Showing posts with label The Verdi Cycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Verdi Cycle. Show all posts

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Sarasota Opera Visits Verdi

At the end of March 2016, Sarasota Opera will complete its Verdi Cycle, a 28-season effort to perform all of the works of Italy’s greatest composer Giuseppe Verdi. This will be a landmark season for the company, with national and international attention focused on Sarasota Opera.
To kick-off the celebratory season, Artistic Director Victor DeRenzi and Executive Director Richard Russell are accompanying a group of 27 Sarasota Opera patrons to Italy as “Sarasota Visits Verdi.”  The 9-night tour includes a sample of audience members who live in Sarasota full-time, are snow-birds and some who come from as far as California and London to join this pilgrimage to visit places where the composer lived and worked.
The trip kicked off on Tuesday night (5/19) with a welcome dinner at the Grand Hotel et de Milan.  This 5-star hotel was the composer’s residence in Milan during the last 30 years of his life and it was in a suite on the first floor that he passed away at the age of 87 on January 27, 1901.
Members of Sarasota Opera's pilgrimage to the sites of Giuseppe Verdi join in the
Grand Hotel et de Milan for a welcome dinner
From the Royal Box at Milan's famed Teatro alla Scala,
a member of the staff  explaines the workings of  Italy's most
venerated Opera House 
The next morning everyone made the short walk to Milan’s famous “Teatro alla Scala,” probably the most venerated opera house in the world. Nevertheless, even this theater, which opened in 1778, and was the site of the premieres of Verdi’s Oberto, Un giorno di regno, Nabucco, I lombardi alla prima crociata, Otello, and Falstaff has not performed all of the composer’s operas, as Sarasota Opera will have by next year.

La Scala has an interesting museum attached to the opera house which charts its history and has a room devoted exclusively to Verdi. The visit also included a guided tour of the auditorium and backstage from one of the theater’s music staff.  The plush historical interior of the theater is in stark contrast to the updated technology visited backstage (result of a 3-year renovation from 2001-2004).
Entrance to the Casa di Riposo in Milan
Following the theater visit, a bus took the group to the Casa di Riposo per Musicisti (Rest Home for Musicians) which is more commonly known as the Casa Verdi. In a letter to a friend the composer wrote: “Among my works, the one I like best is the Home that I have had built in Milan for accommodating old singers not favored by fortune, or who, when they were young, did not possess the virtue of saving. The poor, dear companions of my lifetime! Believe me, my friend, that Home is truly my most beautiful work (la mia opera più bella.”)
Sarasota Opera Artistic Director Victor DeRenzi contemplates a bust of Giuseppe Verdi in the sitting room of the Casa Verdi, the retirement home for poor musicians the composer built in Milan  
It was a novel idea to build and equip a rest home for the disadvantaged when Verdi proposed this idea in in the last years of his life.  It was not the first example of this type of philanthropy. A few years earlier he had built a hospital for the residents of Villanova, a town near his country estate at Sant’Agata. He acquired land on the outskirts of Milan in 1889 for the retirement home and oversaw the design and construction of the building, attending to every detail. He endowed it  with the royalties from his operas (which expired in  1962; it is now funded by a private foundation and the state.)
Under a portrait of the composer Giuseppe Verdi, members of Sarasota Opera's Verdi trip 
hear about his life at the Casa Verdi  
The Sarasotans were  met by the Director of Communications for the Casa Verdi, who highlighted Verdi’s place not only as a great composer of opera, but as a national hero whose music inspired Italians in their quest for unification in the mid 1800s. The house is full of artifacts from Verdi’s collection (including a small piano that he was given as a boy and kept all of his life) and it is in a crypt off the courtyard of the house that is his final resting place, along with his second wife Giuseppina Strepponi.
The crypt at the Casa Verdi where the composer and his wife are buried.
The evening will take the Sarasota contingent back to La Scala for a performance of Turandot by Verdi’s heir, Giacomo Puccini.



Stay tuned for more updates as Sarasota Opera continues its travels through Italy and the life of Giuseppe Verdi. 

