Friday, May 27, 2011

Opera Education Opportunities Abound!



Seattle Opera will be offering and involved with several exciting new opera- and theater-education programs this summer. Here's some information about some of these opportunities:

*****
Pirates of Penzance Opera Camp

Hosted at Seattle Public Theater
Directed by Kelly Kitchens and Barbara Lynne Jamison

Adventure on the high seas awaits! Join Seattle Opera and Seattle Public Theater for a hilarious farce of sentimental pirates, bumbling policemen, dim-witted young lovers, dewy-eyed daughters and an eccentric Major-General, all morally bound to the often-ridiculous dictates of honor and duty. Our camp includes acting, singing and all-round madcap theatrical fun – we’ll have you singing (even if you've never sung before) – and loving it!

When?
July 18-August 12; Monday-Friday, 9am-12pm

Performances:

August 12 @ 7pm
August 13 @ 2pm and 7pm
August 14 @ 2pm

Cost: $350 (scholarships available)
Ages: 12-16

To register, CLICK HERE.
For more information contact Sue Elliott at sue.elliott@seattleopera.org or 206-676-5560

*****
Opera as Creative Writing: Song Pirates, Ahoy!
Crafting High Seas Adventure Journals

Workshop at 826 Seattle

Have you ever wondered what pirate captains and high-seas adventurers do between epic skirmishes with sea monsters and encounters with fighting major generals? Why, they write adventure journals, of course! Calling all hands on deck for an opera-inspired mixture of visual arts, creative writing, and Pirates of Penzance inspired activities (no singing or opera experience required). For more information, and to register, CLICK HERE.

When:
July 18-21, 2-4 pm
Final Sharing for friends, family and any neighborhood pirates: 3:30pm on July 21

Cost: Free
Ages: 9-11

*****
Technical Theater Training Workshop

Hosted at Seattle Repertory Theatre

Know a high school student interested in jobs backstage and technical theater? Join the Western WA Theatrical Training Trust this August for an exciting new workshop, which offers training in lighting, sound, costuming, hair and makeup, scenery building, fly systems and video/projections for students (16 & up) and teachers. To register, CLICK HERE.

When?
Tuesday August 2, 2011 – Thursday August 4, 2011

Cost: $200.
Ages: 16 and up. Teachers may also participate.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Speight Jenkins Awarded Honorary Doctorate by New England Conservatory

This past Sunday, Seattle Opera General Director Speight Jenkins was awarded an honorary doctorate by the New England Conservatory, as part of its 2011 Commencement ceremony. It was a thrill for Jenkins, who flew to Boston to accept the degree, along with his fellow honorees: violinist Jorja Fleezanis, composer Steve Reich, and musicologist Leo Treitler. A vital part of Boston's and the nation's music scene, New England Conservatory was founded in 1867; its faculty, 225 internationally esteemed artist-teachers and scholars, trains a student body of 720 undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral music students from around the world each year. The school presents 600 free concerts each year, many of which are carried by 250 partner NPR stations around the country.

Says Jenkins, "I am honored to be a graduate of the New England Conservatory of Music, one of the leading music schools in the nation. It was particularly gratifying to me have been nominated for this award by Luretta Bybee, one of the distinguished and versatile artists who have often appeared at Seattle Opera."


Speight Jenkins with Luretta Bybee and NEC President Tony Woodcock.

Bybee, a mezzo-soprano and the Executive Director and Chair of Opera Studies at the NEC, made her Seattle Opera debut in the 1990 production of War and Peace, and has appeared in a dozen roles since then, including leading roles and supporting characters. In 2004, she sang both the title role in Carmen and the small part of Wowkle (in Puccini's Fanciulla del West) for Seattle Opera. Bybee was most recently seen in Seattle as Amanda in the world premiere of Amelia last year.

Have a look at a few pictures from this special day, below:


Speight Jenkins with his fellow honorees. From left to right: Steve Reich, Jenkins, Jorja Fleezanis, and Leo Treitler.



Bybee adorns Jenkins with the cowl during the graduation ceremony.



Jenkins receives his honorary doctorate and shakes the hand of NEC President Tony Woodcock.


Many thanks to NEC and photographer Miro Vintoniv for photos.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Benjamin Richardson's Final Report, #5

It's me again, Benjamin Richardson, Second Spirit. Looking back on this whole Magic Flute experience is incredible. I was onstage singing with well-known singers while on a scooter and 10 feet high on a catwalk! That has got to be one of the most unique experiences ever. I had the time of my life playing the Second Spirit. This was (98% sure) the last time I will ever be a Spirit in this opera, and I will never forget it. The cast was such great fun to work with, and everyone was so nice and helpful. I loved coming back to the Greenroom after singing in front of hundreds of people, on a catwalk, and wearing a red wig, to find people waiting to play poker or another game. It was very serious onstage, but surprisingly casual when we weren’t singing.

The last performance went very well, and nothing seemed to go wrong except for one minor accident. I previously had made a mental note to lean forward more when I get up from lying down on the catwalk so that the lights would shine on me. I forgot one small thing, though. When I crawled back up from my laying position, leaning a little more forward than usual, my whole head banged on the railing above me. The red wig shielded my head, but it still made a huge gong-like noise onstage. Casi Goodman, the Third Spirit, could hardly keep herself from laughing. The rest of the performance was superb, and I think that everyone must have loved the Queen of the Night a lot that night, for when she came out to bow she received the biggest roar of applause of any character on any night!


