Sun Yat-sen. His wife, Ni Gui-zhen, takes him aside and expresses her worry about Charlie’s illegal activities. Moments later, Sun Yat-sen arrives. From the second he enters the room, Sun becomes the focus of attention. His wife Lu Mu-zhen follows him at a much slower pace. She is a traditional countrywoman with bound feet. Charlie and guests feel sorry for Sun Yat-sen. Just as the guests begin to rally around the cause, a messenger arrives and hands Charlie a note: a reward has been placed on Sun’s head.

ACT II
Scene 1: Japan (Umeya’s Residence)
Fleeing to Japan where he is in exile, Sun Yat-sen takes up residence with his friend Umeya and continues his revolutionary activities with his new aide, Charlie Soong’s daughter Ching-ling. She is attracted to his revolutionary ideals, he to her vivacity. They fall in love.

Scene 2: Japan, Sun and Ching-ling’s wedding (Umeya’s Residence)
At their wedding, Charlie enters, furious. Not only has Charlie not given his consent to the marriage but Sun still remains married to a woman in China. To everyone’s surprise, Charlie brings in Sun’s first wife, Lu Mu-zhen, in the hope that she can ruin the wedding. With a touching aria, Mu-zhen instead sings about her misfortune and sacrifice. She, to everyone’s surprise, finally gives Sun her signed divorce paper, setting him free to marry Ching-ling. Outraged, Charlie walks out of the wedding, renouncing both Ching-ling and Sun, and his association with the Chinese Revolutionary Alliance.

ACT III
Scene 1: China
Back in China, Sun tries to overthrow the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty with the help of Yuan Shi-kai. Under Sun’s leadership the regime of the Qing Dynasty is overthrown and he is named provisional president of the new republic. The new government’s hold is weak and Yuan Shi-kai, an ambitious general in the revolution, betrays Sun and becomes president, a step in achieving his final goal of naming himself the new emperor of a new dynasty. Sun Yat-sen, accompanied by his newlywed wife Ching-ling, is giving speeches in various locations in China, gathering supports to overthrow Yuan Shi-kai’s rule. One night, Sun’s house is under attacks by Yuan’s assassins. During their escape, Ching-ling miscarries their baby. In the midst of all this tragedy, a messenger appears to tell Sun that Charlie is on his deathbed and wanting to see both him and Ching-Ling.

Scene 2: Charlie’s House, Shanghai
Charlie is ill and dying. Ching-ling arrives at his home alone, and assures her father that she is truly in love with Sun Yat-sen. Charlie, ashamed, confesses that he had all but given up his revolutionary dreams, but Sun’s indomitable determination and idealism has renewed his confidence. In an act of reconciliation he gives Ching-ling the wedding dress that he had made for her as a child, but refused to give her when she married Sun. His final speech, a blessing to Sun and Ching-ling and a meditation on the true meaning of what it is to be a revolutionary, is overlaid with a speech of Sun’s. The two men share this spiritual reunion, revolutionaries to the end.

The opera ends as a large statue of Sun Yat-Sen is revealed. A crowd honors the timeless man. The timeless wedding dress re-appears and is carried out by the dancers.

Artists

  • Dr. Sun Yat-sen – Warren Mok
  • Soong Ching-Ling – Corinne Winters
  • Ni – Mary Ann McCormick
  • Charlie Soong – Dong-Jian Gong
  • Mr. Umeya – Chen-Ye Yuan
  • Conductor – Carolyn Kuan
  • Director – James Robinson
  • Scenic Designer – Allen Moyer
  • Costume Designer – James Schuette
  • Lighting Designer – Christopher Akerlind
  • Choreographer – Seán Curran
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“Madame Butterfly” in Cincinnati

CINCINNATI OPERA PRESENTS:

Madame Butterfly

July 24 & 26 • 7:30 p.m.
Music Hall

Music by Giacomo Puccini
Libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa

THE OPERA
The 94th Summer Festival closes with Giacomo Puccini’s heartbreaking tragedy Madame Butterfly in the Cincinnati Opera production by Paul Shortt last seen in 1996.

THE CAST

Maria-Luigia-Borsi-sized Mathey-Shawn-sized Roberto-deCandia-sized Kelley-OConnor-sized Steven-Cole-sized Reginald-Smith-sized
Maria Luigia
Borsi

Cio-Cio-San
Shawn Mathey
Pinkerton
Roberto
de Candia

Sharpless
Kelley
O’Connor

Suzuki
Steven Cole
Goro
Reginald
Smith, Jr.

