Thursday, April 30, 2015

Meet Our Singers: PATRICK CARFIZZI, Music Master/Truffaldino

Patrick Carfizzi takes on two roles in Seattle Opera’s comic-tragic mashup of Ariadne auf Naxos. On the serious side of things, he’s the distressed Music Teacher, who’s having a terrible time trying to produce his young protégé’s new opera on the Ariadne legend. But after intermission, Patrick will switch allegiances and become Truffaldino, the lowest voice among the four boyfriends of fickle Zerbinetta, the comic antithesis of Ariadne. An intensely intelligent man and a fantastic singer with a big fan base in Seattle, Patrick shared with me his unique perspective on this unique situation.

Patrick Carfizzi as the Music Teacher butters up the Prima Donna in the Prologue to Ariadne auf Naxos

What’s the story of Ariadne?
There are several wonderful stories: that of the young Composer, growing up and making discoveries about life. Or the story of my character, his mentor, the Music Teacher, helping this teenager on his journey, when he’s stubborn and easily frustrated: “Aw, I don’t wanna do it that way, mom! I wanna do it my way!” Or the story of the commedia goofballs, who are the same as the goofballs you see on any playground. There are lots of stories in Ariadne. I always hope the audience comes to an opera and thinks: I see myself in that, or I wish I could be like that, or wouldn’t it be interesting to be like that.

Patrick Carfizzi as the Music Teacher and Kate Lindsey as the Composer
Elise Bakketun, photo

Ariadne asks questions about the nature of love. What, to you, is the love-story of Ariadne?
There are so many. For my character of the Music Teacher, it’s about the love between student and teacher.

Have you done this role before?
No, but I did Ariadne first when I was an Apprentice at Santa Fe Opera—I was the Wigmaker, I still remember the line. And then I did the Lackey at the Met. It was there I heard Wolfgang Brendel sing the Music Teacher, and I said, “That’s for me—I want to do that role someday.”

Patrick Carfizzi as the Music Teacher, with Doug Jones as the Dancing-Master
Elise Bakketun, photo

What makes a great Music Teacher?
It’s great for a singing actor. You’ve got to have a bit of experience, for the story to be credible; I’m happy I wasn’t doing the Music Teacher when I was 25! This man absolutely embraces his position as teacher, mentor, and guide to this young Composer. He’s living out some of his own personal history, and is managing hormones the best he can. The Composer is inexperienced and driven by passion; the Music Master is doing his best to help the Composer channel his feelings, and not to squelch his enthusiasm, or diminish it in any way. Vocally, there are wonderful challenges. The role is both high and low, which is fantastic.

Does the Music Teacher understand what happens at the end of the Prologue, when the Composer falls for Zerbinetta?
Oh, yeah. He gets it immediately. He sees it as an advantage—maybe this distraction is a good thing!

Patrick Carfizzi as Truffaldino
Elise Bakketun, photo

Let’s talk about Truffaldino. What does your other Ariadne role require?
Truffaldino is a wonderful stock buffo character from commedia dell’arte, with a fantastic musical palette. Strauss has written him music which is trombone-esque. That, coupled with Hofmannsthal’s text for the four guys, is really brilliant. The commedia performers don’t get the opera singers, and the opera singers don’t get the commedia troupe.

Patrick Carfizzi, with Rachele Gilmore, Joshua Kohl, and Eric Neuville, sing a passage from "Fickle Zerbinetta and her Four Lovers," the scene they contribute to Ariadne auf Naxos

There’s a lot of movement required with these commedia characters.
The best way I can put it: clumsy has to be graceful. I’m not a trained dancer, by any means, but it has to look elegant. I’m actually quite used to that challenge; you get it in almost all the buffo roles I sing. Buffo it has to be real.

Patrick Carfizzi as Dr. Bartolo in The Barber of Seville
Rozarii Lynch, photo

You’ve done buffo roles in Seattle, and also serious roles.
In my roles there’s always this balance of the comic and the straight man. The Music Teacher, and all straight men in comedy, have got to be played seriously. Same with Ping in Turandot. Ping takes his job very seriously. And then roles like Dr. Bartolo, or Don Magnifico in La Cenerentola—they have to be played seriously, but their situations are different. Those guys aren’t really in control of their situations. They like to think they’re in control, but in truth they are not.

