
Madama Butterfly 2000 Performance
Poster
Design by
© Heins Creative
Opera director enjoys
Billings
CHRISTENE MEYERS
Gazette Arts & Entertainment Editor
| Posted: Sunday, October 22, 2000
11:00 pm
Food, wine and
theater. Travel and opera.
These
are a few of his favorite things.
But, for Douglas Nagel, opera would
definitely have to head the list.
The other elements follow suit,
since opera inspires every aspect of
Nagel’s life.
His production of “Madama
Butterfly” hits the boards in
Billings in early November, the fall
effort of the fledgling Rimrock
Opera Company.
For Nagel, a
Billings native, it’s an opportunity
to return to the city to be with his
family and to give something back to
the community in which he grew up.
“Oh, this is just too much fun,” he
sighs, happily putting makeup on his
Butterfly for a rehearsal and press
photo session. “I have the best of
both worlds, and I feel very
fortunate.”
By that, the
flamboyant bass-baritone means that
he can sidetrack for a time from his
international opera career, return
to his hometown to get the nation’s
newest opera company off the ground
and keep his hand in touring as the
company establishes itself.
And, he says, after traveling
Europe, “it’s wonderful to find how
the restaurant scene in Billings has
grown – believe me, light years from
when I grew up here.”
For
now, he says, “my attentions are
completely here.” To emphasize, he
plants his executive directors’ feet
on the Losekamp Hall stage and seals
the statement with a click of his
heels.
Nagel, 40, got his
musical start singing in area grade
schools and on Easter Eve for
services at Holy Rosary Church. He
saw his first opera as a teenager
and was hooked on the artform.
After graduating from Central
High, Nagel attended Rocky Mountain
College, then graduated from
University of Wyoming.
For
the past 18 or so years, he’s sung
and toured with Pacific Repertory
Opera, the San Jose Symphony,
Arizona Opera, Greater Buffalo
Opera, Virginia Opera and other
companies. He has appeared on PBS
and the BBC, which broadcast a
production in which he sang at
London’s famed Royal Albert Hall.
Before Billings, Nagel’s recent
involvement was with the Rogue
Valley Opera, directing “La Boheme”
and “Die Fledermaus,” two of opera’s
war horses.
Last year, he
appeared as Dr. Bartolo in Rimrock
Opera’s first production, Rossini’s
“The Barber of Seville,” starring
the late Pablo Elvira. Other
nationally acclaimed singers joined
him, with sets and costumes from New
York and a 30-piece live orchestra.
“But we put it together in just
under two weeks, and I wanted a bit
more leisure this year,” Nagel says.
“We have almost three weeks, and it
feels very comfortable.”
Using contacts on the West Coast and
calling upon opera-singing buddies,
Nagel assembled a crackerjack cast
for “Butterfly.”
“Most of my
leads have done their parts
elsewhere, and that’s a big
advantage,” he says.
“And the
chorus has been rehearsing evenings.
The musicians have their scores, and
we’ll actually have about 10
rehearsals together and the last
week with the conductor.”
Nagel is particularly proud of
securing Barbara Day Turner as
conductor. She is founder and music
director of the San Jose Chamber
Orchestra and has conducted nearly
50 operas, including four world
premieres.
For the part of
the doomed Japanese geisha who has a
child with the American Pinkerton,
he has Keiko Kagawa-Hamilton, a San
Francisco-area singer with
international credits and the
important advantage of having a
Japanese heritage.
“She
really understands the torment that
Cio-Cio San feels and the ultimate
sacrifice she ultimately makes for
her son to have a secure future,”
Nagel says.
Nagel’s
Pinkerton, too, has solid credits,
having performed extensively
throughout the Bay Area and recently
at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully
Hall.
For the role of Sharpless,
the consulate and Pinkerton’s
associate, Nagel is thrilled to have
secured Brian Leerhuber, recently an
artist in residence with the
Juilliard Opera Center.
Cio-Cio San’s maid, Suzuki, will be
sung by British-born Elspeth Franks,
whose versatility has won her
supporting roles as diverse as
Orlofsky, Ernesto and Bianca.
