Monday, February 28, 2011

QUIXOTE'S (and Sancho's) QUEST - Week 4 Clues!

2:30 PM UPDATE:

The Week #4 "Quixote's Quest" necklace has been found (wow, that was quick!), by Brandon Fidler at the windmill at Marymoor Park. BUT there's still one more necklace hidden somewhere in Seattle (see clue below), so keep hunting for your chance to win tickets! Good luck....

4:00 PM UPDATE:

Whoa, good job, guys! The final necklace has just been found, at the University Village Barnes & Noble. A giant windmill-sized thank you to everyone who participated in these hunts. We had a blast, and we hope you did, too!

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We're on our final week of "Quixote's Quest," and Sancho Panza has been swayed by Don Quixote's adventurous spirit, and now demands a quest of his own! So, in honor of him--and in honor of opening our production this past weekend--we're giving you two chances to win tickets to the March 9 performance of Don Quixote. We've hidden two different necklaces somewhere in the Seattle area, and we'll be posting clues for each every day this week, until they've been found. Before you head out on the hunt, make sure to read the full details and rules here.

And now for the clues....


QUIXOTE'S QUEST

CLUE #1: Bunyan’s pilgrim labored through the ___ of Despond; DQ’s foe overlooks this one, of Sammamish.


Nicolas Cavallier as Don Quixote. Photo by Rozarii Lynch.







SANCHO'S QUEST

CLUE #1: In a village known for apples and anthropology, cupcakes and candy, Don Quixote’s adventures live on.


Eduardo Chama as Sancho Panza. Photo by Rozarii Lynch.







Be the first one to retrieve either of the hidden necklaces (but not both! Only one prize package per contestant), and you'll win two tickets to the March 9 performance of Don Quixote.

If you need more help, fear not. Just come back to this blog every morning this week (or check out our Facebook or Twitter pages) for NEW CLUES every day until the necklace has been found.

Good luck, and happy hunting!

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Don Quixote 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, February 26 opening night performance of Don Quixote.








Friday, February 25, 2011

Preview Trailer: Don Quixote

One of literature’s greatest characters comes to life in the grandest way: with a stage full of giant sets, Spanish dances, rousing choruses, and beautiful leading voices. Complete with a live horse and donkey, preview the opera that will leave you blissfully daydreaming - just like the knight himself!



Don Quixote opens this weekend! Who will be joining us?!

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Photos from Rehearsal

Here are our first photos of Don Quixote, taken at last night's dress rehearsal by the great Rozarii Lynch, Seattle Opera's production photographer:

Inspired by what many consider the greatest novel ever written, the opera is set in an imaginary landscape of giant books. John Relyea is Don Quichotte and Eduardo Chama is Sancho Panza.


The lovely Dulcinea, played by Malgorzata Walewska, is unsatisfied with her four admirers (played by Alex Mansoori, Marcus Shelton, Emily Clubb, and Jennifer Bromagen)


Sancho (Chama) takes care of Rocinante and Dapple, who are played by Millie (an 8 year-old Paint) and Desperado (a 14 year-old Tennesee Walker).


The opera's plot concerns the January/December romance of Quixote and Dulcinea.


The production features authentic Spanish classical dance, choreographed by Sara de Luis and performed by de Luis, Raul Salcedo, and others.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

A Chat with Nicolas Cavallier

Today we speak with our Sunday/Friday Quichotte, French bass Nicolas Cavallier, who first appeared at Seattle Opera two years ago as Mozart’s Figaro. The only native French member of our cast, Cavallier (whose name, which is related to “Chevalier” or “Knight on horseback,” is a word heard frequently in this opera) is returning to the role of the mad knight.

Don Quichotte is based on a Spanish book, but it’s a French opera. Do these characters reflect French culture at all?
I think Don Quixote encompasses all sorts of culture. Don Quixote is the culture of dreams. If your dreams are alive, desire is alive. Yes, the story takes place in Spain, but it could be someplace else, what’s important is this character, who’s able to transform others through his belief of what those people could be. The message is totally international, for me. The funny thing about Don Quixote is he’s the most international, global character in literature. Worldwide, this may be the most important novel. People keep on reading it, quoting it.