The Bonze

CREATIVE TEAM
Conductor … Ramón Tebar
Scenic and Costume Designer … Paul Shortt

Synopsis

ACT I
At the turn of the century, on the outskirts of the harbor town of Nagasaki, U.S. Navy Lieutenant Benjamin Franklin Pinkerton inspects the house which he has leased and is soon to occupy with his Japanese bride, Cio-Cio-San, known as Madama Butterfly. Goro, the marriage broker, has arranged both the match and the house with a 999-year contract cancelable at a monthës notice. Presently, Sharpless, the United States Consul arrives, and Pinkerton shares with him his carefree philosophy of a sailor and the beautiful Japanese girl who has captivated him. Sharpless tries to persuade him that there is danger in this convenient arrangement; the girl may not regard her vows so lightly. The Lieutenant laughs at such apprehension and proposes a toast to America and the American girl who will someday be his “real” wife.

The hour for the wedding ceremony approaches. Butterfly, accompanied by her friends, arrives joyously singing of her wedding. She tells Pinkerton that since the death of her father she has had to earn her living as a geisha. Her relatives noisily bustle in, commenting on the bridegroom. In a quiet moment, Cio-Cio-San shows Pinkerton her few earthly treasures and tells him that she has secretly renounced her traditional faith in favor of Christianity. The Imperial Commissioner performs the brief ceremony, and the guests toast the couple when, suddenly Cio-Cio-Sanës uncle, the Bonze, bursts in shouting. A Buddhist priest, he curses her for renouncing her ancestorís religion. The relatives instantly turn on the young bride. When Pinkerton angrily orders all the guests away, Butterfly is left weeping. Pinkerton consoles her with tender words, and as night falls, the lovers share a moonlit duet.

ACT II
Three years later, with a gaze fixed upon the horizon, Cio-Cio-San patiently awaits her husbandís return. Beside her, Suzuki prays to an image of Buddha, imploring the gods for aid. The money Pinkerton left is now almost gone. Butterfly bids her maid to have faith. One day, Pinkertonís ship will appear in the harbor and he will again embrace his beloved wife.

Soon Sharpless enters with a letter from the Lieutenant and tries several times unsuccessfully to explain the reason for his visit. The letter tells of Pinkertonís marriage to an American girl. But before he can break the news to Butterfly, Goro interrupts, bringing with him a noble suitor, the wealthy Prince Yamadori. Cio-Cio-San greets the prince with dignity but firmly refuses his offer of marriage, insisting that her American husband has not deserted her. Sharpless again attempts to read the letter and gently advises the girl to accept the prince. He asks her what she would do if Pinkerton never returned. Cio-Cio-San proudly carries forth her young son, “Sorrow.” As soon as Pinkerton knows of his son, she insists, he will return to them, and that day, “Joy” will become the childís name. If her husband does not come back, she says she would rather die than return to her former life. Utterly defeated, but moved by Butterflyës devotion, Sharpless quickly exits.

A cannon roars from the harbor. Seizing a spyglass, Butterfly discovers that Pinkertonís ship, the Abraham Lincoln, is coming into port. Deliriously happy, she orders Suzuki to help her strew the house with blossoms. As evening falls, Cio-Cio-San dons her wedding gown and with her maid and her son, she prepares to keep vigil throughout the long night.

ACT III
The pale light of dawn finds Suzuki and the baby asleep. Butterfly still stands watching and waiting. Suzuki awakens with the sunshine and insists that Cio-Cio-San rest. Humming a lullaby, the young mother carries her boy to another room. Before long, Sharpless, Pinkerton and Kate, his new wife, approach the house. Suzuki almost at once realizes who the strange woman is. Overcome with despair, she reluctantly agrees to aid in breaking the news to her mistress. Pinkerton, now surrounded by evidence of his fragile Butterflyís unwavering faith and devotion, bids an anguished farewell to the scene of his former happiness. He then rushes away leaving the consul to arrange things as best he can. Cio-Cio-San hurries in expecting to find her husband, and instead finds Kate. She instantly guesses the truth and with touching dignity, Butterfly wishes “the real American wife” happiness. She asks Kate to tell Pinkerton that he may have his son if he will return for him in half an hour. Kate sadly departs with Sharpless.

Butterfly orders Suzuki and the child away. She pulls from its sheath the dagger with which her father committed suicide. She reads aloud its inscription, “To die with honor when one no longer can live with honor.” As she raises the blade to her throat, Suzuki pushes the boy into the room. Cio-Cio-San drops the knife and embraces her child, passionately imploring him to look well upon his mother’s face. After finally sending him off to play, she takes her fatherís dagger and stabs herself. As Butterfly dies, Pinkertonís voice is heard crying out her name.