Alissa Henderson, Benjamin Richardson, and Casi Goodman as the Three Spirits in The Magic Flute.
Photo by Rozarii Lynch


It really was the most fun series of performances I have ever done. I had such a great time working with the other Spirits, Alissa Henderson and Casi Goodman, and I hope someday we will end up doing another opera together. Our Director, Chris Alexander, was a wonderful person to work with. He completely made what this opera what it was, and without him it couldn’t have been so successful. Rehearsals with him were always productive and creative, and I appreciated every one of his ideas on how to make the opera better.

Backstage at The Magic Flute: Papageno cowers, near the front of the stage, while Anubis with red brooms sweep away the Three Ladies from the "blacklight" zone upstage (Photo by Alan Alabastro)


I want to congratulate the entire cast for putting on magnificent performances and for making this one of the most amazing experiences of my life! You shall always remain in my memory, and I hope to continue singing with you.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Seattle Opera's Bike-to-Work Team (the "Ring Cyclers")

The weather was so nice on Thursday, Seattle Opera's bike-to-work team got together for a little pizza party and a few photos outside McCaw Hall. (Left, Online/Audience Development Manager Aubrey Bergauer shows her spirit.) We have quite a few employees who bike to work year-round at our main headquarters in South Lake Union, where our rehearsal studio, costume shop, and administrative offices are located; others bike to work at the scenic studio in Renton; and some performers even bike to work at the theater. For several years, Seattle Opera has participated in the Group Health Bike-To-Work Challenge in May. This year so far, our team (which includes commuters who come from Bellevue and Redmond) has logged several hundred miles of bike commuting. And a handful of Seattle Opera staffers are either STP (Seattle-to-Portland) veterans or aspiring hopefuls!

The team, ready to file in to work.


Team captain Iain Quigley is Seattle Opera's Desktop and User Support Technician.


Public Relations Coordinator Monte Jacobson got in on the fun.


The "Ring Cyclers" this May included tenor Jonathan Boyd, who sang a terrific Tamino last night, and baritone Philip Cutlip, who appears tonight as Papageno. Since performances began, Cutlip has had a chance to explore some of King County's fabulous bike trail system. Boyd's bike, for these photos, provided by Cadence Winery.


All photos by Alan Alabastro.

Friday, May 20, 2011

MEET OUR SINGERS: Keith Miller, Sarastro

Singing Sarastro at tonight's performance is American bass-baritone Keith Miller, native of Colorado, former professional football player, Director of Opera and Opera Young Artists Program for the Crested Butte Music Festival, and all-around great guy. The city of Seattle has taken warmly to Miller while he was here making his Seattle Opera debut; last week, the Seattle Times Sports Page ran a story on him, and posted a Video Interview as well; and he also appeared on New Day Northwest, where he sang "O Isis und Osiris" for the studio audience. Yesterday, Miller sang the anthem for the Mariners, and today (before tonight's performance) he answers our questions about his career, the role of Sarastro, and singing those low, low notes.

What’s your favorite moment in Magic Flute--either to perform yourself, or just to watch?
I love the quintet and the entrance of the queen. When they speak of the Three Spirits and that beautiful simple music plucks away underneath the singing, it is magical. Also, I can't imagine what the first performance of Flute must have been like watching the faces of the audience and children as the Queen's first entrance music pulses away and the
vocal fireworks begin on "Du Du Du!" Mozart was a genius!! No argument from anyone on that, and I am so grateful to be a part of the retelling of this masterpiece!

With The Magic Flute, do you have to be careful about warming up, so your voice doesn’t get so high that you can’t sing Sarastro’s arias?
Yes, you do have to be careful as not to warm up so much for Sarastro. It is a very low role and what makes it especially difficult is that I'm singing Escamillo in Glimmerglass right afterwards. This makes the voice bounce up and down like a yo-yo!

Pamina (Hanan Alattar) is not necessarily convinced by Sarastro's (Keith Miller) lofty ideals of nobility and brotherhood; Rozarii Lynch, photo


Do you consider Sarastro “good”? With Tamino not joining Sarastro’s brotherhood in this production, does that change how you perceive Sarastro as a person, and how you play his character on stage?
Great question. I feel like Sarastro is is very much like a parent, with parental powers included. By this, I mean his powers are influence and education along with point of view and perspective. By showing Tamino these things, he is guiding him, educating him, and the fact that Tamino doesn't side with him in the end means that he has done his job well.

I actually consider this to be the final passing of the tests. My own little interpretation! Tamino comes away with the power of choice. Just like a parent, the time to educate and raise our children comes and goes, and when they leave, you hope that they have gathered the lessons taught and begin a new and more prosperous life. In this production, this is how I see this relationship. This is how I know that Sarastro has done his job, and in the end, I think that he can feel proud that he has chosen wisely in Tamino.

Sarastro (Miller) chastises his misbehaving slave, Monostatos (Doug Jones) (Rozarii Lynch, photo)


Why did you decide to make the switch from a career in football to a career in opera?
Basically, I just followed my heart. The stars aligned and I found myself in the unique position of being able to play for probably two more seasons and beginning this journey into music. At that point, I realized that I couldn't imagine what my life would be like looking back at that moment, many, many years from now and saying to myself, "What would have happened if I had seized that opportunity to sing?" I have never lived with regret. But I realized then that if I didn't grab this golden opportunity, it was never going to come again. This is something that I would have regretted, and would have been willing to trade all those days that passed for the chance to come back to that decision and choose music. I would have traded my soul away.