Patrick Carfizzi as Ping in Turandot
Elise Bakketun, photo

In the Prologue to Ariadne, the Music Teacher, who’s producing the tragedy, becomes strange bedfellows with the Dancing-Master, who’s producing the comedy. The two of you are the ones really trying to solve the problem.
Yes, they don’t like each other, but they’re useful to each other. Especially when the Music Master has run out of ideas in terms of how he’s going to make this work.

The one stands for pop culture and the other represents lofty high culture.
And they both believe that theirs is the only kind of culture. The Dancing-Master doesn’t really get the point of the opera.

Which is interesting, because by the end, Zerbinetta seems to have found it touching.
Yes, she is seduced by the music, I think. Were it not for that, I think these two worlds might not really connect.

What excites you the most about opera?
The storytelling. Opera is storytelling, with these beautiful, relatable stories. By the way, if I hear someone say the word ‘relevant’ one more time, I’m going to scream! There’s this idea going around these days, that opera is somehow irrelevant; that because it’s an old art form, it isn’t accessible. “We must be sure opera stays relevant" they claim. No. When did opera or any arts stop being relevant? What are we apologizing for? Opera is so very relatable. All good storytelling is relatable to so many on so many levels and, again, Opera is storytelling.

Patrick Carfizzi as the Music Teacher
Elise Bakketun, photo

Changing the topic—I see that next year you’re doing Maria Stuarda at the MET, an opera Seattle Opera will also be presenting for the first time.
Yes, I’ve done Talbot before, and this time I’m doing Cecil. I love that opera; it’s so beautiful. The entire opera is a study in duet writing, these long and musically gorgeous conversations.

What’s the most embarrassing thing that’s ever happened to you onstage?
Falling flat on my face during my MET debut, embarrassing, yes, but what a way to get over stage fright.

Sarah Coburn (Zerbinetta) and Patrick Carfizzi (Truffaldino) in Ariadne auf Naxos
Elise Bakketun, photo

What’s the weirdest thing that’s ever happened to you onstage?
Fires onstage, and it has happened twice. Thankfully no one was injured, but how truly bizarre.

Describe an artistic challenge that made you grow.
When those who have 'believed' in you for years suddenly doubt that belief. Some might call that “growing pains.”

What music do you listen to regularly?
Jazz, Musical theater, Pop

Take us through a normal performance day for you.
It’s different for each role, but generally: Lots of sleep the night before, a workout earlier in the day, good eating (watch your salt intake!) A nap about 3 hours before curtain for no more than thirty minutes, a light supper, lots of water and a cooked sweet potato cooked to eat during the show.

What do opera lovers have in common?
Passion for listening and learning.

What’s the public’s biggest misconception about opera?
That language is a barrier.

What’s the best way for someone who’s new to opera to learn more about it?
See live performances both of a comic and tragic opera in the course of a month and take different friends with you each time.

What’s your favorite place in Seattle to:
Eat?
Macrina
Drink? Black Bottle
Do yoga? ACME Yoga Project
Walk? Olympic sculpture park, with my friend’s dog.
Shop? Pike Place Market

What are the biggest challenges—and the greatest opportunities—facing opera today?
I’d give you the same answer for both: Education, Audiences, and Communication. 

Monday, April 13, 2015

The Mythic Background to ARIADNE

Greek mythology is a weird and wild world, full of lust-crazed deities, tormented princesses, wayward heroes, and misunderstood monsters. A perfect place for opera! Ariadne auf Naxos spins a single strand from a complex web of mythological characters, locations, and adventures. Here, just for fun, we've collected visual representations of other strands from that web. Imagine setting this entire saga to musicyou'd create a work to rival Wagner's mighty RING in scale!

ATHENS
In a mythic age, long before Pericles politicked at the Parthenon, or Aeschylus authored magnificent tragedies, or Socrates drank hemlock, Athens had to send seven young men and seven young women to Crete every few years to be sacrificed to Crete’s Minotaur until Prince Theseus ended this shameful tradition of tribute.

Image: Wikipedia

AEGEUS
Aegeus, King of Athens and father of Theseus, killed himself by leaping off a cliff and into the sea that today bears his name when a ship with black sails returned from Crete, implying that his son was dead. Theseus had forgotten to switch to the white sails of victory, as his father had requested.