“She one of the busiest and most
sought after singers on the West
Coast,” Nagel says.
Dorinda
Doolittle, his assistant director,
is an old friend from his Rogue
Valley stint in Oregon. And Billings
Symphony Chorale director David
Barnett is chorus master, working
with the singers for several months.
Nagel has performed with many of
the supporting actors and singers,
including well-known area voices
such as Ed Harris, Gregory Paul
Johnson and Leonard Orth. He’s
enticed his fellow opera buffs to
organize a group, Phantoms of the
Opera, which will combine the opera
with a gourmet dinner and reception.
Finally, he says with delight,
“Tickets are selling very, very
well. We hope to sell it out.”
It’s a tremendous help to have
grown up in the region, Nagel says.
“I feel really honored to be putting
the production together here,
blending our own great resources and
superb talent from other places,” he
notes. “They are all, by the way,
completely smitten by Montana.”
--Christene Meyers
Opera company in final
days of rehearsal
CHRISTENE
MEYERS Gazette Arts & Entertainment
Editor | Posted: Sunday, October 29,
2000 11:00 pm
The guest
artists are in town, the costumes
and sets have arrived, the maestra
is at the podium and “Madama
Butterfly” is days from taking
flight.
The fully staged opera,
featuring nationally known stars,
has been in planning for more than a
year and in full rehearsal since
Oct. 16, when the principals began
arriving.
“We’re staying in
host homes, which gives us a
pleasant introduction to the
community,” says British-born
Elspeth Franks.
She is
staying with singers Donald and
Maxine Pihlaja, long involved in
Billings’ musical scene. Franks, who
plays the part of Cio-Cio San’s
maid, Suzuki, says that having
nearly three weeks’ rehearsal “is a
rare luxury – we’re all feeling
quite comfortable with the
production and have a real sense of
unity.”
Franks, born in
Manchester, England, is an old
friend and musical associate of
Rimrock Opera Company’s artistic
director, Douglas Nagel.
"Madama
Butterfly" plays at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 3, and 2 p.m., Sunday,
Nov. 5, at the Alberta Bair Theater.
For more information, see the
Friday, Nov. 3, Enjoy. Call 256-6052
for tickets.
“We’ve worked
together in the Bay Area on several
operas,” Franks says, “and he knows
how much I enjoy this part.”
She
says her friendship with Japanese
born Keiko Kagawa-Hamilton, who
plays Cio-Cio San is also helpful.
“We’ve bumped into one another
in the Bay Area, and that’s all
helpful,” she says. “And I’ve worked
with Lee (Gregory), too, so it feels
a bit like a big, happy family.”
Gregory plays the role of
Pinkerton, the American who falls in
love with Cio-Cio San and fathers
her child. The three have several
scenes together.
“And I met Brian
Leerhuber on the plane, and we felt
like old friends,” she says.
Leerhuber plays Sharpless, from the
American consulate, the character
who tells Cio-Cio San that her lover
has taken an American wife and is
returning to America without her.
Nagel said that two weeks’
rehearsal for last year’s “The
Marriage of Figaro” didn’t seem like
quite enough time, “and this feels
much more comfortable.”
He was
thrilled that conductor Barbara Day
Turner arrived early and that the
orchestra knew the score on the
first run-through.
“It put us
way ahead of the game, and she was
delighted,” Nagel said.
For
singer Leerhuber, a Los Angeles
native, recently an artist in
residence with New York’s Juilliard
Opera Center, “It’s wonderful that
your town is so musically savvy.
“I think ‘Butterfly’ is a good
one for the community. It’s easy for
the audience to get into. People who
love opera love it, but it’s also
easy even for people who haven’t
seen much opera.”
“It’s a
good length – under three hours. And
we have strong singers, good
musicians and flashy costumes,” he
says
For David Cody, who
plays Goro, “It’s a good story. Yes,
a tragedy, but very human and
sympathetic characters. They live
their lives and make decisions.
There’s a strong moral undertone,
too, about doing ‘the right’ thing.”
Cody has played his role before and
says that helps enormously in
putting a new production together.
