Showing posts with label La Cenerentola. Show all posts
Showing posts with label La Cenerentola. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

La Cenerentola Gets Underway

© Brett Coomer, Houston Grand Opera, 2007

Today was the first day of rehearsal for our winter production, Rossini’s La Cenerentola. This brilliant comic opera brings to Seattle a team of artists from around the world, including several singers who are familiar to our audience and several new voices and faces. Making their U.S. debuts with this production are our exciting young conductor, Giacomo Sagripanti, who hails from Rossini’s hometown of Pesaro on Italy’s Adriatic coast, and marvelous mezzo-soprano Daniela Pini, also Italian. Tenor René Barbera, a Texan who lives in Chicago, shares the role of Cinderella’s prince with Edgardo Rocha, a native of Uruguay who lives in Italy. Also making her Seattle Opera debut is mezzo-soprano Karin Mushegain, who sings Cinderella to Rocha’s prince.

This Cinderella-story of course features two wicked sisters, sung in Seattle Opera’s production by Sarah Larsen and Dana Pundt, members of our Young Artists Program. But unlike many Cinderella stories, this one features several great male characters. Instead of a wicked stepmother, Rossini’s Cenerentola has to deal with a wicked stepfather, Don Magnifico. Ms. Pini struggles with Patrick Carfizzi, who gave us such a fine Ping in Turandot this summer, while Valerian Ruminski, who first sang with us in '06 as Don Alfonso in Così fan tutte, makes life hell for Karin Mushegain. The great Brett Polegato, who sang such a nuanced Sharpless in Madama Butterfly last May, returns as Dandini, the Prince’s mischievous sidekick. And Arthur Woodley, fresh off his recent success as Rocco in October’s Fidelio, is back for a role that couldn’t be more different: Alidoro, the benevolent tutor to the prince who functions in this story the way Cinderella’s fairy godmother does in that OTHER Cinderella story. Actually, there are hundreds of variants of the Cinderella story, ranging from cultures such as Ancient Egypt to medieval China. We’ll explore some of them on this blog as we approach Rossini’s unique Enlightenment-era Cinderella.

We'll also speak with each of our singers in these coming weeks as our production takes shape under the leadership of Maestro Sagripanti and our brilliant artistic team: director Joan Font, designer Joan Guillén, and choreographer Xevi Dorca. These three gentlemen from Barcelona first created this production several years ago for opera companies in Houston, Barcelona, Cardiff, and Geneva, and opera fans in Toronto and Brussels have also enjoyed its colorful, sweet story-telling and delightful sense of humor. Seattle (and after us, Los Angeles) is excited to be next in line for the production!

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

NEW: Audio-Described Performances for Visually-Impaired Patrons

Beginning with our upcoming production of Fidelio, Seattle Opera will now offer live audio description of performances for patrons with visual impairments at select Sunday matinees throughout the 2012/13 season. Performances will be described at the 2 p.m. matinees on October 14, 2012 (Fidelio); January 13, 2013 (La Cenerentola); February 24, 2013 (La bohème); and May 12, 2013 (La voix humaine with Suor Angelica). This new service, provided at no additional cost to ticket-holders, is designed to enhance the opera-going experience for patrons by providing verbal information about the opera’s setting, scenery, costumes, onstage action, and more. Seattle Opera has worked in consultation with the Washington Council for the Blind and Arts and Visually Impaired Audiences to develop the program.

Patrons can request an audio-description headset from the assistance booth, around the corner from coat check, located on the main entry level of McCaw Hall. Headsets will be distributed free of charge on a first-come, first-served basis. Participating patrons must leave an ID in exchange for the headset. A member of Seattle Opera’s Education staff will narrate the live description, beginning 10 minutes prior to the beginning of the matinee. The early start will allow patrons to become familiar and resolve any issues with their ear bud, while offering the narrator a chance to make introductory remarks about the production before the curtain rises. During the performance, descriptions will be carefully timed so as not to interfere with patrons’ enjoyment of the music, and will continue briefly at the beginning and conclusion of the intermission. Transmissions to ear buds will not disturb non-participating patrons sitting nearby.

To find out more, contact the Seattle Opera Box Office at (206) 389-7676, or email tickets@seattleopera.org. Complete information about accessibility at Seattle Opera is available HERE.

Photo from Turandot by Alan Alabastro

Friday, September 21, 2012

AUDITIONS: Male & Female Dancers for
La Cenerentola

Seattle Opera is holding auditions for our upcoming production of Rossini’s La Cenerentola, directed by Joan Font and choreographed by Xevi Dorca. The production, which originated in Barcelona, opens on January 12, 2013, and runs through January 26, 2013.

Dancers in La Cenerentola will play the rodents who facilitate the union of Cinderella with the Prince.
Brett Coomer, photo

Seattle Opera is casting:

4 men between 5’08”- 5’11” with chest size up to 40”
2 women up to 5’04” with chest size up to 35”

We are seeing dancers trained in contemporary and ballet dance.

All positions are paid, and daytime availability for rehearsals is required. The show begins rehearsing on December 12, 2012.

Auditions will be Monday, October 15, 2012. For more information and to sign up, please phone Paula Podemski, Seattle Opera's Production Supervisor, at (206) 676-5812.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

ARIA READY:
Q&A with Brett Polegato, our Dandini

Brett Polegato as FigaroBrett Polegato as Figaro in Vancouver Opera's 2003 production of The Barber of Seville.

While Brett Polegato was in Seattle for Madama Butterfly a few weeks ago, Seattle Opera's Communications Editor, Jessica Murphy, got to sit down with him to look ahead to next season and ask him about Dandini, the character he'll sing in La Cenerentola, and the amazing entrance aria he'll sing halfway through the first act, "Come un'ape." Brett had plenty to say about this aria, which he loves, about our production, which he has previously done in his hometown of Toronto, and about playing comedy seriously.

Why does Dandini sing this aria?
In the drama, my boss--Prince Ramiro--is disguised as me, his valet, and wants to scope out the joint. Because he has to get married, he wants to observe the women in his kingdom without them knowing that he’s the prince. So he’s said, “In just a second the prince will be here to meet all the eligible girls.” That’s when I come in and I pretend to be the prince. Dandini sings this because it’s his first opportunity not to be a servant...normally he’s the Prince’s servant. It’s his chance to be bigger than life, to imagine how he would behave if he were prince.

It sounds like fun.
It is. You have to have a great deal of energy. It’s almost a Broadway show tune; it’s really an advertisement for the prince. So it’s just fun, like a big dance number. The chorus and the other characters also play an important part in the second part of the aria, singing along, so it becomes like a big chorus line by the end of it. It’s all about you, a commercial about how great you are: I can do anything! It doesn’t move the plot forward; it really is about dazzling people.

William Burden as Pylades (left) and Brett Polegato as Orestes (right) in Seattle Opera's 2007 Iphigénie en Tauride.
Photo by Bill Mohn

Is it hard to sing?
It’s very demanding, because it has to sound easy. It has to sound fun and comic. But like a lot of Rossini, with fioratura and coloratura, it’s technically quite difficult. Like many of the heroic arias it’s split into two parts. There’s a slow, beautiful section and a fast section; in the slow section there are a lot of runs and a huge range and changes in vocal phrasing--a legato passage and a passionate moment. And then the fast part is extremely wordy, it has a huge range and there’s not a lot of opportunities to breathe. It’s unusual for a character of Dandini’s stature to have that type of aria. Think of Figaro’s “Largo”—that’s just fast all the way through, very talky, not a lot of coloratura. Stylistically it doesn’t change very much, whereas the Dandini aria incorporates everything.

Your character is in disguise. Do you have to reflect that disguise in your singing?
That’s always a hard thing in opera because it can come across as very put on. The good thing about this is that no one in this scene knows either the prince or Dandini, so neither of them has to disguise their voice--no one would know what they would sound like. But Dandini does have to sing with different voices in that there are moments when he is talking to Magnifico and his daughters mixed with these asides to the prince: “Look at them, these two daughters are really ugly!” or “Am I doing a good job?” For those you have to make sure the audience knows you’re not being presentational.

These sets and costumes for La Cenerentola, pictured here at Houston Grand Opera in 2007, will be seen in Seattle in January 2013.
Photo by Brett Coomer

What’s it like to sing a huge aria upon your entrance? I’m sure you have other roles in which the audience has had a chance to get to know you a bit more before you sing the big aria.
Yes, although I like this one because…first of all, it’s a great entrance. I did this production before, in Toronto, it’s wonderful, over-the-top, you are immediately likable--even more so than Figaro in his entrance--because immediately the audience sees you having so much fun. Apart from the ugly stepsisters, who are funny in a different way, Dandini is the first identifiable character; he’s very much like the audience. He really has nothing to lose in this story; from the outset he knows when this day is over he’s going back to being a servant. So he can say whatever he wants because he has nothing to lose. He’s quite forthright with the prince (sometimes when other people are around, so the prince can’t chastise him). It gives Dandini a chance to be frank about things he maybe wouldn’t do or say otherwise.