Image: theseus.yolasite.com

THESEUS
Prince, hero, slayer of monsters, and Ariadne's deceitful lover. After the events of this saga, Theseus goes on to wed Hippolyta the Amazon (in A Midsummer Night's Dream). Their son, Hippolytus, comes to a bad end in the myth of Phaedra (set beautifully to music by Benjamin Britten).

Image: Troy

CRETE
Island kingdom in the Mediterranean. The Bronze Age Minoan civilization centered on Crete predated the golden age of Athens by a thousand years. Twentieth-century archeology has unearthed evidence that a sport known as bull-dancing or bull-leaping, pictured above on a Cretan fresco, was a popular entertainment and ritual (something of a cross between gladitorial combat and modern bull-fighting). Perhaps that's the origin of the legendary combat between Theseus and Crete's Minotaur.

Image: wikipedia

MINOS
King of Crete and father of Princess Ariadne. Later one of the judges of the dead in the underworld. Crete's embarrassing curse begins when he fails to sacrifice a beautiful bull sent to the island by the gods.

Image: William Blake's illustration of Dante, who kept Minos in the Inferno.

PASIPHAË
Minos’ Queen and mother to Ariadne, the Minotaur, and Theseus' second wife Phaedra. She falls in love with the bull sent by the gods and, with the help of the clever inventor Daedalus, figures out a way she can have sex with it.

Image: mynameshallsurvive.blogspot.com

MINOTAUR
The monstrous offspring of Ariadne’s mother and the divine bull, the Minotaur was a half-man, half-bull who dwells in Crete's Labyrinth and eats people.

THE LABYRINTH
Those sacrificed to the Minotaur enter this inescapable maze from the castle of Minos on Crete.

Image: goodsky.homestead.com

DAEDALUS TELLS ARIADNE ABOUT THE SPOOL OF THREAD
Daedalus, clever inventor and slave to King Minos, invented both the bull-disguise Pasiphaë used to couple with the divine bull and the Labyrinth that imprisoned their demon-offspring. Daedalus also told Ariadne the secret of the Labyrinth“Unroll a spool of thread as you go, so you can find your way back out." She passed the information on to her beloved Theseus, who killed the Minotaur and eloped with her. Minos, furious, imprisoned Daedalus and his son Icarus in the Labyrinth.

Image: David Vance

DAEDALUS AND ICARUS
Inventor and son were lost in the Labyrinth, and this time without a spool of thread. So they made wings from wax and feathers and escaped by air. But young Icarus, delighted by the ability to fly, flew too high; the heat from the sun melted his wax, his wings disintegrated, and he plunged to his death in the sea. Set to music by Daron Aric Hagen in Seattle Opera's 2010 world premiere, Amelia.

Painting by Frederic Leighton

ARIADNE
Daughter of Minos, she takes pity on handsome Theseus—doomed to be sacrificed to her family’s Minotaur—and helps him defeat the monster and escape. But he maroons her on a desert island where, like so many opera heroines, she becomes donna abbandonata.

Painting by Evelyn De Morgan

NAXOS
Nowadays it’s a popular tourist destination in the Greek islands. But for poor Ariadne, it was a barren, desolate place, with only a Naiad, a Dryad, and an empty Echo for company.

Image: wikipedia

NAIAD
A water nymph.

Painting by Henri Fantin-Latour

DRYAD
The nymph of a tree.

Image: Photo, c. 1910, by John Cimon Warburg

ECHO
Nymph who fell in love with Narcissus, a beautiful young man who wasted away lusting after his own reflection in a pond. Echo did her best to reflect Narcissus’s love back to him, but he never saw her and eventually she became invisible. You'll hear her echoing many of the other characters in Strauss's Ariadne auf Naxos.

Painting by John Waterhouse

BACCHUS (aka Dionysus)
God of wine, born from the explosive final encounter of Jupiter and Semele. Always a popular god, since worshipping him involves drinking wine! His first adventures take him to the islands of Circe and then Ariadne.

Painting by Simeon Solomon

 CIRCE
Seductive witch, sister to Pasiphaë. Loves to invite sailors who visit her desert island to join her at a feast, only then to transform them into pigs. Odysseus resisted her wiles, as did Bacchus.