– Courtesy of Boston Lyric Opera

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“The Impresario” & “Le Rossignol” in Santa Fe

THE SANTA FE OPERA PRESENTS:

The Impresario & Le Rossignol 

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; Igor Stravinsky

2014 Double Bill Large

For the first time since 1993, The Santa Fe Opera presents two shorter operas paired as a double bill.

Divas vie for a plum role while a producer struggles to cope with their rivalry and with the stresses of work in the music business. That’s the scenario of Mozart’s brief, witty opera The Impresario, but it could also be a news story in tomorrow’s issue of The Hollywood Reporter. In these ingeniously framed productions, the stars’ rivalry centers on casting for Stravinsky’s exquisite one-act opera Le Rossignol, which forms the second half of a perfectly balanced double-bill. With English dialogue by the British dramatist Ranjit Bolt and additional Mozart concert arias folded into the score, The Impresario takes us to 1920s Paris for the high-stress auditions. With the same cast, Le Rossignol enfolds us in Hans Christian Andersen’s poetic fable in which an emperor learns the lesson of humility. Sopranos Erin Morley and Brenda Rae face off as the dueling divas. Making his Company debut is English stage director, Michael Gieleta. Evan Rogister who led King Roger (2012) and Oscar (2013), will conduct. This production of Le Rossignol honors the centennial of the opera’s premiere in Paris in 1914.

8:30 pm July 19, 23
8:00 pm August 1, 7, 15

The Impresario
Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Libretto Gottlieb Stephanie

The one-act opera, The Impresario shares the trials and tribulations an impresario encounters in leading a group of traveling players. Herr Puff suggests to the impresario that he should sign the actors at low wages, and he recommends bribing the critics and disregarding artistic merit. The banker takes care of the finances for the impresario in return to have his mistress play a role in the production. As the impresario begins to hold auditions, it’s clear that Madame Tintement and Madame Popescu are divas trying to outdo each other for the same role. The two women continue their rivalry and the competition heats up. When the impresario cannot choose and threatens to cancel the production, the singers decide that only through peaceful collaboration can art thrive.

Le Rossignol
Based on the story by Hans Christian Andersen

Composer & Librettist Igor Stravinsky

Sung in Russian

Set in Ancient China, the fisherman acts as a narrator for the story’s events.

ACT I
Just before dawn, a fisherman awaits the arrival of the singing nightingale. The cook arrives bringing court officials and says how the bird’s beautiful song makes her cry. The Chamberlain, unable to hear, tells her he will appoint her as private cook to the Emperor if she can find the bird. The nightingale appears and the cook and Chamberlain invite it to sing for the Emperor. The nightingale accepts the invitation but reminds them that her sweetest song is in the forest.

ACT II
Couriers prepare the palace for the nightingale’s song with lanterns. They ask the cook about the bird and she responds that though the nightingale appears plain, tears of happiness will flow from listener’s eyes. The Emperor’s procession enters and he commands the bird to sing. The Emperor is moved by the beautiful singing and offers the bird a reward of a golden slipper. Three Japanese Envoys enter the palace and offer the Emperor a mechanical nightingale. The mechanical bird sings and the nightingale flies away. The Emperor banishes it from the empire. He names the mechanical bird “first singer” in the court.

ACT III
As the Emperor is dying and Death is near his side, the ghosts of his past deeds visit him. He calls for his court musicians, but instead the nightingale appears – disregarding the banishment. Death hears the nightingale sing and asks it to continue. The nightingale agrees, but only if Death returns the crown, sword and standard to the Emperor. Death agrees and the Emperor offers the nightingale “first singer” – the nightingale declines, stating that the Emperor’s tears are reward enough, and promises to sing each night from dusk until dawn.

Artists

  • Mme. Tintement/Nightingale – Erin Morley
  • Mme. Popescu/The Cook – Brenda Rae
  • Mon. Popescu/The Fisherman – Bruce Sledge
  • Impresario/The Emperor – Anthony Michaels-Moore
  • Fraulein Krone/Death – Meredith Arwady
  • Herr Puff/Chamberlain – Kevin Burdette
  • Eiler/The Bonze – Bradley Smoak
  • Conductor – Evan Rogister
  • Director – Michael Gieleta
  • Scenic Designer – James Macnamara
  • Costume Designer – Fabio Toblini
  • Lighting Designer – Christopher Akerlind
  • Choreographer – Seán Curran
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“La Calisto” in Cincinnati

CINCINNATI OPERA PRESENTS:

La Calisto

July 17, 20, 23 & 25 • 7:30 p.m.
July 27 • 3:00 p.m.
SCPA’s Corbett Theater

Music by Francesco Cavalli
Libretto by Giovanni Faustini

THE OPERA
Cincinnati Opera presents its first-ever Baroque opera with Francesco Cavalli’s La Calisto, first performed in Venice in 1651. The opera is the company’s second production to be presented in SCPA’s Corbett Theater, a state-of-the-art, 750-seat auditorium just a block away from the company’s home at Music Hall.