“You’re freer to concentrate on
other nuances and the specific
details of the new production if
you’re already comfortable with the
role,” he says.
For the Pinkerton
character, “I’ve done the role in
Santa Cruz and elsewhere, and I’ve
worked with Elsbeth and knew
Douglas. That puts us halfway there
when we get together.”
With
the mechanics under control, the
singers agree, they can work on the
subtleties of their characters.
Gregory says he hopes to paint
Pinkerton as “a believable,
sympathetic character.”
“He
is a typical, turn-of-the-century
American male. America ruled the
world, and he took what he wanted,”
Gregory says. “But he does truly
love Cio-Cio San, and that
complicates things.”
Gregory
says it would be easy to play
Pinkerton as a villain, “but this is
no cookie-cutter human being.”
For this final rehearsal week,
the principals ran through the work
Saturday and Sunday, with the
orchestra. The first full technical
rehearsal was scheduled for Tuesday
afternoon, with a full dress
rehearsal with orchestra Tuesday.
Wednesday is final dress
rehearsal and Thursday is a dark
day, with “nothing assigned, a
well-deserved day off,” Nagel says.
--Christene Meyers
Soprano, mezzo and
conductor form key spokes of musical
wheel
CHRISTENE MEYERS Gazette
Entertainment Editor | Posted:
Wednesday, November 1, 2000 11:00 pm
Three strong women are
integral points of a triangle in
next weekend's Rimrock Opera
production of “Madama Butterfly.”
All three bring unique
contributions to the mix in what
artistic director Douglas Nagel
calls “a very exciting production.
We had the first orchestra
run-through Monday and it was
thrilling. We have top musicians.”
In fact, he's bursting with pride
about the production, from the
orchestra pit to the leading singer.
Having a Japanese heritage gives
a big leg-up to Keiko
Kagawa-Hamilton, who plays the
leading role of the ill-fated
courtesan, Cio-Cio San.
“I
actually have samurai blood on my
mother's side of the family,” says
Keiko, “and I have her as a resource
for figuring out my character.”
When Cio-Cio San falls in love
with Pinkerton, she becomes pregnant
with his child.
“She loves
the child enormously,” says Keiko,
“and she wants a good life for him.
But she knows she can't raise him by
herself.”
Thus, she reasons,
“her decision to commit suicide is
an act of bravery and generosity.
And because she comes from a noble
background, even though she's fallen
on hard times, she will not disgrace
herself.”
Keiko, a graduate
of the San Francisco Conservatory of
Music, also studied music in her
native Japan, at a top private music
School in Tokyo, the Kunitachi
College of Music. Her operatic roles
include critically acclaimed
performances as Cio-Cio San with
North Bay Opera and San Francisco
Lyric Opera.
“It's fun to be
reviving the role now with your
Rimrock Opera,” she says, “and I
love the countryside. Parts of it
remind me of Japan.”
Born
near Hiroshima, Keiko has been in
the U.S. for many years, leaning
perfect English and playing many
European roles.
She will do
Nedda in “I Pagliacci” with S.F.
Lyric Opera, and favorite past roles
include Fiordiligi in “Cosi fan
Tutte,” Donna Anna in “Don
Giovanni,” the First Lady in
“Christopher Sly,” and the Mother in
“Hansel and Gretel.”
“I asked my
mother to come to Montana for the
production,” she says, “but she
doesn't travel as much as she once
did. But I think she would have felt
very happy here.”
As homage
to her heritage, the well reviewed
and busy soprano is director of
Choral Cosmo, a Silicon Valley based
Japanese chorus, and she teaches
privately, giving both piano and
voice lessons to about 50 students,
including several talented Japanese
students.
Singing with her in
“Butterfly” is mezzo-soprano Elspeth
Franks, a fellow Californian who has
played a huge range of roles,
including parts usually taken by
males.
“I play boys and old
bags,” says Elspeth, with a laugh.
“That's my lot, it seems, so I'm
delighted to play the part of
Suzuki, with all its lyricism.”
Elspeth sees Suzuki as a sympathetic
character, “who really understands
the intricacy of the romance”
between her mistress and Pinkerton.