Image: Katerina Art

 SEMELE
Princess of Thebes and beloved of Jupiter, who inadvertently kills her when she asks for it. Our last opera, Semele, concluded with the announcement that her child by Jupiter, Bacchus, would make all people happy forever after. 

Photo of Seattle Opera's February production by Elise Bakketun

BACCHUS MEETS ARIADNE
Finally, we get to the plot of Strauss's little opera! Ariadne has been marooned on Naxos by the faithless Theseusor was it because Bacchus, who had fallen for her, told Theseus to take a hike? In Titian's famous painting Ariadne, left, yearns for the departing ship of Theseus, while Bacchus (with his entourage) approaches her. A crown of stars, overhead, indicates how Bacchus and Ariadne will be transformed into constellations when love makes them both divine.

Painting by Titian

Monday, April 6, 2015

Seattle Opera Salutes ANDREW PORTER

Andrew Porter (1928-2015), the fantastically erudite critic, translator, and director, passed away on Friday. Read the wonderful celebrations of his life and work at NPR, The New York Times, and of course at the New Yorker, where his 20 years as staff music critic taught many Americans how to listen.

Porter also taught the city of Seattle what Wagner’s Ring was all about in the early years. Each summer between 1975 and 1983, Seattle Opera presented the Ring both in the original German and in Porter’s famous and brilliant English singing translation. Thanks to KUOW, which broadcast many of those English-language performances, excerpts survive testifying to Porter’s genius as translator, musician, and man of the theater.

Speight Jenkins, who was a music critic in New York before he became Seattle Opera’s General Director in 1984, was a friend and admirer of Andrew Porter’s. Says Jenkins, “Andrew Porter represented the best in music criticism. He was thoughtful, interested in opera everywhere, and in all kinds of opera. His discoveries about Don Carlos have added much to the Verdi lexicon. His contributions in general to music criticism are too many to be enumerated. I had the pleasure of working with him when he directed La forza del destino at Seattle Opera. He worked with intensity and strove very hard to create a Forza exactly as Verdi did it in its first performances at La Scala.”

Explore photos of Seattle Opera’s 1984 La forza del destino HERE.

Aidan Lang on Ariadne auf Naxos

General Director Aidan Lang has strong feelings about and plenty of experience with Ariadne auf Naxos, the final opera of our 14/15 season. He calls the work ‘subtle’ and ‘beautiful,’ and points out that you don’t present Ariadne unless you can hire a cast with a lot of star power.

There’s a lot going on in Ariadne auf Naxos—a mash-up of comedy and tragedy and a show-within-a-show. Is this opera safe for those who are new to the art form?
There is a lot going on here—two mini-operas set in a framework which provides a context for the whole thing. Is this an opera for a first-timer? Yes, I think it is, precisely because nothing hangs around too long and you do get three glimpses of our art form in digestible chunks.

To start with we have the Prologue, which is a delightfully sly send-up of the process of getting an opera up, especially those frantic last few minutes on opening night. And in it one sees that Hofmannsthal and Strauss had been there, done that, complete with the tempermental wigmaker! There are artists at every stage of the process, and each have their own very real needs and concerns, to make the overall show perfect.

The Tenor (John Horton Murray) rejected the Wigmaker (Byron Ellis)'s masterpiece in Seattle Opera's 2004 Ariadne auf Naxos
Rozarii Lynch, photo

Then we move to the opera itself—the Ariadne story is a serious story out of Greek mythology, made into this tragic opera seria. And that’s counterbalanced by the comedians’ opera. They give their own little shtick, their piece which they’ve been asked to do, and they also improvise a section. And in between there’s an extraordinary virtuoso aria for Zerbinetta. So there’s something for everybody. It’s funny, it’s serious, it’s interesting to get this behind-the-scenes look, and I think it’s a fantastic piece for a first-timer because you see a cross-section of everything we do.

Zerbinetta (Jane Giering-DeHaan played the field in Seattle Opera's 2004 Ariadne auf Naxos
Rozarii Lynch, photo

What’s Fickle Zerbinetta and Her Four Lovers about?
The Zerbinetta troupe have been brought along to perform a little piece of commedia dell’arte theater. Their characters come from that tradition of comic Italian theater. So they perform a little tale of inconstancy, of playing the field.

Philip Cutlip sings Harlekin's song at Seattle Opera in 2004

In addition, they have a scene prior to their little performance, which they interject into Ariadne’s story, and the idea is, that scene is improvised. They’ve had a few minutes to work out what to do—they’ve been commanded to play their opera simultaneously—and such performers were skilled improvisers. There was an element of novelty to any commedia dell’arte performance. And in between those two performances is Zerbinetta’s aria, where she says to her guys, “Okay, enough, this is girl-to-girl talk, I’ll put her to rights.” And her philosophy is: there are plenty of men out there, you shouldn’t stay constant to one. Their play then demonstrates that philosophy: we see Zerbinetta playing the field. And Zerbinetta’s final little twist comes just as the opera is near resolution; there’s a marvelous line where she just echoes the end of her aria, as if to say, “Told you so!” Because a new god has come along who has transformed Ariadne’s very rigid viewpoint. But it’s a told-you-so spoken with great tenderness, borne, probably, of the five minutes Zerbinetta spent with the Composer. I think her encounter with the Composer has affected her. At that moment it isn’t really the character of Zerbinetta speaking, it’s the human who plays Zerbinetta.

Ariadne, as painted by Evelyn Pickering

What’s this serious tragedy of Ariadne about?
Like all Greek myths, there are many variants of Ariadne. She was the daughter of Minos, who guarded the Labyrinth; she helped Theseus slay the Minotaur, and when Theseus took her to the island of Naxos he abandoned her. In another version of the story, Dionysus (or Bacchus, as he’s called in the opera) transforms her into a constellation, making her divine. But what the Composer says very clearly, in one of his outbursts in the Prologue, is that for him, Ariadne is the embodiment of man’s isolation, his loneliness. That’s a very early twentieth-century view of man: our essential isolation, lack of connection. And that is of course the Composer, this young man who is so devoted to his art he cannot in any way connect with other people. And towards the end of the Prologue, in this beautiful duet, Zerbinetta reveals to him that actually she is not the character she plays onstage—she, too, is deeply searching for the right person, and there’s this marvelous frisson where you think: “Are they going to get together?” So the actress Zerbinetta has the same effect on the Composer as Bacchus has on Ariadne. A very fixed viewpoint is changed. So our view of this Ariadne opera is conditioned by our view of its creator, which is this character of the Composer.

The Composer (Carrie Kahl) tries to understand Zerbinetta (Julianne Gearhart) in Seattle Opera's 2004 Ariadne auf Naxos
Rozarii Lynch, photo

Which one are we supposed to believe? Who wins?
I think the point is no one wins. Strong idealism meets compromise, and in the light of that, something better emerges. Just as the Composer thinks there is only one truth in art, so Ariadne thinks she must be true to Theseus until death, and she welcomes death so she can go on to a higher plane rather than betray her beloved husband. And in both stories, by making a change, by making a compromise, a new and higher reality is awakened. Ariadne’s devotion to Theseus is overturned, and new feelings are awakened by the arrival of Bacchus, which help her rise to the status of demigod, transformed into a constellation. For the Composer there’s the hint that his walls may begin to come down now that he understands the person behind the façade of Zerbinetta. So it’s about not who wins! It’s about this fusion of pragmatism and compromise. We’re not opposed to idealism. But if you merge a strong idea with practicality, you end up with a better outcome. And of course that’s exactly what we do when we make an opera! We go in with a strong conceptualized approach to a piece, and but then reality intrudes: “Actually, you can’t fly that wall right there, because...” or “We’ve run out of money for paint...” or whatever. Reality forces you to think again, to deepen your initial idea, and invariably you come out with a better product in the end.