THE CAST

Nathalie-Paulin-sized Michael-Maniaci-sized Jennifer-Johnson-Cano-sized Alexandra-Seshorties-sized
Nathalie
Paulin

Calisto/Eternita
Michael
Maniaci

Endymion
Jennifer
Johnson Cano

Diana/Destino
Alexandra
Desho
rties
Juno
       
Daniel-Okulitch-sized Nathan-Stark-sized Blake-Aaron-sized Andrew-Garland-sized
Daniel
Okulitch

Jupiter
Nathan Stark
Sylvan
Aaron Blake
Pan
Andrew
Garland

Mercury

CREATIVE TEAM
Stage Director … Ted Huffman
Conductor … David Bates
Scenic Designer … David A. Centers
Costume Designer … Rebecca Senske
Lighting Designer … Thomas Hase

SYNOPSIS

Prologue

Destiny persuades Nature and Eternity that Calisto deserves a place among the stars in heaven.

 

Act One

The world is suffering the consequences of a war between mankind and the gods. Giove (Jupiter) and Mercurio (Mercury) are making sure that everything is as it should be on earth. Giove observes Calisto, a nymph, lamenting the lack of drinking water, for which she blames Giove. Charmed by the girl’s beauty, Giove immediately replenishes a spring and makes improper advances to Calisto. She, however, belongs to the retinue of Diana, a daughter of Giove, and has proclaimed that she will die a virgin. In great indignation, Calisto rejects Giove’s advances. Mercurio advises Giove to take on the form of Diana, to whose charms the unsuspecting Calisto will surely succumb. The plan succeeds: Calisto has no objection to accepting affectionate kisses from her beloved goddess.

Endimione (Endymion) is also in love with the chaste Diana. When she appears in the company of Linfea (Lynfea) and her nymphs, he can no longer hide his feelings and thus immediately incurs Linfea’s anger. Diana also treats Endimione rather coldly, in order not to betray the fact that she is secretly in love with him. Calisto joins Diana and the nymphs, ecstatic at the pleasure she has experienced with the kisses she and “Diana” have just exchanged, which understandably causes some confusion in Diana. She accuses Calisto of being a shameless hussy and banishes her from her entourage.

Linfea admits to herself that she would also really like to have a lover. A little satyr – Satirino – offers himself as a solution to her problem. Together with Silvano (Sylvano), the god of the woods, he subsequently tries to give new heart to Pane (Pan), the god of the shepherds, who is suffering from the throes of unrequited passion for Diana.

 

Act Two

Endimione wants to be near Diana and sees her in the form of the moon. When he has fallen asleep, Diana can no longer withstand her feelings for him. She kisses Endimione, who immediately awakes and finds that reality is as attractive as his dream, he has achieved his heart’s desire. Satirino, who has observed the scene without being noticed, now voices his own opinion on the constancy of women.

Giove’s jealous consort Giunone (Juno) suspects that her husband’s visit to earth is not only the result of his concern for the ravishes wrought by war and now decides in her turn to pay earth a visit. She immediately comes across Calisto, who in her despair innocently tells her how Diana was at first so loving and then so cold and cruel towards her for no apparent reason. Giunone knows her husband well enough to suspect immediately what has actually happened. Her suspicions are confirmed when Giove, in the form of Diana, comes into view with Mercurio and arranges another assignation with Calisto. Giunone angrily swears to be revenged on her rival, Calisto.

Before Giove, still in the form of Diana, can disappear for his rendezvous with Calisto, Endimione returns. Believing that it is Diana whom he has come upon, Endimione chats in lovesick fashion about the kisses he has exchanged with the goddess the previous night, thus revealing to Giove that Diana is perhaps not as chaste as he has been led to believe. Pane, Silvano and Satirino are also taken in by Giove’s disguise: convinced that they have caught Diana with her lover, they take Endimione prisoner and threaten to kill him. Mercurio urges Giove to have nothing to do with the whole affair and to disappear. Endimione has no choice but to think that Diana has heartlessly abandoned him to his plight and loses all will to live. Linfea, on the other hand, is now determined to go to any lengths in her urgent search for a lover.

 

Act Three

Calisto waits expectantly for “Diana” at the appointed time. In her place Giunone appears with furies and turns Calisto into a bear. In this form, she believes, her rival will no longer be quite so attractive in Giove’s eyes.  Giove, however, is determined to raise Calisto to divine status. He cannot, in fact, turn the clock back and restore Calisto to her original form, but he promises that when her life on earth as a bear comes to an end she will have a place among the stars in the firmament.

