Last-minute surprises & a star performance by Barton: HGO's La Favorite

Last-minute surprises & a star performance by Barton: HGO's La Favorite

Mezzo Jamie Barton inhabited the lead role of Léonor very naturally indeed, especially in her aria “O mon Fernand,” itself a perfect example of Donizetti’s felicitous employment of confident Parisian harpists and wind players in prominent positions. Such inspired orchestrational choices are the sort of thing that give great singers an optimal point to start their dramatic conceptions of such arias.

Andrew Schneider - Feb 3, 2020
Talking with singers: Blythe Gaissert

Talking with singers: Blythe Gaissert

"I feel like my voice has grown a lot in the last five years or so. Wagner is becoming more comfortable and I’m looking at some Verdi roles. I try to always learn and grow to just see what happens. Even if it's not something that becomes my wheelhouse, it's something that informs my other repertoire."

Eva Cahen - Feb 3, 2020
Talking with singers: Marnie Breckenridge

Talking with singers: Marnie Breckenridge

"Not only do I hope more people will know a bit more about Jacqueline and honor her memory, I hope they will take away a sense of immediacy. A reminder that we each have a finite amount of time on this planet, so why not burn our creative flames of talent, love, and kindness as brightly as possible while we inhabit the bodies we've been given!"

Jenna Simeonov - Feb 3, 2020
Technologies may change, people may not: DMMO's The Human Voice

Technologies may change, people may not: DMMO's The Human Voice

Stage Director Kristine McIntyre brought Poulenc’s one woman drama into the modern era with her own updated translation of the libretto. Performing the opera in English removed the need for supertitles which let the audience focus on the drama. In addition to the telephone, McIntyre added in some new technologies such as a smartphone and tablet.

Meghan Klinkenborg - Feb 3, 2020
A Love Letter to Jennifer Holloway

A Love Letter to Jennifer Holloway

Richard Strauss's Salome has always been a controversial opera, to say the least. The premiere performance in 1905 was not particularly well received, though famously the premiere was attended by Giacomo Puccini, Gustav Mahler, and Adolf Hitler. Based off of Oscar Wilde's play of the same name, