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From left: Jasmine Habersham (Zerlina), Kenneth Kellogg (Commendatore), and Laura Wilde (Donna Elvira). |
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
Why present Don Giovanni in 2021?
Sunday, February 21, 2021
Honoring Black artists, creatives in opera
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Lighting Designer Allen Lee Hughes, dramatic soprano Jessye Norman, and baritone Lester Lynch. Credit: Kate Lord, The New York Times, and Philip Newton. |
Tuesday, February 16, 2021
Don Giovanni offers an ‘opera film’ experience
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From right: Kenneth Kellogg (Commendatore); Maestro Lidiya Yankovskaya; scenes of filming Don Giovanni by Paula Podemski and Doug Provost. |
Seattle Opera presents Don Giovanni, streaming March 19–21, 2021 for $35. Learn more at seattleopera.org/giovanni.
For many years, the character of Don Giovanni was celebrated as “Mozart’s bad boy”—an evil but charming anti-hero of opera. But for Stage Director Brenna Corner and Maestro Lidiya Yankovskaya—the duo behind Seattle Opera’s streaming Don Giovanni—there’s so much more to this masterpiece than toxic masculinity.
“The title character is a tool through which librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte speaks to the challenges and experiences of women from different social classes,” Yankovskaya said. “While Don Giovanni himself is a trope, the women in this story continually defy our expectations and assumptions.”
With a mix of tragedy and comedy, the story depicts an unrepentant sexual predator convinced of his irresistible charm who must who must pay for his misdeeds. Through the lens of female characters such as Donna Anna, Donna Elvira, and Zerlina, the audience sees the human impact of Don Giovanni’s abuse, violence, and narcissism. Mozart’s immortal music for Don Giovanni has been enchanting audiences since its 1787 premiere. But at Seattle Opera in 2021, Don Giovanni will bring something new to the table—a fusion of opera and film artistry. Inspired by a 1960s film of Hamlet on Broadway, stage director Brenna Corner has chosen to capture this streaming opera in black-and-white film. Because of the pandemic, it’s not possible to perform in McCaw Hall. So, Corner thought, why not lean into new artistic possibilities?
Friday, February 5, 2021
An update from the General Director
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Philip Newton photo |
Dear Seattle Opera Community,
Yesterday we completed the recording sessions for Don Giovanni. It was a wonderful and challenging project to complete and brought many new artists to Seattle Opera. More than half of the cast is making their Seattle Opera debut. Introducing artists to Seattle audiences is an important part of my role here and a way for you all to experience great talents and expand the opera artists you follow. As I continue to plan out next season and beyond, I look forward to bringing back many of the artists you love as well as introducing new voices, new productions teams and a variety of titles.
Thursday, February 4, 2021
What to listen for during the Ring broadcast
Stephanie Blythe (Fricka) and Greer Grimsley (Wotan). Chris Bennion photo |
- The Danish bass who sang Fasolt the giant, Stephen Milling, was over 6’6” in real life. Our Costume Shop didn’t need to work very hard to help him look larger-than-life!
Wednesday, February 3, 2021
Notes on the 2005 Ring
By Melinda Bargreen
Seattle Opera’s Ring was the reason I became the classical
music critic of The Seattle Times (for 31 years; I’m still freelancing).
In 1975, my husband and I saved up our pennies, and bought
two second-balcony tickets to Götterdämmerung when Ring I was presenting
the cast in furs and horned helmets, and there were no supertitles for the
German-language production. Thrilled to the marrow by the performance, I
eagerly awaited the review in the suburban newspaper where we live. The critic
hated the show. It was too long, he said; it was boring … and it was all in
German, “Gotterdammerit!”
Incensed, I got up my nerve and phoned the editor to complain
about the review.
“Why don’t you send me what you would have written?” the
editor asked.
I did, and I was assigned to review all the Seattle Opera
productions. One review led to another; soon the classical music critic job
opened up at The Seattle Times, when the critic/editor decided to focus on
theater, and in 1977 I got the job of a lifetime. (Hint: They pay you for going to the opera and concerts, and writing what you think afterward. What could be better?)
Looking back on the whole jewelry store of Rings, the 2005 version ranks around the top of my personal favorites so far. The arch-traditional Ring I (whose Götterdämmerung I heard on that fateful career-defining evening) was followed by the more avant-garde Ring II, resulting in hot debates among Wagnerian fans. But in Ring III (first presented in 2001), general director Speight Jenkins and the company created something particularly special. Quickly dubbed the “Green Ring,” it was beautiful to look at (those forested, craggy Thomas Lynch sets!) and even more beautiful to hear, as several unforgettable singers made their mark.