“She is a bit older, a bit less
na'efve, and she sees what is
happening,” Elspeth says, “while
Cio-Cio San may be a bit more
unworldly.”
The opera is a
“prop nightmare” for Suzuki, Elspeth
says, “because she produces all the
props used by nearly everyone.”
And, she says, “My knees are a
wreck by the end, from all the
sitting and bowing and ups and
downs.”
The singer is one of
the West Coast's most courted, Nagel
says, because of her “trouser-role”
versatility and repertoire as
Cherubino, Hansel, Octavian, Nerone,
Luzauli and Prince Orlofsky. But
Elspeth says she'll “wear a skirt
when absolutely necessary” and has
done so in roles with Rogue Opera,
West Bay Opera, and Teatro Bac-chino
in Berkeley, Calif.
Conductor
Barbara Day Turner recently
completed 15 years serving as Opera
San Jose's resident conductor and
artistic administrator.
She
worked with Nagel during both her
San Jose days, and during production
of “The Merry Wid-ow,” with the
Rogue Valley Opera in Oregon.
She is also proud of her work
the El Paso Opera, Texas All-State
Orchestra, North Arkansas Symphony
and the well respected Bay Area
Women's Philharmon-ic.
For
eight years, Turner was conductor of
the San Jose State University
Symphony and Chamber Orchestras and
lecturer in conducting and
harpsichord, a personal love of
hers. She studied harpsichord with
the late Fernando Valenti and has
appeared with most of the Bay Area's
orchestras, including the San Jose
Symphony, Oakland/East Bay Symphony,
Sinfonia San Francisco and the
Midsummer Mozart Festival Orchestra
of San Francisco.
An ardent
advocate for contemporary composers,
Turner has premiered more than 30
new works in the past 10 years and
recently released, with the San Jose
Chamber Orchestra, a CD recording of
four works written in the past five
years. A second CD of new work is
set to be recorded in the fall of
2000.
An inveterate traveler,
she'll be conducting “Lucia di
Lammer-more” for Taconic Opera in
New York, and is planning a concert
with the symphony orchestra of
Rudolstadt, Germany, and a repeat
engagement conducting the “Sing It
Yourself Messiah” at Davies Hall in
San Francisco this December.
MORE
INFO Rimrock Opera Co. presents a
preview of “Madama Butterfly” this
Sunday, Oct. 29, at 7 p.m. in
Losekamp Hall on the RMC campus. The
preview is free and features musical
excerpts. The complete production
with full orchestra, lavish costumes
and sets and “supra-titles” is Nov.
3 and 5 at the ABT. Call (406)
256-6052.
Opera inviting,
even to neophyte
BECKY SHAY Of
The Gazette Staff | Posted: Friday,
November 3, 2000 11:00 pm
What I know about opera
fits in a thimble.
That statement
made, here’s what I think about
Rimrock Opera’s Friday performance
of Madama Butterfly:
Wow!
Powerful, moving singing and
orchestra performances. Beautifully
designed sets. Lighting that added a
fabulous effect.
And, much to my
surprise, laughter from the crowd
and sarcasm from the characters.
As producer and director Douglas
Nagel said at the beginning of the
opera, “We have a plethora of local
talent,” and they were joined by
phenomenal, nationally recognized
talent.
The English titles
projected above the stage helped
outline the specifics of a fairly
simple story line, but the acting
and emotion in the singing did more
to carry me along through the nearly
three-hour performance. (There are
two intermissions.)
Keiko
Kagawa-Hamilton’s performance as
Madama Butterfly, Cio-Cio San, was
probably the most emotional
portrayal. While her soprano voice
at times seemed rather soft, she
also had the ability to project over
the orchestra and the male lead, Lee
Gregory, with amazing strength. It
was her emotion-packed performance
in the second act – while she waited
for Gregory (U.S. Navy Lt. B.F.
Pinkerton) to return to Japan and
their marriage and family – that
most drew me into the opera.