The Dancing-Master (Doug Jones) and the Music Teacher (Richard Stilwell) look for potential cuts in Seattle Opera's 2004 Ariadne auf Naxos
Rozarii Lynch, photo

Tell us a little about Strauss, Hofmannsthal, and their partnership.
This relationship with Strauss and Hofmannsthal was of course one of the great composer-librettist partnerships. And yet they were very different people. Hofmannsthal was an intensely intellectual man, a man of words. A truly elegant librettist. And Strauss had an element of practicality to him. They really sparked off one another. Writing a piece about the act of writing an opera was right up both their streets. It’s a glorious confection—there’s so much in it! There’s almost too much in it, but I think you wouldn’t want to lose anything. This business about the nature of music, the high art, the holy art, the Composer calls it—her aria at the end of the Prologue is very much Strauss’s credo. Allied to the high idealism of the Composer, that aria reflects the intellectualism of Hofmannsthal as well. Both these men lived in the realm of high art. But at the same time both were aware of other art forms as well, and were happy to incorporate them, with great skill, into this opera.

Kate Lindsey sings the Composer's Aria at Seattle Opera

How is opera-going, in contemporary Seattle, different from what Strauss might have experienced?
Remember that when this piece was written, going to the opera, especially in major cities in Europe, was a very normal, everyday activity. You were going to see a show. You know, I always think it’s odd when people say, “I’m going to a show on Broadway,” but they don’t really make a distinction as to whether they’re seeing a play or a musical. They may say, “I’m going to see a play,” but they’re going to Les Miz. But neither one is opera; we have compartmentalized opera away from theater. One of the delightful challenges we have, dealing with opera today, is trying to bring people towards that day-to-day acceptance of the art form. So I think although yes, Ariadne is a piece of high art, audiences in Strauss’s day had less trouble in their minds deciding to go see Ariadne as opposed to whatever play was going on at Stuttgart’s Hoftheater. There’s been a big shift in the way opera is perceived, which I would love to reverse. My mission is to make opera-going a very normal part of the lives of the people in Seattle.

For Seattle Opera's 2004 Ariadne auf Naxos, Jane Eaglen parodied herself as Seattle's favorite Prima Donna
Rozarii Lynch, photo

Our production sets Ariadne in contemporary Seattle instead of Rosenkavalier-Vienna. What is gained? Is anything lost?
Generally, productions of the piece I’ve seen over the years have stayed away from setting it in the original time. It makes no difference when the piece is set; the idea of a commissioned entertainment, of whatever length, happens today.

I’ll give you a personal anecdote to show you that this kind of thing actually happens. While I was actually directing Ariadne—my wife Linda was playing Zerbinetta, we were in London—she got a job with another well-known opera singer and a fabulous pianist—to give fifteen minutes of post-dinner entertainment at a banquet given by the Lord Mayor of London, at the Mansion House, at which Prince Charles was the guest of honor. I went along to turn the pages. There was a good fee for all of them and a lovely dinner—they weren’t invited to sit with the guests, but had their own table out back. And there was a man—probably ex-army, maybe ex-military police, who was the Major-Domo, and he kept coming out to check that we were all okay, but his real message was: “Fifteen minutes and no more!” And it was the most brilliant thing because we were doing Ariadne and here we were, living Ariadne! So it goes on.

This unseen wealthy patron is the framework to Strauss’ Ariadne. And there’s another theme: the freedom, or otherwise, of the artist. Is he free to do what he likes? No. There are set parameters to this performance, as dictated by the guy who’s paying for them. And I love the character of the Butler or Major-Domo, he’s so condescending! And just like the guy at Mansion House, what’s most important to him is that they stick to the clock—we’ve got this fantastic display of fireworks! That’s what the Butler really wants to see. The constraints placed on art by this wealthy man are similar to what we impose as a company—we don’t want the opera to go into overtime, for example. We put budgetary constrains on our creative teams. That’s pragmatism. So the opera’s framework, as well as being witty and showing us details of life backstage, is itself a statement of the rigor which any artistic enterprise needs. Time and money.

Tell us a bit about the fireworks that conclude the production!
Originally (in 2004) they used live fireworks, but now we’re going to do it digitally. Why are the fireworks there? As Ariadne becomes a constellation, we send people’s eyes upwards and you have the sense of sparkling stars for a moment.

Fireworks music at the end of Ariadne auf Naxos

Now, there’s a difference between live fireworks and what we will do digitally. For me, when you bring into a theater things which don’t normally live in the theater—animals are a prime example of this—your framework shifts. The incongruity of live flame in this place—which could set the building on fire—for a moment takes you out of the contract you, as an audience member, have made with the theater. That is, you’ve agreed to enter a world of imagination. I think a very lavish digital display of fireworks will keep you within the framework of the theatrical experience.