Friday, March 13, 2015

ARTISTS CORNER: Soprano Michelle Johnson

Soprano Michelle Johnson

Soprano Michelle Johnson makes her Sarasota Opera debut this season as Élisabeth de Valois in Verdi's Don Carlos. Since being a Grand Prize winner in the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions in 2011, Ms. Johnson's career has skyrocketed taking her leading roles at Glimmerglass Opera, Opera Philadelphia, Kentucky Opera, and now Sarasota Opera. Her voice is described as being "velvety and pliant" and regarded as "similar to young Renata Tebaldi." 

Continuing reading to learn more about this soprano on the rise. 


Q. Where are you originally from and where do you make your home now?

A. I am from Pearland, Texas close to Houston, Texas.

Q. What drew you to become a singer?  Was there a specific “Aha!” moment of clarity?

A. When I was 8 years old I saw a production of Madame Butterfly on PBS. I have been hooked ever since.
Ms. Johnson in the title role of Puccini's Manon Lescaut.
Photo by Kelly & Masa Photography
Q. Did you have other career aspirations in the works before you decided on singing?  

A. I come from a long line of educators. I was certain that I was going to be a teacher in the field of English or History

Ms. Johnson as Elisabeth de Valois in
Verdi's
Don Carlos at Sarasota Opera
Q. What can you tell us about the character of Élisabeth?  What is her role in the opera?

A. Élisabeth is a strong young woman dealing with heavy decisions throughout the entire opera. She battles with being faithful to her duties as royalty and her own wants for her life. She is the face of hope, honesty, and purety.

Q. This is not exactly what one would consider a standard sized role in opera. What challenges do you face taking on a role of this length?

A. My main focus is stamina. One must not give too much too soon. With the leadership of Maestro DeRenzi the role is becoming super familiar.

Q. At the end of the performance, what knowledge about the character of Élisabeth would you like the audience to walk away with?

A. Élisabeth wants the best for everyone, her people of France and the people of Spain. She’s willing to give up her happiness for the happiness of others.

Q. Are there any famous “Élisabeth’s” from the past whose performances you admire?

A. I admire any soprano who attempts this role!

Ms. Johnson as Minnie in Puccini's Girl of the Golden West at Kentucky Opera. 
Q. Thus far, what is the most bizarre experience you have had during a rehearsal?  During a performance?

A. Unfortunately, I have had to hold up a skirt or two until the end of a scene. It’s not fun!

Q. Do you have any pre-performance rituals?  Performance superstitions?  Good luck charms?  

A. The only thing I need is about 20 minutes of meditation then I’m ready to go!

Q. How do you relax in between performances?  What hobbies do you enjoy at home and “on the road”?

A. I love movies. So, Netflix is very dangerous. I travel with my Yorkshire Terrior, Jasper, so I hang out with him a ton when I’m off.

Ms. Johnson as Giulietta in Jacque Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann.
Don't miss Ms. Johnson's performance as Élisabeth de Valois which was described as "a pure-voiced soprano of regal deportment" by classicalvoicenorthamerica.org. Remaining performances are March 15, 18, 21, and 24. Go to www.sarasotaopera.org or call (941) 328-1300 for information and tickets. 

Monday, January 27, 2014

ARTISTS CORNER: Baritone David Pershall

Baritone David Pershall
Photo by Arthur Cohen
ARTISTS CORNER: Meet baritone David Pershall who will be making his role debut as the jealous and vengeful Count De Luna in this season's production of Verdi's Il trovatore.  With his "smooth, evenly produced lyric baritone" combined with his “persuasive” stage presence Mr. Pershall is quickly making a name for himself on stages around the world. This year he joined the roster at the Metropolitan Opera as well as bowed on the stages of Dallas Opera, Virginia Opera and El Paso Opera.  Upcoming engagements include appearances at Washington National Opera, Minnesota Opera, and several appearances at the Vienna State Opera House next season.  Continue reading to learn more about Mr. Pershall and how he came to opera.  



Q. Where are you originally from and where do you make your home now?
A. I was born in Oklahoma City OK, but grew up in Temple TX. I currently live in New Brunswick, NJ and will move to Vienna, Austria in September as the majority of my work next year will be with the Vienna Staatsoper.

As the birdman, Papageno, in Mozart's
The Magic Flute at Virginia Opera
Q. What drew you to become a singer?  Was there a specific “Aha!” moment of clarity?
A. I have always had a love for music – my mother is a piano instructor so naturally that was my first instrument. Through the years I began to take voice lessons. I have always ADORED opera, and I heard my very first one in high school on a record my first voice teacher loaned me. It was not until college when I was studying at Baylor University that I thought I would try to make a living singing opera.

Q. Did you have other career aspirations in the works before you decided on singing?
A. I have always been fascinated with math and the stars.  There was a time I thought I would become an aerospace engineer or astrophysicist

Mr. Pershall as Enrico in Donizetti's
Lucia di Lammermoor 
Q. Singing the role of the Count de Luna will be a role debut for you, correct?  What made you decide to take it on?
A. Yes, this will be my debut singing the role of Count de Luna. I was thrilled at the thought of taking on the part because Il trovatore is one of my most favorite operas.

Q. What can you tell us about this character?  What do you want the audience to know about him?
A. I think this opera tells a special story. De Luna is known as the BAD guy in this opera- which is true to a point. De Luna’s life sort of unravels as a result of love. This in and of itself inspires sympathy. However, the story of De Luna also teaches restraint, in that his life is torn apart because of the obsessive type of love he feels for Leonora.

Mr. Pershall in concert at the Beethoven
Easter Festival in Warsaw, Poland
Q. What is your process for preparing a role for performance?
A. First and foremost I begin technical preparations to ensure my body is up to the task at hand. Then I study the libretto to dig into the psychology of the character in the way he speaks and the way he relates to others. This is followed with a study of the score, which provides clarification on what the composer thought of the character and gives the ultimate indication on how to turn a phrase dramatically. The final step is putting it altogether. These steps provide the most efficient and effective way to communicate with the audience.

Q. Thus far, what is the most bizarre experience you have had during a rehearsal or performance?
A. My pants split in a performance of Figaro in Il Barbiere di Siviglia.

Q. Do you have any pre-performance rituals?  
A. I pray and ask God to enhance the gifts He has bestowed upon me.

Mr. Pershall as Zurga in Bizet's The Pearl Fishers
at Virginia Opera.  
Q. How do you relax in between performances?  What hobbies do you enjoy at home and “on the road”?
A. I enjoy spending time with my wife, reading, going for walks, and checking out the local museums.

Q. How do you stay connected to family and friends when you are “on the road”?  Do you keep a blog? Website? Facebook?  Twitter?
A. I call my wife daily when she is not with me. I have a website which people can check out at www.DavidPershall.com.  I also keep a personal Facebook account, I am on Twitter (@DavidPershall), and people can enjoy clips of my performances on my YouTube channel.  Just search DavidPershallOPERA on YouTube (or you can just click here: http://www.youtube.com/user/DavidPershallOPERA.)

Don't miss the chance to see Mr. Pershall's debut as Count de Luna in Sarasota Opera's Winter Festival production of Verdi's Il trovatore opening February 8th and running through March 22nd.  Tickets are available at www.sarasotaopera.org or by calling (941) 328-1300.

Monday, January 20, 2014

ARTISTS CORNER: Tenor Kirk Dougherty

Tenor Kirk Dougherty
Tenor Kirk Dougherty has a thriving career in concert and opera.  Opera Magazine (UK), Operapulse.com, and Opera News describe his voice as a “tenor on the rise”, “an “exceptionally beautiful tenor”, and a “limitless, iridescent instrument”.  This season he makes his Sarasota Opera debut as the troubador Manrico in Verdi's Il trovatore opening February 8th, a role he has sung with a number of renowned musical organizations.  Continue reading to learn more about Mr. Dougherty and the path that lead him to a performance career in opera.   

Q. Where are you originally from and where do you make your home now?
A. I am originally from Sleepy Hollow, NY, which is a suburb of New York in Westchester County.  My wife is originally from Park Slope, Brooklyn.  We now live in the Washington Heights neighborhood in New York.   We like our neighborhood because it is convenient to our work which often revolves around auditioning and studying as much as performing.  Our neighborhood is also in between our two families who still live in Westchester and Brooklyn.