Something I didn’t realize until
Gregory returned in the third act
was that I found myself upset with
his arrogance and the way he broke
that poor girl’s heart. By the way,
they build to an incredibly dramatic
ending together with young Billings’
actors Lewis Rawlinson, who shined
in Friday’s performance, and Tatum
Walker, who will most likely do the
same on Sunday.
It says much
about Rimrock Opera that it provides
the type of performance that moves
an opera neophyte through a range of
emotions including laughter, anger
and tears.
They apparently
had a similar effect on the bulk of
the crowd as there was a full 10
minutes of applause after the
curtain dropped. Kagawa-Hamilton
brought the crowd to its feet, but
it was Billings’ own Nagel who drew
the first “bravos!” Laurel’s Leonard
Orth also drew exuberant applause
for his baritone performance as
Prince Yamadori. And Gregory, well
the crowd apparently adored him,
too. As I heard one
dignified-looking woman say at
intermission: “Oh, that Lee Greogry.
Is he to die for? And he can sing,
too.”
One of the things to
remember about opera in Billings is
that it’s new. That means people,
like me, who don’t know an aria from
a orchestra prelude, have an
opportunity to shed the
stereotypical notion of an
over-sized singer with an over-size
voice and give it a try. Heck, it
was the third act before I saw
conductor Barbara Day Turner’s hands
and baton and realized where the
orchestra pit was located.
Although I did see a few pairs of
opera glasses in the nearly sold-out
theater, it certainly wasn’t an
“uppity” crowd. I heard friends
greet each other with a “Happy
opera!”
I certainly didn’t
expect to laugh at the opera. The
chuckles started early, when
well-known local bass Ed Harris
entered wearing a skull cap as a
Buddhist priest. It was Harris’
well-known personality, certainly
not the performance, that drew the
little wave of laughter. But those
chuckles did much to break the ice
for me and are surely a sign that
opera isn’t all hoity-toity.
I have to confess, I was a little
worried about “what to wear.” But I
was assured that as long as I fell
somewhere between a formal dress
with high heels and jeans with wool
clogs I’d be OK. That’s exactly the
type of dress people around me were
wearing as I entered Alberta Bair
Theater.
My best advice to anyone
who might be interested in trying a
visit to the opera, or to those who
want to help bolster attendance by
encouraging a friend to go, is to
remember that opera doesn’t have to
be intimidating. The cast and crew
of “Madama Butterfly” make it
incredibly comfortable and Rimrock
Opera and a long list of sponsors
make it accessible.
If you
like music and you appreciate
talent, go check out this showcase
of both.
--Becky Shay
Butterfly’ takes wing
tonight
CHRISTENE MEYERS Gazette
Arts & Entertainment Editor |
Posted: Monday, November 6, 2000
11:00 pm
It’s down
to the wire and Douglas Nagel is
happy as if he were in his right
mind.
Puccini’s ghost is
guiding him, he feels, for his
production has the passion and beaut
the master demanded.
For
Nagel, opera is a passion, and to be
artistic director of his own
production is “sheer joy,” he says.
Returning to Billings from a
career in Oregon and Washington has
meant some shifts in focus for the
40-year-old bass-baritone. The
changes have been good, though.
“I’ve reconnected with old
friends and we’re actually building
the nation’s newest opera company
right here,” he says. “I’ve been
eating and sleeping and dreaming
‘Butterfly,’ and we even have opera
groupies.”
The “Phantoms of the
Opera” have organized to get the
inside scope on the opera. They
attended Sunday’s opera preview at
Rocky Mountain College, listening to
Nagel and orchestra conductor
Barbara Day Turner visit with
principals about the production.
They’ve had special opera
dinners, and they’ll have a
post-opera party this weekend.
The opera has been in planning
for a year, in serious production
for two months, and in final
rehearsals this week. But it hasn’t
been all work and no play for the
international cast. They’ve had time
off for sight seeing, have taken in
the hockey at Metra, saw parts of
the NILE rodeo and have had time for
antique shopping and trying
Billings’ restaurants.
Rimrock Opera Company attracted the
guest artists, Nagel says, because
of the appeal of Montana and the
fact that Billings has enough “city
life” to engage folks from larger
metropolitan areas.