What’s the trick to directing and designing a good production of Ariadne?
I have a very strong view of how you go about designing Ariadne. The big pitfall is that sometimes the framework of the Prologue, i.e. the idea that we are putting on a performance in a space, can radically compromise the Ariadne part of the opera itself. What you need to do is to start from the point of view of whoever was directing the Ariadne opera. How would we want to do that? And then work backwards. Of course you have to acknowledge the framework, but you mustn’t let it constrict the imagination needed to fulfill a truthful and creative rendition of the Ariadne story. The Zerbinetta bit’s easy. But, rather than always being reminded of the framework of the rich man’s house, like a TV camera we should be able to zoom in and enter Ariadne’s world.

Seattle Opera has put together a very starry cast for this show. Does Ariadne depend on star power?
Yes, Ariadne needs some fabulous singers to bring it off. It’s very demanding, and you need different sorts of singers. Not only Ariadne (Christiane Libor and Marcy Stonikas), Zerbinetta (Sarah Coburn and Haeran Hong), Bacchus (Issachah Savage and Jeffrey Hartman), and the Composer (Kate Lindsey and Sarah Larsen), roles like the Music Master—that’s a tricky, tricky number, and you need someone who has experience and presence to bring it off. (We have Patrick Carfizzi.) Part of the tongue-of-cheek humor of the piece is about star singers—we see them, warts and all, in the Prologue, as divas. That’s part of the fun. So it requires casting at a very high level, not only for its demands, but part of the fun of the piece is seeing very, very talented people performing.

And the reality is, if you can’t sing Zerbinetta, you won’t. We hire someone capable of sustaining an absolutely virtuosic twelve-minute aria.

Sarah Coburn sings Zerbinetta's aria at Seattle Opera

And you need an Ariadne who is capable of sustaining two very taxing monologues, one after the other, plus the big scene with Bacchus in the end.

Christiane Libor sings Ariadne's "Es gibt ein Reich" at Seattle Opera

And as for Bacchus—the old saying goes that Strauss hated tenors so he wrote an unsingable part.

The late Greg Carroll sang Bacchus when Seattle Opera's Young Artists Program presented Ariadne auf Naxos in 2010

Actually, you need a Bacchus who is capable of singing with great delicacy, with great sensitivity. A lot of his music is marked piano. It tends to get oversung. He enters in a strange frame of mind—he’s just had this bizarre encounter with Circe, and the more delicately you can get that opening encounter between Ariadne and Bacchus, the more interesting a scene you will have.

Bacchus (John Horton Murray) enters warily in Seattle Opera's 2004 Ariadne auf Naxos
Rozarii Lynch, photo

It shouldn’t be about two monsters just singing at each other, because that’s not how it’s written. It is very important that that scene is directed properly. It can so easily feel grafted-on. Whereas actually it’s really a very well-crafted, well-written scene. But you need people for those roles who are sensitive actors, just as for the commedia troupe you need people who are physically adept and can give the impression of being old hands at this style of comic acting.

"Cheer up, sad island lady!" A scene from Seattle Opera's 2004 Ariadne auf Naxos
Rozarii Lynch, photo

What’s the conductor’s job with this opera? Tell us a little about Maestro Rennes, who conducted Elektra in Seattle in ’08.
Strauss wrote Ariadne for an orchestra of 39 or so players. There are the odd moments where it sounds a bit like Elektra—but that’s a red herring. It’s a large chamber orchestra, not an orchestra of 85, 90. Delicacy for me is one of the key words with this piece musically. It’s a very beautiful score, a very subtle score, where you hear individual string players rather than a full string body. It’s not easy to bring off. You need really good people, and the conductor must unite them so the work retains its integrity.

Lawrence Renes is a Dutch conductor, he’s recently been appointed Music Director of the Royal Swedish Opera. His repertoire is quite varied; he’s done a lot of John Adams, but at the same time he’s done Mozart and the orchestral repertoire. We heard when he conducted Elektra here that Strauss is in his blood, and the challenge for this piece is to give it its own unique quality. As an opera man through and through, I know Lawrence will do a fantastic job for us.

This discussion has also been released as a SoundCloud podcast. Listen below, or download it HERE.