Miller as Sarastro (Rozarii Lynch, photo)


You’re training young singers and introducing kids to opera through the Crested Butte Music Festival. How did you get involved, and how do you balance these responsibilities with your performing career?
Balance is a careful combination of doing what you need to do. Each task, whether it be my preparation as a singer, teaching, hearing auditions, auditioning myself, or anything else, is like a spoke of a wheel. Each spoke must be strong within itself, support equal weight and yet be distanced from the rest in order for the wheel to be aligned. I cannot allow myself to neglect what I need to do as a performer, for half of what my value is to young singers is that I am going through the process myself and they can learn from my experiences and follow my career in the making. I cannot concentrate completely on my music, because that would not allow me to administrate to my full effectiveness. The axle of this wheel for me is patience and foresight. Through these two things, all the spokes of my performing career and administrative duties are attached and supported. These two things sustain my career, the education I am providing for the Young Artists, how to balance the needs of my staff, and allow for the natural progression of time. The good thing is as this wheel turns, I am able to learn new things about myself, the business and most importantly music. The only way to balance a wheel is to let it spin. It's like a planet. If it continues to do its job, it aligns itself and everything falls into place.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

VIDEO: The Behind-the-Scenes Magic of Quick Change

For every person you see on the opera stage, there are, on average, three more people working behind the scenes to bring you a fantastic opera-going experience. Here's a glimpse of some of that unseen work. To learn more, visit www.seattleopera.org/support




Videography by Alan Alabastro, Jeffery Santos, and Matt Holmes.

Monday, May 16, 2011

MEET OUR SINGERS: Eric Neuville and Erik Anstine, First and Second Priests

Our current production of The Magic Flute wraps up this Saturday, and our blog series of Q&As with artists still hasn't made it through everyone in this very large cast. But today we bring you two more players in Flute, both of whom also were Seattle Opera Young Artists this season: tenor Eric Neuville (First Priest) and bass Erik Anstine (Second Priest). Check out what they had to say about their roles below, and take note that if you haven't yet seen Flute, there are only three performances remaining.

To the right, a costume sketch for Sarastro and his priests, by costume designer Zandra Rhodes.

In your brief duet, “Bewahret euch vor WeibertĂĽcken,” the two of you warn Tamino and Papageno to watch out for women. Have these priests been badly hurt…or are they just jerks?

ERIK: I think that’s an unfair question. The priests’ attitudes toward women come from the philosophy of the temple. In the finale of Act One, Sarastro gestures while lecturing about how women, without the guidance of men, will tend to step out of place. The women of the chorus fall to their knees in deference at this comment. The two priests are starting to indoctrinate Tamino and Papageno in the temple’s attitudes toward women.
ERIC: I think the priests take pleasure in scaring Tamino and Papageno, but keep in mind, these two priests were the first to speak up against allowing Tamino to take the tests in the first place. So perhaps they knew they would have to be babysitters and are just annoyed with the whole situation.


Erik Anstine (Second Priest) and Philip Cutlip (Papageno) in The Magic Flute.
Photo by Rozarii Lynch


In Act 2, as Tamino and Papageno undergo the brotherhood’s testing, you each take one under your wing. How does that play out?

ERIC: I'm very fortunate to be the Priest responsible for Tamino on his journey, as Mr. Anstine gets stuck with the "flighty" one. Talk about a pain in the tail-feathers!
ERIK: The Second Priest is disappointed at having to deal with Papageno, yes. While Tamino answers all questions correctly, stays silent, and undergoes the trials, Papageno only wants a glass of wine, or spends his time talking and making life difficult for the Second Priest.

Eric, you and Erik Anstine both performed in the Young Artists Program production of Don Giovanni earlier this spring. How do these two Mozart operas compare to each other?

The first thing that comes to mind is the nature of the stories. Don Giovanni feels very real; one can easily sympathize with a character like Donna Elvira or Leporello. The Magic Flute is a fairy tale. I mean, when is the last time you were forced to do secret priest tests in order to impress daddy enough to get a first date with a girl who's picture you fell in love with after being rescued from a dragon?


Marcy Stonikas (Donna Elvira) and Eric Neuville (Don Ottavio)--both Seattle Opera Young Artists--in this spring's YAP production of Don Giovanni. In The Magic Flute, Stonikas makes her mainstage debut in The Magic Flute, as one of the Three Ladies.
Photo by Rozarii Lynch


Erik, congratulations on your mainstage debut with this production. Does it feel like an arrival for you?

Thanks! After two years in the Young Artist Program and watching singers perform on the mainstage, I’m really happy to get up there myself. Singing at McCaw and being in a mainstage production has felt like a natural progression from being in the amazing program here. Of course I had some nerves on opening night, but I have felt incredibly prepared throughout the process, thanks in no small part to the terrific training I received here. As opposed to being coddled or treated like students, we were treated like real professionals in the program. We were expected to behave and perform at an extremely high level. Being under that kind of pressure really prepared me for being on the mainstage and has meant that I’ve been able to enjoy my debut.

I’m also really glad I’ve been able to share this production with Marcy Stonikas and Eric, my fellow two-year YAP veterans.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Checking in with Chris Alexander

Chris Alexander, stage director of both The Magic Flute and (coming up next at Seattle Opera) Porgy and Bess, stopped by and we asked him about the first few performances of his Flute.