For
Nagel, a Billings native, it’s an
opportunity to return to Billings to
be with his family and to give
something back to the community in
which he grew up.
“It’s been just
too much fun,” he sighs, happily
putting make-up on his Butterfly for
a rehearsal and press photo session.
“I have the best of both worlds and
I feel very fortunate.”
After
graduating from Billings Central
High School, Nagel attended Rocky
Mountain College and then graduated
from the University of Wyoming. For
the past 18 or so years, he’s sung
and toured with Pacific Repertory
Opera, the San Jose Symphony,
Arizona Opera, Greater Buffalo
Opera, Virginia Opera and other
companies, and has appeared on PBS
and the BBC, which broadcast a
production in which he sang at
London’s famed Royal Albert Hall.
Before Billings, his recent
involvement was with the Rogue
Valley Opera, directing “La Boheme”
and “Die Fledermaus,” two of opera’s
war horses. Many of this weekend’s
guests have connections with Nagel’s
Bay Area and Oregon arts venues.
But he’s been back in Montana
off and on for several years and in
1999, he appeared as Dr. Bartolo in
Rimrock Opera’s first production,
Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville,”
starring the late Pablo Elvira.
Other nationally acclaimed singers
joined him, with sets and costumes
from New York and a 30-piece live
orchestra. Nagel is carrying on the
dream of opera buffs who have
struggled for nearly a decade to get
the opera company off the ground.
“Last year, we put a production
together in just under two weeks,
and I wanted a bit more leisure this
year,” says Nagel. “We have almost
three weeks and it feels very
comfortable.”
Most of the
leads have done their parts
elsewhere, and the chorus has been
rehearsing evenings for several
weeks. The musicians were ready last
week and 10 full rehearsals have
been accomplished.
Nagel is
particularly proud of securing
Turner to act as conductor. She is
founder and music director of the
San Jose Chamber Orchestra, and has
conducted nearly 50 operas,
including four world premieres. For
the part of the doomed Japanese
geisha who has a child with the
American Pinkerton, he booked Keiko
Kagawa-Hamilton, a Bay Area singer
with both international, credits and
the important advantage of having a
Japanese heritage.
“She
really understands the torment that
Cio-Cio San feels and the ultimate
sacrifice she makes for her son to
have a secure future,” says Nagel.
The opera’s Pinkerton, singer Lee
Gregory, has solid credits, having
performed extensively throughout the
Bay Area and recently at Lincoln
Center’s Alice Tully Hall.
For the role of Sharpless, the
consulate and Pinkerton’s associate,
Nagel is thrilled to have secured
Brian Leerhuber, recently an artist
in residence with Juilliard Opera
Center.
Cio-Cio San’s maid,
Suzuki, will be sung by British born
Elspeth Franks, whose versatility
has won her supporting roles as
diverse as Orlofsky, Ernesto and
Bianca. “She’s one of the busiest
and most sought after singers on the
West Coast,” says Nagel.
Old
friend Dorinda Doolittle is his
assistant director, an acquaintance
from his Rogue Valley stint in
Oregon. And Billings Symphony
Chorale director David Barnett is
chorus master, working with the
singers for several months.
Rounding out the cast are well known
area voices such as Ed Harris,
Gregory Paul Johnson and Leonard
Orth.
The singers and players
had Thursday night off after two
full dress, technical and make-up
rehearsals with full cast and
orchestra Tuesday and Wednesday.
With his mom in the audience for
a recent dress rehearsal, Nagel
says, “It’s great to have such a
build-up, to feel the region behind
us. We’re honored to be putting this
together here, blending our own
talent and nationally known voices
under the beautiful Big Sky.”
A taste of opera for area kids
CHRISTENE MEYERS Gazette Arts &
Entertainment Editor | Posted:
Friday, October 13, 2000 11:00 pm
Opera has all the great stuff of
life: tragedy, triumph, bliss,
betrayal, revenge and death.
Area gradeschoolers are raving about
a condensed version of “Madama
Butterfly,” brainchild of
Billings-born Doug Nagel, who
detoured from a world-class opera
career to return to his roots.