In the meantime the real Diana rescues Endimione from the hands of Pane and Silvano, who see this as a confirmation of their opinion of her as someone who appears chaste but who is in reality obviously sensual through and through. Diana decides that she will keep Endimione as her lover, in eternal sleep in the mountains.

In order to give Calisto some idea of her future glory, Giove shows her the firmament in all its magnificence, where her place in the constellation of Ursa Major is secure. But that time has not yet come; Giove and Calisto say farewell to each other. Calisto has to return to earth as a bear. 

Synopsis © Bavarian State Opera

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OPERA IN LOVE: Romeo & Juliet in Verona

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“Fidelio” in Santa Fe

THE SANTA FE OPERA PRESENTS:

Fidelio

Ludwig van Beethoven

2014 Fidelio Large_NEW

For the true meaning of heroism expressed in some of the noblest music ever composed, look to Fidelio. Beethoven’s only opera is a testament to the human spirit and a test of musical skill and endurance, posing magnificent challenges for soloists, chorus and orchestra. The story is of the unjustly imprisoned Florestan and his steadfast wife Leonore, who secretly battles a corrupt political regime to win his release. Fidelio finds the super-hero in all of us. Returning to Santa Fe to sing Leonore in this production is the soprano Alex Penda (formerly Alexandrina Pendatchanska), who impressed in our productions of Rossini’s Ermione (2000) and Mozart’s La Clemenza di Tito (2002) – and also earned two Grammy nominations in 2006. The tenor Paul Groves, who sang Gualtiero in our 2011 Griselda and the title role in our 2010 production of The Tales of Hoffmann, portrays Florestan. Stephen Wadsworth, who directed King Roger in 2012, returns to mount this production. On the podium, Harry Bicket leads his first production as Santa Fe’s new Chief Conductor.

8:30 pm July 12, 16, 25,
8:00 pm July 31; August 5, 12, 21

Synopsis

Composer Ludwig van Beethoven
Librettist Joseph Sonnleithner

Sung in German

The nobleman Florestan has gone missing, and his wife Leonore believes his enemy Pizarro is holding him captive as a political prisoner.

ACT I
Two years later, Leonore, disguised as Fidelio, becomes an assistant to Pizarro’s chief jailer, Rocco. Marzelline, Rocco’s daughter has fallen in love with Fidelio, though Jaquiro, who works under Rocco is in love with Marzelline. Fidelio has won the confidence of both Rocco and his daughter, and Jacquiro is crushed. Rocco mentions a man near death in the prison and Fidelio instantly suspects it is her husband. Fidelio persuades Rocco to take her where she believes her husband is kept – the lowest cell in the prison.

Don Fernando, minister of the state, is on his way to inspect the prison. Pizarro is now determined to kill Florestan before Fernando arrives, and orders Rocco to dig a grave in the dungeon. Rocco and Fidelio go to the cell and allow the other prisoners to get some air in the courtyard.

ACT II
Florestan is in his cell, and dreams he sees Leonore free him. Rocco and Fidelio begin preparations for the murder, and Fidelio instantly recognizes Florestan. Rocco signals to Pizarro that all is ready. As Pizarro prepares to kill Florestan, Fidelio intercedes between the two, revealing that she is Florestan’s wife, Leonore. Just then, a trumpet call announces Fernando’s arrival above.

Don Fernando appears in the prison courtyard and rejoices as his friend Florestan appears. Fernando is relayed the details of Florestan’s ordeal, and sets him and all of the prisoners free, while Pizarro is arrested. The crowd hails Leonore for rescuing her husband.

Artists

  • Leonore – Alex Penda
  • Florestan – Paul Groves
  • Don Pizarro – Greer Grimsley
  • Rocco – Manfred Hemm
  • Marzelline – Devon Guthrie
  • Don Fernando – Evan Hughes
  • Jaquino – Joshua Dennis
  • Conductor – Harry Bicket
  • Director – Stephen Wadsworth
  • Scenic Designer – Charles Corcoran
  • Costume Designer – Camille Assaf
  • Lighting Designer – Duane Schuler
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Opera in Love presents “Romeo and Juliet” in Verona

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“The Tragedy of Carmen” in Iowa

Des Moines Metro Opera 

PRESENTS:

Bizet/Brook / The Tragedy of Carmen

Bizet/Brook / The Tragedy of Carmen

An Opera in One Act
Libretto after Prosper Mérimée, Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy
First performance: Viviane Beaumont Theater, Lincoln Center, New York, 1981

July 10, 2014 7:00pm & 9:00pm
July 19, 2014 1:00pm
This opera will be performed at the Des Moines Social Club

Cast:
Carmen Peabody Southwell
Don José TBA
Escamillo Luis Orozco
Micaëla Rebecca Krynski
Garcia TBA
Lillas Pastia TBA
An Old Gypsy TBA
Zuniga TBA

Cast and opera are subject to change without notice.

PRODUCTION:
Conductor Michael Spassov
Stage Director Dugg McDonough
Assistant Stage Director TBA
Musical Preparation TBA
Set Designer TBA
Costume Supervisor TBA
Lighting Designer TBA
Make-Up/Hair Designer TBA
Stage Combat Director TBA

Cast, production and opera are subject to change without notice.

SYNOPSIS:
The Tragedy of Carmen is opera at its most powerful — a raw and visceral adaptation of Bizet’s most popular work. Peter Brook and his collaborators have crafted a concentrated night of theatre that focuses on the fatal relationships between the gypsy, soldier, village girl and bullfighter. The score retains all of the most famous musical moments of the original: Carmen’s Habanera and Seguidilla, Don Jose’s Flower Song, and Escamillo’s swaggering Toreador Song. Performed at the Des Moines Social Club’s newly remodeled facility, this will be an opera experience not-to-be missed.

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Puts’ “Silent Night” in Cincinnati

CINCINNATI OPERA PRESENTS:

Silent Night

Music by Kevin Puts
Libretto by Mark Campbell

July 10 & 12 • 7:30 p.m.
Music Hall

THE OPERA
To commemorate the 100th anniversary of World War I, Cincinnati Opera will present Silent Night, winner of the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Music.

Inspired by a true story and based on the 2005 film Joyeux Noël, this new American opera by composer Kevin Puts and librettist Mark Campbell recounts the moving tale of the Christmas truce of 1914, when combatant soldiers on the Western Front declared a brief ceasefire and celebrated the holiday together. The production was hailed as “a triumph of contemporary stagecraft” (Opera News) at its November 2011 premiere.

THE CAST

Thomas-Blondelle-sized Erin-Wall-sized Phillip-Addis-sized Craig-Irvin-sized
Thomas
Blondelle

Nikolaus
Sprink
Erin Wall
Anna
Sørensen
Phillip Addis
Lt. Audebert
Craig Irvin
Lt. Horstmayer
       
Gabriel-Preisser-sized Andrew-Wilkowske-sized Thomas-Glenn-sized Thomas-Cooley-sized
Gabriel
Preisser

Lt. Gordon
Andrew
Wilkowske

Ponchel
Thomas
Glenn

Jonathan Dale
Thomas
Cooley

Kronprinz

CREATIVE TEAM
Stage Director … Eric Simonson
Conductor … David Charles Abell
Set Designer … Francis O’Connor
Costume Designer … Kärin Kopischke

Synopsis

PROLOGUE
Late summer, 1914. War is declared. At a Berlin opera house, the announcement disrupts the careers and personal lives of international opera singers Anna S¯rensen and Nikolaus Sprink. In a small church in Scotland, it inspires dreams of heroism in William, who demands that his younger brother Jonathan immediately enlist with him as their priest, Father Palmer, looks helplessly on. In the apartment of the Audeberts in Paris, it angers Madeleine who excoriates her husband for leaving to fight while she is pregnant with their first child. Amid the fervor of nationalistic songs, the men prepare to leave for war.

ACT I
In and around a battlefield, near the French border, before Christmas

Scene One — December 23, late afternoon. A horrific battle is fought between the Germans and the French and Scottish. An attempt by the French and Scottish soldiers to infiltrate the German bunker fails miserably; corpses begin to pile up in no-manís land between the three bunkers. Nikolaus is seen violently engaging in combatóstabbing a man to death and growing in despair at the violence. William is shot and Jonathan must leave his brother behind to die.

Scene Two — December 23, evening. In the Scottish bunker, Lieutenant Gordon assesses the casualties after the battle. Father Palmer offers solace to Jonathan in prayer. In the French bunker, Lieutenant Audebert discovers the French General waiting in his makeshift office, who reprimands him for surrendering and threatens him with a transfer. The General leaves and Audebert laments the loss of his wifeís photograph to his aide-de-camp, Ponchel. When he is alone, Audebert tallies the casualties in the last battle, while missing Madeleine and their child who he has not yet seen. He sings of needing sleep, a sentiment echoed by all of the soldiers. As it starts to snow, covering the corpses in no-manís land, the soldiers slowly begin to sleep. Alone in the German bunker, Nikolaus reveals his despair about war to an imagined Anna.