Were you pleased with the opening night performance?

Saturday evening, there was a moment of suspense there because we had some trouble with one of our curtains opening and closing. The wonderful Yasmine Kiss, who is our stage manager, saved the show. When the iris didn’t move for the scene change into Papageno's suicide, she got everybody downstage and they entered from another direction. The problem was fixed right before the eight Papageni “chicks” came on, thank goodness. I was sitting in the house, and there really was a tense moment, but it worked out and we were so relieved.

And how about the Sunday performance, which featured the debuts of all five principal singers?

It’s really thrilling to see both casts, and the Sunday cast did a wonderful job with the matinee. The matinee was, I thought, a little more relaxed than the opening evening.

What surprised you most about the performances so far?

Well, I was thrilled by what Mari Moriya, our second Queen of the Night, did. She’s amazing, every time she does the Queen of the Night, she adds something to it. It’s evolving into an immense performance. So she really surprised me in a wonderful way. And Papageno, with the audience reacting to everything he says or does, really came out of his shell [laughs].


Mari Moriya (Queen of the Night)
Photo by Rozarii Lynch


You're pleased with the audience reaction?

Yes, the audience is having fun with it, and that was very important to me. I like it that they respond with laughter and sometimes even hissing to some of the statements made by Sarastro and his priests, which is what we were expecting. And one of the most special moments is the entrance of the eight chicks--people go crazy over that!

The first big laugh in the show comes in the first number, when the dragon snorts out steam as it dies. That’s where you basically introduce yourself to the audience, telling them what your show is going to be like.

That’s it exactly. We were considering taking the puff out because it leaves a trace of powder on the stage. We were asking “Oh, should we even use it?” And I thought that we had to. That's the introduction to the production’s style.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

MEET OUR SINGERS: Christine Brandes and Hanan Alattar, Paminas

Today, we chat with Christine Brandes and Hanan Alattar, who share the role of Pamina in The Magic Flute. Brandes has previously appeared in Seattle as Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro and Cleopatra in Giulio Cesare (the latter of which was conducted by Gary Thor Wedow, who has also returned for Flute). Alattar, on the other hand, is making her company debut in the role, though she has previously performed with the Seattle Symphony. We talk to both sopranos about relating to Pamina...and what the princess thinks about her mother, the fearsome Queen of the Night.


Tamino falls head over heels in love with Pamina upon seeing only her picture. Do you find that romantic, or just creepy?

CHRISTINE: I think it is a romantic idea—rather sweet, in principle.
HANAN: Haha, well, it would be creepy if it was via Facebook in 2011... However, my picture in a locket belonging to my mother who is a queen and in a world where he is a prince looking for his princess.... Wowies! Romance in all its glory is certainly in the air.


Leigh Melrose (Papageno) and Hanan Alattar (Pamina).
Photo by Rozarii Lynch


Does Pamina's relationship with her mother change over the course of the opera? How does she feel about the Queen at the end of the opera?

CHRISTINE: Initially, Pamina trusts her mother, believes she will rescue her from this circumstance and has her best interest at heart. Pamina gradually realizes that, as one might suspect with queens, she is completely driven by her own self-interest not the hoped-for unconditional love. While she has compassion and understands what has driven her mother to the point of madness, she has definitely broken with her and found her own path.
HANAN: Yes—even though Pamina loves her mother, she has had to make decisions that will secure the kind of future that she wishes to have in her life. I think that Pamina grows up a lot during the course of this opera. She meets the love of her life, sees her mother in a completely different light, goes through dangerous trials and in the end decides to move forward with her partner on a separate path. It's not that she now dislikes her mother; she still loves her! But, she sees that her mother's methods might not be the best way for her in her own life.

As modern women, how do you relate to Pamina, who is denied so many of the freedoms we take for granted today?

CHRISTINE: She is easy for me to relate to. The path to Tamino is not easy and once they are together, they have trials to overcome as a couple. She is strong-willed, follows her heart and speaks her truth. Gotta love all of that! Ultimately, she gains all those freedoms as she and Tamino walk off into the sun(set) to make a different world for themselves—as equals.
HANAN: The biggest shift you see and hear in Pamina is when she figures out her own tests in the trials. She calms down and actually takes the wheel for a while! She says, "I myself will guide you. Love will light the way for me... Play the flute. It will protect us. It was made by my father,” and so on. She becomes the equal, and they say the last lines together. And that's where the show leaves us, both sides moving together towards the new future.


Christine Brandes (Pamina) and John Tessier (Tamino).
Photo by Rozarii Lynch


Christine, this is your second time working here with Gary Thor Wedow. How would you describe your collaboration with him?

Working with Gary is a complete delight. He is a fantastic musician and conductor (two characteristics not always found in one individual!) and is a dear person. I also trust him when it comes to musical, vocal, or dramatic observations.

How did you get started in opera? What do you say to people who don’t find this art form relevant?

I came into "straight" opera a bit through the back door. I was doing lots of baroque opera, was scooped up by a manager after one of those performances, and gradually found doors opening to mainstream houses and repertoire.

I would suggest that people who don't find this art form relevant just aren't paying attention. Maybe relevant isn't the right word. Opera does many things. It uplifts, entertains and amuses and hopefully inspires some kind of emotional response. If a magnificent phrase can transform one's spirit, even for just a single shiver, our work is done. Those are the moments that reaffirm and feed our souls. I hope opera is thought-provoking and perhaps can give a new perspective to a nagging issue in one's own life. Okay, so stabbing your rival may not always be the answer to your problems, but perhaps other options will arise!