What do you like about this production?
It’s a wonderfully fun production. Very colorful, and it captures the fairy-tale aspect of the piece. It’s not a cerebral experience. It’s very entertaining. When we did this in Toronto, there were kids in the audience 5 years old and up, and they loved it and laughed. While Barber is funny, the people are quite mean. In La Cenerentola the humor is not quite so malicious. I find it a much more charming piece overall, and the ensembles are great. There’s a wonderful ensemble in the second act, in which everyone is terribly confused, and Rossini just uses rolled Rs and percussive Ps to make it musically funny.

Brett Polegato (Sharpless) with Patricia Racette (Butterfly) in Seattle Opera's May 2012 production of Madama Butterfly.
Photo by Elise Bakketun

Which is harder to perform, comic roles like this one or serious roles like those you’ve done on our stage up to now?
I get asked to do comedy a lot but I think by nature I am a more serious person so I gravitate toward more serious roles. If I get hired for comedy, maybe it’s because I play comedy quite seriously, and people find that funny. Just taking people at face value in comedy seems to be hysterical sometimes.

Can you give us an example of how you might work out a funny moment for an opera comedy?
Many people who do comedy come with a bag of tricks they insert. For me, though, comedy just comes out of the scene. I remember one time doing Rossini’s L’italiana in Algeri and there’s a moment when one of the characters says to me, “When I sneeze, that’s your cue to exit.” But my character doesn’t do what he’s supposed to do. This was totally spontaneous, and I didn’t even think it was going to be funny, but the character says this, and sneezes, and I reached into my pocket for my handkerchief, and the audience howled with laughter. I didn’t do it in a comic way, I did it in a very honest way: “Oh, do you need a hankie?” It just comes out of being aware of what your colleagues are doing onstage.

Brett Polegato at Seattle Opera in 2005, as Henry Miles in The End of the Affair
Photo by Bill Mohn

What should someone who has never before heard this opera be listening for?
One of the reasons I love singing Dandini is it really is a true Rossini coloratura role. Many people who know The Barber of Seville think Figaro is a role that requires tremendous technical agility. It really doesn’t, it’s a patter role from start to finish, whereas Dandini is required do everything, and all in this aria. It’s fun to be able to do a comic piece and still have it be vocally challenging. It keeps you on your toes!

Would you say that it’s usually easier to sing comic roles than serious ones?
A lot of comic roles for baritones and basses tend to be very syllabic, very wordy and talky (or barky!). They don’t allow for a great deal of beautiful singing. Dandini does; there are some really beautiful moments. In fact, the people with the most coloratura in this opera are Cenerentola and Dandini, both of them servants. I think Rossini felt much more connection with these more human characters than he did with the pompous father or the magician or the prince.

La Cenerentola at Houston Grand Opera in 2007.
Photo by Brett Coomer

You sing the second half of this aria as an aside.
Oh, that’s the other interesting thing about Dandini. He often talks to the audience. It’s not an aside; he specifically says this to the audience. “Just wait till the end to see how all this comedy is going to turn into tragedy!” And then in the second act, he says, “I told you everything would turn around in the second act!” No one would say that to themselves, so it’s clear that he is there to help the audience. In the second half of his aria he’s saying, “I’m your narrator for this evening, stick with me, watch with me and we’ll see what happens!”

Monday, June 18, 2012

ARIA READY: Dandini's "Come un'ape"

These whimsical sets and costumes for La Cenerentola, as pictured here in 2007 at Houston Grand Opera, will be part of Seattle Opera's January 2013 production of Rossini's comedy.
Photo by Brett Coomer

After fairy-tale happy endings to the serious stories of Turandot and Fidelio, our season moves on to one of the classic fairy tales of all time, Cinderella. We’re doing Rossini’s delightfully hilarious version of this beloved story, La Cenerentola, which is short on magic and high on personality and fun. Think of it as The Barber of Seville 2.0: it features pretty much the same singers and even some of the same music as the Barber. If you heard Lawrence Brownlee sing Almaviva at Seattle Opera in 2010, you heard a huge aria at the very end of the opera, “Cessa di più resistere,” which is cut more often than not. Not much happens in it, plot-wise (the young lovers have already defeated the old miser, at this point) although psychologically it’s an interesting piece in which this young guy, who’s been pretending to be other people all night long—a starving student, a drunken soldier, a foppish music teacher—finally becomes the willful, glittering nobleman we know from The Marriage of Figaro. But Rossini himself cut that aria from Barber and used it, nine months later, to end La Cenerentola. In this opera he gives it to Cinderella, again at the very end of the opera, when she is no longer a servant but has become the princess. Mezzo sopranos stole the aria from tenors, with Rossini’s blessing, and have loved singing it ever since.