But writing this music, Massenet was in fact a Frenchman putting down his impressions of Spain.
Yes, and it’s definitely a French sound, just like in Carmen. You know, Bizet never went to Spain but, the music of Carmen sounds Spanish. You wonder where they got the inspiration, where they heard it, because there was no radio, no tv, no records, but occasionally Spanish musicians turned up in Paris, where these composers lived. They had very little information to work with.

Keep in mind, too, Massenet was a god when he wrote this opera, for Monte Carlo in 1910. And it’s such surprising music: it changes every second, it’s impossible to predict what he’s going to do next. And it’s short, very concise.

Is Don Quichotte crazy, or do you understand his actions?
A man who starts thinking his own thoughts, fighting against the--how do you say...the mensonge, lies, who puts integrity at the center of his life, will very quickly be marginalized. And when you spend a lot of time alone, you may turn a little nutty, or maybe a bit depressed. Certainly he is a nostalgic man. What makes Don Quichotte a great character is, at the end of his life, he’s now 50, old for that time, he gets up and says “Now I’m going to do what is right for the world.” It’s an extraordinary message, it’s so modern: don’t get frustrated about your state, one day you can wake up. It’s what we’re seeing in so many countries in Africa and the Mideast, all these awakenings. That’s what he does, Don Quixote awakens, he decides he will make good in the world, provide his energy, his dreams, to the people around him.

Cavallier as Figaro in Le nozze di Figaro (Rozarii Lynch, photo)


In French opera, the text is extremely important. As a native French speaker, do you think it’s challenging for non-native French speakers to get the style right?
Well, I’m French, but I’ve sung Bluebeard’s Castle, in Hungarian, or Janáček operas, in Czech; that’s just as complicated as an English singer learning to sing in Russian, or whatever. Some languages are a bit easier to sing...Italian is a very lyrical language, as is Russian, but French is not always an easy language to sing. We have many vowels that are closed, which makes the language more difficult than some. Even French singers struggle with it. I find it easy to sing in English because it is quite frontal. Also, the dipthong helps you; I use that, technically, to mellow ceratin sounds. Anything but French! When I was studying at the Royal Academy of Music, in London, I only sang a few French songs. My teacher would sometimes tell me, “You must open the vowel or else your sound won’t come out properly and you’ll ruin the line.” So yes, for a lot of French singers it’s a battle to sing their own language. It’s interesting to hear foreign singers sing in French. John Relyea, who’s Canadian, has very good French.

Do you think Dulcinée is making a mistake by saying no to Don Quichotte, or does she have good reasons to turn him down?
Ah, very romantic question! I think Don Quixote is a passeur, he passes on the flame to other people. To Dulcinée he says, “That’s how beautiful you are.” It’s what Gandhi did to his people, Gandhi had the faith, using nothing, and nonviolence, to bring faith to millions of people: stand up for what you are, you are free. That’s what Don Quixote wants people to be: free. Dulcinée, you know, is full of scarcasm and boredom, and being like that you can’t be happy. And he comes along and says, “You are the most beautiful.” Everybody wants somebody to come and look in their eyes and say, “You are the most beautiful." But she asks him to stay with them, and he is beyond that; his work is done. It’s like a relay race: he passes his thoughts to a few people, like the bandits. He could have been moralistic to them, you know, to tell the bandits, “Don’t steal!” Instead he says to them, “Bandits, you have courage, you stand for what you believe. I understand, you don’t yield to the pressure of being under a dictator, and I respect that, as a free man myself."

Dulcinée (Daniela Sindram) interrupts Don Quichotte (Cavallier) mid-duel (rehearsal photos by Alan Alabastro)


Much of your career has been back in France. What are some of the differences are between the French opera scene and the rest of the opera world?
I can speak from the English point of view, since I spent 12 years in England, six years at the Royal Academy of Music. In France, when you finish your studies you go straight from student life into professional life, and sometimes it happens a little bit too quickly. We don’t have all the choral societies, like they have in England, who will give young singers work, a few bucks for singing a Mozart Requiem, that kind of thing to get experience, which--no matter what level it’s at--is what you’re craving as a student. In France, as soon as you’re a professional they’re expecting the utmost of you.

You’ve been in Seattle once before, in 2009. What do you look forward to doing here now that you’re back in town?
Honestly, I haven’t been feeling well, there’s been a fair amount of illness in our cast. So mostly we’re concentrating on getting healthy! But if it’s not too wet, I’d like to go back to the Olympic Peninusula, to go into the rain forest and not just see rain.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

A Chat with Malgorzata Walewska

Today we catch up with mezzo-soprano Malgorzata Walewska, who is our opening night Dulcinea in our new production of Don Quixote (opening this Saturday!). Walewska previously appeared opposite with John Relyea (our opening night Don Quixote; rehearsal photo, left, by Alan Alabastro) in Seattle Opera's 2009 production of Bluebeard's Castle, and we ask her about their collaboration--and what it's like to reject him on stage.

What is it like to be working with John Relyea again?
This is the second time I meet John on the stage. He is a great and very flexible singer, and a great partner. He is very well prepared—and focused. During the Bluebeard’s Castle performances he never stepped on the train of my gown, which was 6 feet long ! I was really impressed! He is also a handsome and tall man, and every woman feels great with a partner like this. I also just noticed that in both Bluebeard’s Castle and Don Quixote, my character is half as young as I am, and John’s character is two times older than he actually is. The power of stage make-up is great.

Walewska as Azucena in Il trovatore (Rozarii Lynch photo)


When we saw you in Trovatore, you played a crazy character. Do you think Don Quixote is also crazy?
Yes, he is somewhat crazy. This is a man with a child’s soul. He is pure and good, but naïve, and lives in his own fantasy world. But I would not compare him to Azucena’s madness. She freaked out after very traumatic experiences as a young girl. Don Quixote was an educated, adult man. He read a lot of books (maybe too many) and tried to recreate his favorite knights’ lives.

Does Dulcinea make the right choice by refusing Don Quixote? What does she think of him?
I feel really bad and sorry that I am so cruel to such a gentleman, but...what would I do in the real world? I don’t think I would accept somebody’s proposal only because I feel pity for them. Anyway, Dulcinea notices how Quixote suffers and tries to explain her denial. To me, this is like the situation when a six-year-old pupil falls in love with her/his teacher and insists on marrying him/her. Dulcinea explains how much she likes Don Quixote, but that marriage is impossible. This is always difficult….

A lot of Seattle Opera’s favorite singers are Polish, such as yourself, Aleksandra Kurzak, Ewa Podles, and Mariusz Kwiecien, to name a few. What is the opera scene like in Poland?
The National Opera House in Warsaw is my home. I had my debut there in 1991. We have our families and audience in Poland and we perform for them with pleasure, but to evolve we need to practice a lot and experience new things--and there aren’t many theaters in Poland where that is possible.

I feel great in Seattle and always come back with great pleasure. I am sure that my Polish singer friends feel the same. By the way I saw Mariusz a month ago and he asked me to send you his best wishes. We all love Speight. He is unique.

Walewska as Judit in Bluebeard's Castle (Rozarii Lynch, photo)


What are your favorite things to do in Seattle when you’re here?
Usually I meet my friends. After my third time in Seattle, I have made many friends. When the weather is good I like to go for a cruise on Puget Sound, or dine in the Space Needle restaurant. If the weather is bad I love shopping.

QUIXOTE'S QUEST - Week 3 Clues!

2/22/11 UPDATE:

The Week #3 "Quixote’s Quest" necklace has been recovered!

Robin Kessler braved the cold today to retrieve Dulcinea's necklace from Branch's Quarter Horses, home of Desperado and Millie (who play Rocinante and Dapple in Don Quixote). Thanks to everyone who participated, and remember that our final hunt will begin on Monday--so stay tuned for a last chance to win tickets to Don Quixote.

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Can you believe it?! That absent-minded Dulcinea has lost her necklace again! Last week, an enterprising operagoer found it at the 8th floor Arts & Literature desk at the Central Branch of the Seattle Public Library; the week before that, it turned up in a windmill in the Mt. Baker neighborhood's Bradner Gardens Park. Where has it run off to now?

The quest is once again yours, fearless scavenger hunters of Seattle. Who will be the first to find Dulcinea's necklace this week? There's a free pair of tickets to Seattle Opera's fast-approaching production of Don Quixote for the first person to retrieve the necklace. Read the full details and rules of the scavenger hunt here.

Here is the first clue to the location of this week's necklace.