Hanan, you recently sang the Mozart Requiem with Seattle Symphony. Was that your first visit to our fair city? Do you have exciting plans for extracurriculars while you’re here?

I sure did, and it sure was my first visit! I am a major coffee person, so I have been exploring all of the local coffee houses. Also, I love the outdoors, so I am truly enjoying walking around the city and seeing its beautiful landscape.

You’ve sung your fair share of new music and opera in English, as well as lots of Mozart. Tell us about Goldenthal’s Grendel.

Goldenthal's Grendel was a heroic task taken on by Los Angeles Opera and the wonderful, whimsical world of Julie Taymor. It was cool on many levels. Goldenthal is actually Julie's partner as well, so there was such a strong connection from text to music, to puppets, and to the drama. The cast was phenomenal, including Eric Owens, Denyce Graves, and Laura Claycomb. I totally had a crush on Eric Owens’ voice after that show, wow.

I was part of Denyce Grave's three-pronged tail. (My first glorious role at Los Angeles Opera!) My costume took three hours to prepare every evening. I also covered Laura Claycomb's role at the same time.

There was a bit of drama with a delayed opening of the show due to a computer malfunction, but it was so worth the wait. The set, the amazing costumes, and the music really took you to another place and time and kept you suspended there until the very end. I wish it would be done again. We performed it in New York as well, and all nights were sold out. I think it is one of those shows that you would say to your friends and colleagues, "Don't miss this one. You really, really have to see it—at LEAST once!"

The Magic Flute: Flute-Apalooza

In celebration of “The Magic Flute,” Seattle Opera hosted a free community open house at McCaw Hall on Saturday, May 7, which featured performances by Papageno (Leigh Melrose) and the Queen of the Night (Mari Moriya), as well as Sound Wave (the official Seattle Sounders marching band), the University of Washington Magic Flutes, and an all-kazoo orchestra. Check out this recap of the fun, family-friendly event, sponsored by Russell Investments.




Learn more about The Magic Flute on the Seattle Opera website.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Benjamin Richardson Reports from Rehearsal (and Opening Night!), #4

This is Benjamin, the second Spirit in Seattle Opera’s production of The Magic Flute, talking about our last week of rehearsal and opening night. On Sunday, May 1, we watched the Silver Cast do a rehearsal in full costume. This was the first time we saw the costumes and we were amazed at how they sparkled and shone in the light. The costumes are so well-designed, it was hard to believe they were made by a human!

Monday was the first time we were on stage with the orchestra in the pit. It was much different but our maestro, Gary Thor Wedow, is always there in the pit swinging his baton and helping us stay in tempo if we get lost. Then on Tuesday we had our first full dress rehearsal with makeup and costume. Being on the catwalk and on the scooters with our costumes was a whole new experience. My favorite thing to do onstage is to lie down on the narrow catwalk and look down at Pamina.

For Wednesday’s dress rehearsal, we had an actual audience that filled a lot of the auditorium! We had the full experience of what it would be like in a performance. We had some time to waste in the Green Room, so we played things like poker and other games with the Anubii and the chorus men and women. When it was time to get on the stage, we stepped on the catwalk or on our scooters and went out there to sing. It was so exciting being in front of so many people.


A costume sketch for the Three Spirits, by costume designer Zandra Rhodes.


Saturday, May 7, was opening night for Magic Flute, which was very exciting. In my dressing room I was greeted by three truffles, three cookies, three cards, and a rose from Speight Jenkins (who gave a rose to every cast member!). I thought the performance would be similar to the dress rehearsals, but it was actually much different. I think the reason for that is if, for example, the catwalk didn’t come down soon enough in the dress rehearsals we would simply stop, fix it, and keep going. If it happened in the performance, though, it could go very wrong. Thankfully, nothing went wrong from the audience's view, but backstage something did go wrong.

At the beginning of our scene where we tell Papageno not to kill himself, he is supposed to suddenly appear from behind an opened iris, which is a black moveable screen that opens up to form different shapes into which characters enter and exit. The iris, however, did not open, and there was an awkward moment of nothing happening onstage. Backstage we and the Anubii were told to go through another wing. The Anubii were to hold these palm branches that we hide behind, but we had to move all the branches quickly from one wing to another. When we reached the wing, things went smoothly and we improvised our blocking (movements). When I went backstage, I frantically tried to find out where we needed to go next. They told me the iris was now opening, and things could go on normally. My heartbeat slowed down about 75%.


Alissa Henderson, Benjamin Richardson, and Casi Goodman (The Three Spirits) with Philip Cutlip (Papageno).
Photo by Rozarii Lynch


The other parts of the opera went very well, and I felt good about how we performed. The only other thing that happened was a mistake that only I made. There’s a scene where all the Spirits leave the stage except for me, and I take Papageno by the hand and pull him offstage. There were two wings, wing 1 and wing 2, and I accidentally brought him into wing 1. The next scene required Pamina to come out on a moving desk, and this wide desk was basically blocking wing 1 completely. When I saw this, I had to jump past the desk through a very tight space, and I felt lucky neither Papageno nor I hit the desk in any way. I’m also glad our costumes didn’t get caught on the desk, for if we were to be pulled back onstage stuck to the desk, it would have been very embarrassing!