Scene Three — December 24, morning. In the German bunker, crates have arrived, and little Christmas trees from the Kronprinz. Lieutenant Horstmayer castigates the Kronprinz for not sending them more useful presents, like ammunition and reinforcements. He receives a directive from headquarters that Nikolaus has been ordered to sing at the nearby chalet of the Kronprinz, along with Anna S¯rensen. Nikolaus departs for the chalet, excited that he will be reunited with Anna again after many months apart. The French soldiers have received crates of wine, sausages and chocolates from the quartermaster and open them jubilantly. Ponchel, a barber by trade, brings coffee to Audebert and sits him down for a haircut. He is reminded of having coffee every morning with his mother who lives only an hour away by foot. The alarm clock he carries next to his heart at all times (which shielded him from a bullet in the last battle) rings at ten oíclock every morning to remind him of their daily meeting. In the Scottish bunker, crates of whiskey have arrived from home. Jonathan writes a letter to his mother, not mentioning his brotherís death.

Scene Four — December 24, early evening. At the chalet of the Kronprinz, Anna and Nikolaus perform a duet. Following the performance, they steal a few moments on a terrace outside. Anna notices the cruel effect war has had on her lover’s spirit. She has arranged for Nikolaus to spend the night with her and is angry when he says he must return to his fellow soldiers. She vows to accompany him back to the battlefield.

Scene Five — December 24, night. In the French bunker, Gueusselin volunteers to infiltrate the German bunker, and with several grenades, sidles onto no-manís land. The Scottish soldiers drink whiskey and play a bagpipe that another unit has sent them, as Father Palmer singers a sentimental ballad about home. The men in the other bunkers hear the song and react to it with sadness, caution, and annoyance. Nikolaus arrives; his fellow soldiers greet him with cheers and applause and gasp in amazement at seeing Anna with him. When the song in the Scottish bunker is finished, Nikolaus sings a rousing Christmas song loudly in response and midway through the bagpiper begins to accompany. Emboldened, Nikolaus stands atop the bunker raising a Christmas tree as a gesture of friendship. Against the protestations of their superiors, the soldiers from all bunkers stand. Nikolaus bravely moves to the center of no-manís land. Gueusselin abandons his plan to grenade the German bunker. Eventually, the three lieutenants, waving a white flag of truce, agree to a cease-fireÖbut only on Christmas Eve. The soldiers slowly and cautiously move toward each other. They share their provisions, their photos and their names. Anna appears and the soldiers are awed by the sight of a woman. Father Palmer has set up a makeshift church and celebrates mass with the men, while Jonathan finds his brotherís body and vows revenge. Father Palmer finishes the mass and urges the men to ìgo in peaceî as bombs explode menacingly in the distance.

Intermission (20 minutes)

ACT II

Scene One — December 25, dawn. The following morning, Jonathan tries to bury his brother. Because the truce is officialy over, two German sentries are prepared to shoot him, until Father Palmer and Lieutenant Gordon intervene. Looking on, Horstmayer proposes that it may indeed be time to bury all of the dead. The three lieutenants meet and decide over Ponchel’s coffee that the truce will be extended until after the dead in no-man’s land are buried.

Scene Two — December 25, late morning, early afternoon. The soldiers pile up the corpses, Father Palmer delivers last rites and the soldiers form a processional bearing the wagon of bodies away. Anna looks on with Nikolaus and promises that he will not suffer the same fate.

Scene Three — December 25, all day. In the meantime, news of the cease-fire has reached headquarters, and the British Major, the Kronprinz and the French General all react in anger and disbelief. They declare that they will punish the soldiers for their betrayal.

Scene Four — December 25, evening. Lieutenant Horstmayer prepares to return to war and Nikolaus berates him for his allegiance to the Fatherland. Horstmayer arrests Nikolaus for insubordination, but Anna takes his hand firmly and leads him across no-manís land as Horstmayer orders his men to shoot, but no one moves. Reaching the French bunker unharmed, Nikolaus regains his voice and demands asylum for him and Anna.

Scene Five — December 26, late morning. The British Major admonishes the Scottish soldiers for participating in the Christmas truce. They are to be transferred to the front lines. When a German soldier is seen crossing the battlefield, the Major orders him killed. Jonathan complies and dispassionately shoots the man. Lieutenant Audebert returns to his small office and discovers the French General there. The General tells Audebert that he will be transferred to Verdun as punishment for consorting with the enemy and that his unit will be disbanded. Audebert informs the French Generalóhis fatheróthat he has learned he has an infant son named Henri. They vow to survive the war for the childís sake. The Kronprinz angrily announces that the German soldiers are to be deployed in Pomerania as punishment. As the soldiers are taken off in a boxcar, they hum the Scottish ballad they heard in the bunker on Christmas Eve. The battlefield is now completely empty. Snow begins to fall again.