But for ARIA READY this week we’ve chosen another of La Cenerentola’s wonderful arias: the show-stopper entrance aria for Dandini (the Figaro of this opera), who is the Prince’s valet and mischievous sidekick. If you don’t remember Prince Charming having a sidekick, in other versions of the Cinderella story, that’s because Rossini added himself to the story with this wonderful character. In Rossini’s version, the Prince (named Ramiro) doesn’t want to get married because all the girls in his kingdom are superficial, pretentious ninnies, like Clorinda and Tisbe, daughters of the unbelievably pompous Don Magnifico. So he exchanges identities with his servant, Dandini, in the hopes of finding a girl who likes him simply for himself, not for his royal title—and he’s already fallen for Magnifico’s pretty young housekeeper, Cenerentola, when Dandini arrives to invite the daughters of the house to his ball.

Dandini, meanwhile, is having the time of his life playing the aristocrat. His aria, which comes complete with choral introduction and other characters supporting him vocally during the fast movement at the end (the cabaletta) is a parody of that classic eighteenth-century opera seria form, the metaphor aria. That is, the lofty, noble characters in most operas of the two generations before Rossini always sang arias that began with metaphors: “Like a river rushing toward the sea, so I am determined on achieving my goal...” or “Like a serpent who has been bruised by your heel, I shall slither back for vengeance...” or even “Like a rocky crag, firm against the buffets of sea and wind, my soul stands firm in its faithful love!” (The first two, from Handel’s Giulio Cesare; the third, another mock-metaphor aria, from Mozart’s Così fan tutte.) Dandini’s metaphor compares himself, false prince on this bride-quest, to a bee buzzing from flower to flower. But in the fast section that concludes the aria, he turns straight toward the audience and sings, over and over again in tongue-tripping patter, that what now seems a comedy will become a tragedy, for the arrogant and unkind. Rossini’s music tells us exactly how much glee and delight Dandini will experience as he watches the downfall of Magnifico, Clorinda, and Tisbe.

CHORUS: Hurry, choose a wife before the summer is past. Otherwise your royal lineage will die out.
DANDINI: Like a bee on an April day, flying from rose to rose, seeking out the sweetest blossom, I’m dashing back and forth between all the beautiful maidens. I’ve seen many a beauty but I haven’t yet found one delectable enough for me.
CLORINDA: Prince!
TISBE: Sire!
CLORINDA AND TISBE: Such a grace you bestow on us!
DON MAGNIFICO: What a flood, a bottomless pit of honor!
DANDINI: Not at all. Lovely! Charming! They look just like their daddy! (aside to Prince Ramiro) (How am I doing?)
PRINCE RAMIRO (aside): (Idiot! Careful, watch it.)
DANDINI: Have mercy! Lower your eyes: their gaze is driving me mad. They’re like pairs of cannons aimed straight at my heart! So cute, so gracious... just like their daddy! (aside—up tempo) (But our comedy will end as a tragedy for them.)
PRINCE RAMIRO: (Oh, why isn’t she here, with her grace and kindness?)
CLORINDA AND TISBE: (He gazes at me, sighs, he’s delirious...there’s no doubt, he is already my slave!)
DON MAGNIFICO: (He’s already a goner. “Excellency” becomes “Your Majesty!”)
DANDINI: (Our comedy will end as a tragedy for them!)

Jean-Pierre Ponnelle directed wonderful movie versions of both Il barbiere and La Cenerentola, arising out of productions at La Scala conducted by Abbado. Here’s Dandini’s entrance aria, staged by Ponnelle with precise comic movement in the ancient Italian tradition, sung by Claudio Desideri. Francisco Araiza played Ramiro in this film (Cenerentola, who doesn’t appear in this scene, was a gorgeous young Frederica von Stade), with the great Paolo Montarsolo as Magnifico and Margherita Guglielmi and Laura Zannani as Clorinda and Tisbe.

On Wednesday we’ll get a chance to hear from our Dandini, Brett Polegato, who recently won rave reviews for his performance of Sharpless in Seattle Opera’s Madama Butterfly. Polegato, who’s has also sung the glum Henry Miles in The End of the Affair and the tormented Orestes in Iphigénie en Tauride for Seattle, is extremely excited to show us what he can do when it comes to comedy. The brilliant production he’ll be in, designed by a group of Spanish artists who are new to Seattle Opera, was filmed in Barcelona a few years back with a stellar cast including Joyce DiDonato and Juan Diego Flórez. The titles are in German, but the entire opera has been uploaded; you can find David Menéndez singing Dandini’s aria, complete with carriage and giant mice, at 40:13 in the video:

Friday, December 30, 2011

2012/13 Season: Turandot, Fidelio, La Cenerentola, La Bohème, La Voix Humaine and Suor Angelica

It’s that magical time of year everyone at the Seattle Opera offices looks forward to…. No, no, not the holidays. It’s time to announce our 2012/13 season!