At the end the audience gave us a heartwarming standing ovation, and we bowed several times.

The next day, we had a cast party at Speight Jenkins’ house. It was a beautiful house with pretty flowers all over the front porch. They had the most delicious food: pasta, salad, pepperoni, bread, and apples with cream for dessert. Almost every single person who had anything to do with The Magic Flute was there having a great time. Mr. Jenkins also had two adorable dogs named Sunshine and Cinnamon, and they were very friendly and they greeted every person. It was remarkable seeing all these people, having seen them onstage doing incredible things, just talking and being normal human beings!

Monday, May 9, 2011

MEET OUR SINGERS: Ani Maldjian, Papagena

Now it's time to check in with Ani Maldjian, who plays Papagena. An alumna of Seattle Opera's Young Artists Program, Maldjian made her mainstage debut in the fall of 2007 as the First Priestess in Gluck's Iphigénie en Tauride; meanwhile, as a Young Artist, she was playing such roles as Serpina in La serva padrona, Nannetta in Falstaff, Rita in Donizetti's opera of that name, Trio Soprano in Trouble in Tahiti, Fire/Princess/Nightingale in L'enfant et les sortilèges, Lauretta and Ciesca in Gianni Schicchi, and an unforgettably Armenian Lillas Pastia from a tough neighborhood of Los Angeles in The Tragedy of Carmen. She speaks with us about Papagena, playing roles large and small, and working with dialogue and character voices.


Just before rehearsals for Flute began, you were down in Portland for The Diary of Anne Frank, with Portland Chamber Orchestra, a role you’ve done several times before. Tell us about this opera, and what it’s like to portray Anne Frank.
The Diary of Anne Frank by Grigori Frid is a one-woman opera, nearly one hour in length. Every word you hear comes directly from Anne herself, out of her diary. Most of the opera takes place when they are in hiding and spans the entire two year period they lived in the annex. The opera takes us through many emotions and experiences Anne went through, some of which include her fears, concerns, hopes, prayers and my favorite... the first time she falls in love. It's an amazing experience to portray Anne because she was such an extraordinary child, so ahead of her time and with an important message which still applies to us today. My favorite line in the opera is: "In spite of evil and fear, this world is still beautiful...and as for man...he too is good." Every time I perform this role, her spirit reawakens mine. I feel so lucky to have performed this internationally over the past four years.


Papageno (Leigh Melrose) first meets Papagena (Ani Maldjian) when she's disguised as an old woman.
Photo by Rozarii Lynch


Why does Papagena first appear to Papageno as an old woman?
Papagena appears as an old woman to test Papageno's heart and to see if he will promise his love to her even if she is old and not so beautiful. Once he promises and she sees that he has a good heart, she reveals herself as the beautiful, young Papagena. He is happily surprised!

You’ve just done an opera (Anne Frank) in which you’re onstage the entire time; in Magic Flute, you have an extremely small, although vital, part. What are the challenges and rewards of these two kinds of roles?
I think there are challenges to both sizes of roles. In a small role, you only have a few minutes to show your talents and to make an impression. So there's that kind of a pressure. But a larger role requires longer periods of focus, commitment, emotional and vocal stamina and you really have to be on top of your game for much longer. However, no matter the size of role I sing, I prepare in the same way mentally and give it my all. After all, I'm here doing what I love...PERFORMING!

As Papagena the old lady, sopranos often do an exaggerated character voice. If you’re performing dialogue—particularly in a weird voice—is it easy to turn around a minute later and sing beautifully?
I am doing a character voice in this production. I tried out many voices in my own practice (ranging from cartoony voices to screaming very high pitched voices). But as soon as I put on my costume and mask, the right voice naturally came out. It just felt right. I would say it's a high pitched voice that is a cross between an exaggerated old lady and and an evil cartoon character. It's really easy for me to switch into singing because I keep the speaking sound supported as if I were singing and I try not to put too much pressure on the vocal cords.


Papageno (Philip Cutlip) and Papagena (Ani Maldjian) celebrate their new love and family.
Photo by Rozarii Lynch


We hear you're acquainted with Serj Tankian, who's playing with his rock band System of a Down at Key Arena on May 13.
Yes, he's a friend of mine and I've sung on a couple of his solo albums. I'll be singing as Papagena the night he's at Key Arena, though, so I'll miss his concert!

Magic Flute Opening Night Q&A with Speight Jenkins

After every performance, General Director Speight Jenkins hosts a free Q&A session in the lecture hall at McCaw Hall. Listen to this live recording of Seattle Opera General Director Speight Jenkins as he candidly answers the audience's questions after the Saturday, May 7 opening night performance of The Magic Flute.








Saturday, May 7, 2011

Meet Our Musicians: Zart Dombourian-Eby and Philip Kelsey, Flute and Bells

Between final rehearsals the other day I had a chance to check in with Zart Dombourian-Eby and Philip Kelsey, the soloists in our orchestra who play the all-important magic flute and magic bells solos in Seattle Opera's production (which opens in a few hours). It's conductor Gary Thor Wedow's job (one of his many jobs, in fact) to sync what they're playing, down in the pit, with what the singers and prop personnel are doing up onstage, to give you the impression that the props you see are making this magical music. There's a famous story of how at the first production in Vienna in 1791, Mozart played a prank on his librettist Schickaneder (who created the role of Papageno) by playing the bells at the wrong time, leading Schickaneder to improvise the line, spoken while slapping the prop onstage, "Das Glockenspiel musst kaput sein!" You'll hear our Papagenos say that line...except that over the years, it's worked its way to apply to a different situation.