– Courtesy of Opera Philadelphia

 

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Rossini’s “Le Comte Ory” in Iowa

Des Moines Metro Opera 

PRESENTS:

Rossini / Le Comte Ory

Rossini / Le Comte Ory (The Count Ory)

Opéra in two acts
Libretto by Eugène Scribe and Charles-Gaspard Delstre-Poirson after their own play
First performance: Paris; Paris Opéra, August 20, 1828
Performed in French with English supertitles above the stage

Rossini’s effervescent Le Comte Ory is a comic tale of disguise, seduction, and the victory of virtue. The scene is the French countryside; the time, the Middle Ages, during the Crusades. Count Ory, a young nobleman, will do just about anything to conquer the chaste Countess Adèle—but his page, Isolier, will do even more to win her love. The result is a triangle of intrigue, counter-intrigue, and counter-counter-intrigue that features some of the most gorgeous and vocally dazzling music in the operatic repertoire.

EVENING SHOWS July 5 | July 15 | July 18
SUNDAY MATINEE July 13

CAST:
Le Comte Ory Taylor Stayton
Comtesse Adèle Sydney Mancasola
Raimbaud Steven LaBrie
Ragonde, the Countess’ stewardess Margaret Lattimore
The Tutor Wayne Tigges
Isolier, page to Ory Stephanie Lauricella
Alice, a peasant girl Abigail Paschke
Setting: The castle of Formoutiers, in and about 1200

PRODUCTION:
Conductor Dean Williamson
Stage Director William Theisen
Cover Conductor Aaron Breid
Assistant Stage Director TBA
Chorus Master Lisa Hasson
Musical Preparation Allen Perriello
Set Designer R. Keith Brumley
Costume Designer TBA
Lighting Designer Barry Steele
Make-Up/Hair Designer TBA
Costumes TBA

Cast, production and opera are subject to change without notice

SYNOPSIS:

Act I
France, around 1200. The Count of Formoutiers and most of the men have left for the Holy Land to fight in the Crusades, leaving behind the count’s sister, Adèle, and her companion Ragonde. The young Count Ory, who is trying to win the countess, is resolved to take advantage of the situation. With the help of his friend Raimbaud, he has disguised himself as a hermit and taken up residence outside the castle gates. Village girls and peasants gather to get the holy man’s advice on matters of the heart. Ory blesses them and promises to make all their wishes come true. Among the crowd is Ragonde. She tells Ory that, in the men’s absence, the ladies of the castle have taken a vow to live as widows, but that the Countess Adèle, who is suffering from a strange melancholy, will come to consult him. Ory is overjoyed at the prospect of seeing her.

Ory’s page Isolier arrives with Ory’s tutor, who is looking for his charge. The tutor is suspicious about the hermit’s identity and leaves to summon reinforcements. Isolier however, who does not recognize his master, confides to the “hermit” that he is in love with the countess and that he has a plan to enter the castle: he will disguise himself as a pilgrim. Ory, impressed by the idea, agrees to help but secretly resolves to use the plan for his own ends.

The countess appears, lamenting her melancholy. To her astonishment, Ory prescribes a love affair to cure her, which leads her to confess her feelings for Isolier. But the “hermit” warns her not to get involved with the page of the libertine Ory. Thankful for his advice, the countess invites Ory to the castle. They are about to leave when Ory’s tutor returns and unmasks him—to the collective horror of Isolier, the countess, and the other ladies. When news arrives that the Crusaders are expected back in two days, Ory resolves to stage another assault on the castle before their return.

Act II
At the castle that evening, the women angrily discuss Ory’s plot. A storm breaks, and cries for help are heard from outside from a group of pilgrim women who claim that Ory is pursuing them. They are, in fact, the count and his men, disguised as nuns. The countess lets them in and one of them, Ory, asks to express their gratitude. When left alone with the countess, he is barely able to contain his feelings. The countess orders a simple meal for the guests and leaves. Raimbaud, who has discovered the castle’s wine cellar, enters with enough to drink for everybody. The men’s carousing gives way to pious chanting as soon as Ragonde comes within earshot.

Isolier informs the countess that the Crusaders will return that night. When Ragonde offers to tell their guests, Isolier realizes who they are and decides to play a joke on Ory. He extinguishes the lamp in the countess’s bedroom as Ory approaches to pay her an unexpected visit. Misled by the countess’s voice, Ory makes his advances towards Isolier. When trumpets announce the return of the Crusaders, Isolier reveals his identity and Ory is left with no choice but to make his escape.

Des Moines Metro Opera
106 West Boston Avenue, Indianola, IA 50125

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