Lori Phillips is TurandotSoprano Lori Phillips (pictured here in Nashville Opera’s 2006 production of Turandot) stars as Turandot on opening night.
© Marianne Leach
Next year we’ll present six operas that explore the infinite variety of love, beginning in August with Puccini’s extravagant final masterpiece, Turandot. It’s a grand romance, set in legendary China, and tells the story of a cruel princess softened by love. And, of course, it features one of opera’s most famous arias: the emotional “Nessun dorma.” On opening night, soprano Lori Phillips takes on the role of the icy Turandot, opposite Italian tenor Antonello Palombi as Calaf. (By the way, you can also see Palombi in our upcoming production of Attila, opening in just a couple weeks!) For more info on the production and a more complete cast list (including bios, headshots, and audio clips), visit our Turandot webpage.

 

Fidelio at Seattle OperaSeattle Opera’s 2003 production of Fidelio.
© Rozarii Lynch
In October, Seattle Opera revives its 2003 production of Fidelio, created by the innovative team of director Chris Alexander and designer Robert Dahlstrom, who set the action in a present-day first-world prison. Beethoven’s only opera, Fidelio remains a story of hope in the face of oppression and tyranny that is as relevant today as it was in 1814. On opening night, German soprano Christiane Libor makes her U.S. operatic debut as Leonore, a devoted wife determined to find and free her wrongfully imprisoned husband, Florestan. Singing that role is tenor Clifton Forbis, whose recent Seattle Tristan inspired rave reviews. Two Seattle favorites run Fidelio’s prison: bass Arthur Woodley is head-jailer Rocco, and bass-baritone Greer Grimsley is the cruel governor Don Pizarro. For more info, click here.

 

La CenerentolaThe whimsical sets/costumes come from Houston Grand Opera.
© Brett Coomer
Rossini’s effervescent take on the Cinderella story returns to Seattle Opera in January 2013. This charming production of La Cenerentola brings the family-friendly fairy tale to life with eye-popping colors, magical conveyances, and a helpful team of giant mice. Italian mezzo Daniela Pini and American tenor René Barbera make their Seattle Opera debuts as Cenerentola and Prince Ramiro on opening night. Also making their company debuts are Karin Mushegain and Edgardo Rocha, who take on those roles for two of the performances.
For more info, click here.

 

Francesco Demuro is RodolfoTenor Francesco Demuro (pictured here as Alfredo in Seattle Opera’s 2009 Traviata) stars as Rodolfo on opening night.
© Rozarii Lynch
Another Puccini masterpiece comes to Seattle Opera in February and March 2013: La bohème, directed by Tomer Zvulun and conducted by Carlo Montanaro. You may remember Zvulun from his company debut last season, directing a stunning Lucia di Lammermoor. Montanaro also made his company debut during 2010/11 (Don Quichotte) and you can see him in the pit again in a couple weeks when we open Attila. On opening night Francesco Demuro returns as Rodolfo, with Elizabeth Caballero as his ill-fated Mimì. Norah Amsellem and Michael Todd Simpson, who both appeared in Seattle Opera’s recent Carmen, return as Musetta and Marcello. The alternate cast features the debuts of Michael Fabiano as Rodolfo and Nadine Sierra as Mimì. For more info, click here.

 

Nuccia Focile Soprano Nuccia Focile stars as Elle in La Voix Humaine.
© Tristam Kenton
The season wraps up in May with a double bill of important twentieth-century one-act operas, both new to Seattle Opera: La voix humaine, by Francis Poulenc, and Puccini’s Suor Angelica. Nuccia Focile returns for this 40-minute monodrama in which a woman desperately tries to stay connected to a former lover on the telephone. In Suor Angelica, a woman is forced by her wealthy family to abandon her illegitimate son and join a convent. Maria Gavrilova makes her company debut as the suffering young mother, with Rosalind Plowright returning as her chilly aunt. For more info, click here.

 

Single tickets for select performances won't go on sale until May 29, but you can secure your seats now as part of a subscription package. Visit our website, or give the friendly folks at our ticket office a call (206-389-7676) and they'll be happy to help.

Any questions or comments about the season? Leave us a comment!