Zart, you play the two extended flute solos when Tamino, in the story, is playing his flute to charm the wild beasts and to endure the deadly trials of fire and water. Are these solos like Siegfried’s horn call for a horn player, that is, things you have to play over and over again your entire career?
No, I haven’t done them that much…I’ve only done Magic Flute one other time, at Seattle Opera in 1999. As a flute player, the “Dance of the Seven Veils” from Salome is the main solo that you really dig into...that, plus the Forest Murmurs [from Wagner’s Siegfried]. Both those pieces are done by orchestras all the time in concert. And the suites from Carmen are very flute-ey, with the solos that open Acts 2 & 3. With Carmen, we have a lot of flute operas coming up next year. Gluck’s OrphĂ©e has a huge flute part--now that’s one you start learning that when you’re in Junior High. The solo that heralds Orpheus’s arrival in the Elysian Fields, that’s a good one to learn all about baroque ornamentation: the “Minuet and Dance of the Blessed Spirits.”

Although much of Mozart’s music is not all that challenging, technically, many musicians find they’re very exposed in Mozart. Speight Jenkins likes to say, of singers, “Mozart takes your clothes off.” Is that true for woodwinds, too?
It’s true for entire orchestras: you're naked when you play Mozart. It looks so simple, but it’s the hardest thing to play. It’s great for an orchestra to play Mozart, it keeps you on your toes. In my solos in Magic Flute I have to be precise rhythmically and in terms of pitch; yet you still have to be expressive. It’s got to be everything at once.



In Seattle Opera’s Magic Flute there’s a dialogue scene, in Act Two (when Tamino is trying to ignore the talkative Papageno) when you play, as a solo, the melody of Tamino’s Act One aria, “Dies Bildnis.” Was that your idea? Usually flute players simply reprise their first solo at this point.
It was actually Gary’s idea, our conductor. I love it, because it’s a beautiful melody and I don’t play it when he sings it the first time around. A lot of the ornamentation I do in that solo is based on Gary’s suggestions, too. He’s such a scholar, he brought me a full page of references he had looked up, from Mozart’s period, of how it should be done. He’s inspiring that way: a wonderful musician as well as a scholar.

He’ll be back next year, to conduct your solos in OrphĂ©e.
Yes, I’m looking forward to that! This is the first time I’m playing with Gary Wedow, but all my colleagues in the orchestra loved him when he made his debut [in 2007, conducting Julius Caesar and IphigĂ©nie en Tauride]. I’m very much looking forward to next season…we’ve got Porgy and Bess, and John DeMain is THE conductor in the world for that opera, he conducted it when we did it last time. And lots for the flute in Carmen and OrphĂ©e, and probably in Attila--Verdi and Rossini always put flute, or piccolo, which I play, in the overtures, or in the storm scene. And we end with Madama Butterfly, and I just love Puccini...his harmonies, his arias. My father used to play Puccini operas all the time when I was growing up.

Phil Kelsey, you've been Seattle Opera's assistant conductor for many years. How old were you when you first got to know The Magic Flute?
I was 12 years old, and a member of the San Francisco Boys' Chorus, which provides singing boys for San Francisco Opera. My colleagues with stronger voices got to perform the trio, but I got to know the opera then. It's been a fifty year love affair with this magnificent score.

How many productions of The Magic Flute have you played or conducted or performed as magic-bell-guy?
Although I have worked on a number of productions of Flute in various capacities, this is the first time I've had the chance to play the magic bells. It's something I've always wanted to do!

What do you want out of a Magic Flute production--are you more into the silly, whimsical side of this show, or the profound Masonic numerology-cum-sacred Orphic ritual aspect?
The ideal Magic Flute for me is above all entertaining, but uplifting as well. Mozart's music tells us that he was deeply serious about the search for wisdom and compassion that the "ritual" aspects of the libretto present. It also tells us that Enlightenment isn't worth anything if there isn't room for a sense of humor.



What’s the difficult part about doing a superlative job with the bells?
The magic bell music is tinkly and fun, but it is also elegant and melodic. It musn't just sound like a music box, it must be a Mozartean music box.

Tell us a little about the instrument you’re playing.
Mozart originally wrote the part for a keyboard glockenspiel, which was an oddity even at that time. There are not many of them in existence today. Nearly all theaters use a celesta (which was not even invented until a hundred years after Flute); this is the instrument we are using.

Friday, May 6, 2011

The Magic Flute: Preview Trailer

Our production of Mozart's fantasy is colorful, fun, and boasts a cast full of amazing voices. Watch the preview trailer and see for yourself!




Learn more about The Magic Flute on the Seattle Opera website.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

First Photos from MAGIC FLUTE

Here's a glimpse at Seattle Opera's new production of Mozart's masterpiece, taken at last night's dress rehearsal by the great Rozarii Lynch:

The Queen of the Night (Emily Hindrichs) asks Prince Tamino (John Tessier) to rescue her kidnapped daughter


The music of Tamino's magic flute has the power to charm even ferocious beasts...


...while the music of Papageno's magic bells disarms the threatening Monostatos (Doug Jones) and his henchmen.


The Second Priest (Erik Anstine) has to repeat his instructions about being silent to Papageno (Philip Cutlip)


Thanks to music's magical power, Tamino and Pamina survive the deadly trial by fire


All photos (c) Rozarii Lynch

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

MEET OUR SINGERS: Philip Cutlip and Leigh Melrose, Papagenos

Opening night for Seattle Opera's new production of The Magic Flute is just a few days away, so it's only fitting that we speak with baritones Philip Cutlip and Leigh Melrose, who portray the character some say is the real star of this opera: Papageno. (To the right, see a costume sketch for Papageno, by designer Zandra Rhodes.)

Cutlip appeared as Enrico in Lucia di Lammermoor earlier this season, and Melrose is making his Seattle Opera debut in Flute. We speak to both about their role, and also find out what they've been up to lately.

Speight Jenkins says Papageno is his favorite character in The Magic Flute. What does Papageno have that the other characters don’t?

PHILIP: I KNEW there was a reason I love Speight so much! I have always felt that Papageno is the best character because he most aptly represents the "Every Man." His reactions are genuine and natural, and his motivations are quite simple. He likes to eat and drink, he likes to chat, mainly about himself--and he wishes for a romantic companion. I think I know a few people like that....

LEIGH: I’d say Speight is right on the money there! Papageno has that essential humanity and charm. However, it goes beyond telling some jokes and being involved in funny business. He has the chance to discuss his thoughts and feelings directly with the audience and then act on them. Because of this opportunity, he becomes a very rounded character, and this substance then helps convey his immense story arc: from child-like simplicity to mature man, prepared to pledge his love and die for his beliefs.

Given that Papageno didn’t want to go on Tamino’s quest originally, and has zero interest in Sarastro’s brotherhood, what is he doing in this plot?

PHILIP: Papageno sticks to the plan to journey into Sarastro's realm because he is enticed by the gift of the magical glockenspiel. Before the Three Ladies give it to him, he's ready to skip out on Tamino and go back to his easy, lonely life. I think Papageno also has the barest glimmer of bravery, or at least the desire to be brave, and by joining up with heroic Tamino, he hopes he might have his chance.

LEIGH: Papageno is an Everyman who engages the audience’s sympathies and allows them a view into the topsy-turvy world of Die Zauberflöte. While he provides comic diversions when things get a touch too serious, he also embodies the crucial and fundamental progression in the opera from innocence to knowledge. We all aspire to be a Tamino, Pamina, or Sarastro, but inevitably we all have a lot of Papageno in us. As a result, he is the symbol of hope in the opera--hope that one day the gods will reward you for all your hard work and patience. And maybe include a good glass of wine in the deal too!


John Tessier (the Saturday/Wednesday Tamino) and Philip Cutlip (the Saturday/Wednesday Papageno) rehearse for The Magic Flute.
Photo by Alan Alabastro


What’s your game plan if someone shouts out “I’ll take you!” when you’re threatening suicide if you can’t find a wife? Have you ever heard of that happening to a baritone?

LEIGH: Have I heard of it happening? It happened to me! In fact, when I first performed the role, my teacher, who had himself been a very fine Papageno, threw down the gauntlet by noting that I probably wouldn’t get any reaction on my first production, while he had inspired such things on his very first show. Hhis challenge focused my mind and I can happily report that I had three hands up in the audience waving at me on my first night! And after hearing Simon Keenlyside gently let down a particularly ardent admirer in perfect German one night, I was inspired to hurry up learning the language for just such moments--even though I’m nowhere near his vocal excellence. As for what I’ll actually do...well, I guess it depends on who shouts what!

PHILIP: I have heard of situations where Papageno actually gets some offers. But you'll have to come to the opera to see how I'll handle this one--I don't want to spoil the surprise!

Philip, you were last here in a very different role, as Enrico in Lucia. Do you prefer doing a character where the audience will love you instead of hate you?

It's interesting to compare a role like Enrico to Papageno. As far as singing goes, Enrico was incredibly rewarding to perform. He had demanding vocal lines, extensive arias, and a fantastic verismo duet. Having said that, it's very gratifying to get to be the good, friendly, lovable guy. Papageno places different demands on me as a singing actor, such as connecting directly with the audience.


Philip Cutlip (Enrico) and Davinia RodrĂ­guez (Lucia) in the fall production of Lucia di Lammermoor.
Photo by Alan Alabastro


As a native of the Pacific Northwest, what’s your favorite kind of local recreation?
It's so hard to name what appeals to me most of the myriad outdoor activities. If I had to, I’d narrow it down to two: climbing/hiking/backpacking and skiing. Living on the East Coast, I have chances to ski, but Washington’s mountains give me much more than a hill to ski down.

Leigh, you’ve had plenty of experience singing modern music and pieces in English, probably because of the lively opera scene in England these days. What’s been your experience in the U.S. so far, and how do the audiences compare?

I do seem to do a lot of contemporary works in London and in Europe in the vernacular of the particular country, which is great. For me, there are few greater joys on stage than creating a new character and revealing him to an interested audience who can immediately understand what I’m singing. I haven’t had much experience with American audiences, but from my limited knowledge they are honest and direct so that if you entertain them, they are enthusiastic and very supportive. They are also unafraid to laugh, which is important for a Papageno!

Is this your first visit to Seattle? What non-opera plans do you have for your time here?

This is my first visit to Seattle, so I’m eating my way around the city with relish!