“Opera isn’t about some weird
foreign fat lady singing,” said
Nagel, who took his troupe to Bench
Elementary recently. “It’s about
life.”
In preparation for the
shortened version of the Giacomo
Puccini masterpiece, teachers
coached their young charges on the
well-loved story.
One fourth-grader put it this way before the show:
“It’s in Japan and a Navy guy
marries a Japanese lady and she
loves him really a lot. Another guy
thinks she loves him more than he
loves her and he’s right. But they
have a baby anyway. Then he goes
back to our country and gets married
again. That’s why the Japanese lady
kills herself.”
“That’s the
story,” Nagel said with a laugh.
“And we do it in 36 minutes. The
kids are absolutely eating it up.
They’re spellbound. You can hear a
pin drop.”
The kids agree.
“It’s a great story, but sad,”
said Kelli Murphy, 11. “I liked it a
lot and it was fun to study it first
in music class.” She conceded that
she knew the actress playing Cio-Cio
San didn’t really kill herself.
“When she went behind the screen, we
knew it was just pretend.”
Kevin Cofer, 11, said the story was
“as good as a movie. I liked it a
lot and it kept my interest all
through.”
Nagel’s hope is
that he is addressing the opera
buffs of the future. “Some of these
kids will come to the grand
production in November,” he said,
“and maybe bring their friends and
parents. But more importantly, we
are grooming the audiences of the
future. That’s the exciting part.”
Teachers prepared their classes
with a production kit organized by
Nagel. Before the production,
classes discussed the story of the
ill-fated, intercultural love
affair. The kids learned also
learned the difference between a
soprano and a mezzo, a baritone and
tenor. “Tenor is high,” said one
boy. Then dropping his voice, he
giggled “and baritone is
loooooooooow.”
They learned about
Puccini, born in 1858 in Lucca,
Italy, and they studied Japanese
life, learning words like obi,
kimono and yen.
They looked
up words like “composer,”
“libretto,” and “geisha” and
discussed the great opera themes of
unrequited love, abandonment,
fidelity and suicide.
Teacher
Twila Michel said her sixth-graders
were “eager and excited about it.
It’s a marvelous grooming
experience. Of my 25 kids, only one
had seen an opera. So exposure to
the arts is a wonderful result of
this all.”
The kids also learn
audience protocol, such as when to
clap and show enthusiasm. “If you
like what you hear,” Nagel told
them, “it’s appropriate to applaud.
Let the spirit move you.”
Playing the baritone role of
Pinkerton’s friend Sharpless, Nagel
admitted he liked to wear the
performer hat, too, while directing
the upcoming full-length production.
His lively asides and gregarious
nature also charmed the kids. At one
point, he tossed off asides as he
fanned himself in front of a
Japanese screen while delivering bad
news about Pinkerton. “Oh, it’s so
hot here in Japan,” he said,
encouraging the suspension of
disbelief.
While setting the
scene before assuming his character,
he asked the kids: “Okay, Puccini
ate pasta and drank a little wine.
Where did he live?” The kids
hollered, “Italy.” “Where does this
story take place?” he quizzed. The
hands shot up to answer, “Japan.”
“What is opera?” he asked. “It’s
when people sing instead of talk,” a
young buff replied.
And when
Pinkerton took his curtain call, the
kids voiced their disapproval of his
abandonment of Cio-Cio San with
good, old-fashioned boos.
“Yes,”
said the good-natured tenor, David
Barnett, who plays the role. “I play
that rotten, not very nice guy.”
The kids’ sympathies were
obviously with Anita Rawlinson, who
plays the rejected Cio-Cio San. The
soprano rose from her death bed,
like all good divas, to bow to Bench
Elementary School’s applause.
Upcoming Gazettes will carry
Christene Meyers’ interviews with
members of the nation’s newest opera
company, including the conductor,
artistic director and the lead
soprano. And the Gazette will cover
the intensive one-week rehearsal
when chorus, orchestra, costumes,
set and lights come together. Enjoy
will feature a close-up of the
finished “Butterfly” on Nov. 3.