CLUE #1

“Rameau” wrote music; “Zweig” wrote libretti; the English version holds fourth with another element of opera’s spectacle up in Snohomish.

Update, dated 2/22 at 9:30 am:

CLUE #2

They offer wisdom to tomorrow’s equestrians, not yesterday’s knights-errant.

Be the first one to retrieve the hidden necklace, and you're this week's winner of two tickets to the March 9 performance of Don Quixote.

But if you need more help, fear not. Just come back to this blog every morning this week (or check out our Facebook or Twitter pages) for a NEW CLUE every day until the necklace has been found. And don't forget: the final hunt begins next Monday.

Good luck, and happy hunting!

Behind the Scenes Video: Transforming Bass-Baritone John Relyea into Don Quixote

It’s not easy making our handsome, leading men take the look of the old, deluded knight in Don Quixote, but the Seattle Opera makeup artists have a plan. Go backstage and see the tricks of the trade that make the transformation from singer to character complete.



Don Quixote opens this Saturday!

Friday, February 18, 2011

Moving into the theater...

Opening night of Don Quixote is fast approaching and our cast and crew are down at McCaw Hall and hard at work, making sure everything comes together in time for Saturday, February 26. Animal lovers that we are, we headed over to the hall today to check out the arrival of horse Desperado and donkey Millie, who ventured out of the stables and began rehearsing their roles on stage. After director Linda Brovsky finished feeding Desperado and Millie a treat of organic carrots, we pulled her aside and chatted about this week's progress and what's in store for the weekend. Here's what she told us.

You moved from the rehearsal studio to McCaw Hall last weekend. What have you been up to since then?
This week we finished staging the production, and we had run-throughs where we put all the elements together. Tonight is our first night in the theater, and we'll be adding the rest of the scenery and the horse and donkey.

Any unexpected surprises or challenges this week?
We had a fire drill in the middle of Tuesday's rehearsal, so that kept things interesting! It was an accident, but everyone had to evacuate for 20 minutes, so had a quick break during Act 1 that we hadn’t planned on. And we’ve also had some illness in the cast--but better that people get sick this week rather than next week.

What's in store for the weekend?
Tonight is a cue-to-cue rehearsal, which means that we do entrances and exits and work out technical issues, and then we have a piano technical rehearsal on Sunday, with the Silver Cast in costume, where we start integrating all those elements with costumes and with the music.

Have you had any time to take a break and relax?
Oh, no! [laughs] That's not going to happen until after the show opens.

Photo by Alan Alabastro

Thursday, February 17, 2011

QUIXOTE'S QUEST - Week 2 Clues!

2/17/11 UPDATE:

The "Quixote’s Quest" Week #2 necklace has been recovered!

Congrats to Paula Johnson who found Dulcinea's necklace at the central branch of the Seattle Public Library. She just missed out on last week's necklace when Safia and her husband beat her to the windmill at Bradner Gardens, but her persistence paid off! Thanks to all who participated, and don't forget that we'll be starting another hunt on Monday--so stay tuned for more chances to win tickets to Don Quixote.


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Originally posted on Monday, February 14, 2011, at 10 a.m.

Oh, no! Dulcinea's necklace, found last week in Bradner Gardens Park (a city p-patch in Mt. Baker), has disappeared again. Where could it have gone?

It's up to you--dauntless adventurers of Seattle--to comb the greater Seattle area for Dulcinea's necklace. There's a free pair of tickets to our upcoming production of Don Quixote for the first person to find the necklace. Read the full details and rules of the scavenger hunt here.

Here is the first clue to the location of this week's necklace.

CLUE #1

If only Don Q had consulted this Seattle oracle, who draws wisdom from Bast and her Negative Round.

Update, dated 2/15 at 9:30 am:

CLUE #2

Betwixt and between winter and summer, Jefferson and Monroe.

Update, dated 2/16 at 9:30 am:

CLUE #3

What I Ching and the octopus have in common.

Be the first one to retrieve the hidden necklace, and you're this week's winner of two tickets to the March 9 performance of Don Quixote.

But if you're stumped, fear not. Just come back to this blog every morning this week (or check out our Facebook or Twitter pages) for a NEW CLUE every day until the necklace has been found. And don't forget: a new hunt begins next Monday.

Good luck, and happy hunting!