Mr. Dougherty as Ferrando in
Mozart's Cosi fan tutte
Q. What drew you to become a singer?  Was there a specific “Aha!” moment of clarity?
A. I never had any ‘aha!’ moments that led me to singing.  I think it was a combination of many events.   When I was younger I didn’t have a lot of career direction but I did have an interest in many academic subjects and disciplines.

Oddly enough though, I believe that lack of direction helped me a lot with some of my long-term singing goals.  To be a great professional singer seems to require combing many diverse disciplines into a single art.   I am definitely a generalist and I enjoy the intersection (each to a certain degree) of music, drama, athletic performance, psychology, history, linguistics, literature, and technology.

I think it’s important have the capacity to ‘get lost’ or ‘lose one’s self’ in a work of art.  When I started to be able to do that a few years ago, I felt that I was finally on the right track to a career in singing.

Q. Did you have other career aspirations in the works before you decided on singing?  
A. I considered many far-flung careers as a high school student but by the end of college I knew that I wanted to be a musician or maybe a musicologist.   As a graduate student, I had many performance opportunities but I initially focused on learning and teaching singers rather than on opera and performing. After graduate school, I got a job offer to become a college voice instructor.  For a few of years I taught voice lessons and singing to a number of undergraduate students, but I quickly realized that my true desire was to perform.  About five years ago I began to pursue a full-time opera career.

One of my greatest supporters through this transition has been my voice teacher at the Eastman School of Music. He made quite an impression on me and I admire him very much.  He has a tremendous humility about the art and about his teaching.  He instilled in me a way of thinking that improved my singing and my approach to the performing career.
Mr. Dougherty as Manrico in Verdi's Il trovatore
Q. What can you tell us about this character?  Why should the audience care about him?
A. I think that Manrico is a character who exemplifies contradictions. Although his thoughts and motives demonstrate the nobility and the chivalry of a medieval warrior, he also acts impulsively with the recklessness of a gypsy or a wanderer. This fearless, wandering nobility is also perhaps why his music and his songs seem so intriguing to Leonora.  His profession seems to reconcile these opposing qualities: as a ‘trovatore’ or ‘troubador’, he sings songs with simple, direct melodies but with words that portray the chivalrous ideals of love and courage.

I think it is even more interesting that the other three primary characters of the drama have their own similar contradictions in motives and actions.  In this way, I think Il trovatore can seem hard to follow for some opera-goers, because so much happens.  On the other hand, it’s also an unusually balanced opera with respect to the depth and development of each main character.

For an audience familiar with this drama, I hope it will be fun for them to observe and attempt to understand for themselves the inner motives of these characters.  It is both a “two-woman opera” and a “two-man opera”. Usually, operas largely involve the motives and actions of either one couple or a triangle of main characters. I think it’s interesting that, at one time or another, each of the main characters in Il trovatore – Manrico, Leonora, the Count, and Azucena – carry the drama through their own personal conflicts.

Mr. Dougherty as Hoffmann in Offenbach's
The Tales of Hoffmann
Q. You have performed this role before at other companies.  What do you enjoy about it?
A. I’ve performed the role at Tri-Cities Opera.   I think that prior experience was very important for me.  Il trovatore is definitely a difficult opera to perform and Manrico is a complicated and challenging character to create.  My goal for this production is to give a balanced interpretation of the role’s vocal and dramatic demands. I have never worked anywhere with as much rehearsal time and as many performances as we will have at Sarasota Opera (4 weeks of rehearsal and 10 performances).  I am looking forward to the challenges involved in putting together this opera.

Q. Is there something unique about your process when preparing a role for performance?
A. A few years ago I got my professional start at some smaller opera companies with fewer resources that a company like Sarasota Opera.  I was charged with learning a variety of roles in a short amount of time. I needed to develop a way of understanding and learning each new role in a constructive way.  At that time, I started studying with a system of index cards in order to quickly memorize the music and words.

The bulk of preparation happens long before the rehearsal period begins.  I always want to ensure that I arrive at each new production fully prepared and ready to immerse myself in rehearsal.  I developed a personal system of notation where I write down the smallest rudiments of music for my specific role – text, rhythm, and pitch - on approximately 10-20 index cards.  The cards help to get my nose out of the music and begin to understand the opera and my character more completely.

Mr. Dougherty as Nemorino in
Donizetti's L'Elisir d'Amore
Q. Beyond the musical work, what other kind of preparation/research work do you incorporate in the learning process?  Historical?  Character study?  
A. I have always been interested in history and so I will often try to find the historical context of the story. The original story of Il trovatore involves a medieval kingdom in present day Spain called Aragon.  At various points in European medieval history, Aragon was an important kingdom.  During the period of time Verdi set his opera, there was a war of succession in the early fifteenth century involving the count of Urgell (which is a county in Aragon), Jaime II, who was a claimant to the Kingdom of Aragon.  Manrico was probably leading men in Urgell’s army against the elected king Ferdinand I.  Many other details of the opera are fictional.

There is publication on the history of forgotten political dynasties and nations called “Vanished Kingdoms, the Rise and Fall of States and Nations” by Norman Davies.  In that book there is a chapter about Aragon which explains more about its history and origin through to its rebellion during the 18th century War of Spanish Succession and beyond.   In an unusual coincidence, this book was a gift to me from my father-in-law.  I had no idea that it would be useful reading until I opened it one day last year and found the chapter on Aragon.

Mr. Dougherty as Manrico in Verdi's Il trovatore
Q. Thus far, what is the most bizarre experience you have had during a rehearsal?  During a performance?
A. The Tales of Hoffmann was full of bizarre experiences.  I sang a duet with a robotic character (Olympia) that wore roller skates.  Making sure that she didn’t roll into the orchestra pit was crucial.

Q. Do you have any pre-performance rituals?  Performance superstitions?  Good luck charms?  If yes, why?
A. I don’t have any particular rituals and I try to avoid superstitions.  Sometimes I do bring a puzzle with me on show day just to keep my mind from thinking too much about the upcoming performance. Usually it’s an old-fashioned jigsaw puzzle.  I buy them from time to time but I rarely ever finish them.

Q. How do you relax in between performances?  What hobbies do you enjoy at home and “on the road”?
A. At home, I like to watch old movies and TV shows on Netflix.  I watch a lot of British TV and foreign film.  I guess it reminds me somehow of opera.   I also enjoy listening to the radio – NPR and talk radio. I rediscovered radio when I was driving a lot more and working locally for a variety of places in New York State.  I found talk radio and NPR was the best thing to listen to when driving a long distance.

When it’s possible, I try to enjoy the local and regional environment around me at any given place.   I was working recently in Anchorage, AK and saw some pretty scenic landscapes.  Nevertheless, it is a lot of work to produce an opera.  I try to give my voice and myself some space and time to recover from a production day.  Unlike a lot of actors and musicians, an opera singer is constantly keeping track of their instrument.  As a consequence, I am more conservative about how I spend my free time during a production.

Mr. Dougherty as Edgardo in
Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor
Q. How do you stay connected to family and friends when you are “on the road”?  Do you keep a blog? Website? Facebook?  Twitter?
A. I think it’s amazing how far technology has come to bringing people close to one another over vast distances. One of the things that definitely kept me from pursuing my singing career earlier in my life was the amount of travel and distance away from your family.  An itinerant life, however, is so much easier now than it was ten years ago.  I talk to my wife via Skype, Facebook, email, text, phone, and Facetime.  I’m also lucky that my wife sings opera as well and has a career of her own so she understands what a production period is like.   We always keep in touch throughout the time we are away and often it gives me some important perspective.

Whenever possible, my wife and I travel with each other.  When we don't have the good fortune of working on the same production, one of us will travel with the other to wherever they are singing.  Last summer I was very fortunate that she could go with me to Spain for some concerts and a production of Verdi’s Otello.   We know each other’s work very well and having my wife there with me helped me have great rehearsal and production days.

Don't miss Mr. Dougherty's performances as Manrico in Verdi's hot blooded Il trovatore opening February 8th and running for 10 performances through March 22nd.  Subscriptions and Single Tickets are on sale at www.sarasotaopera.org or by calling (941) 328-1300.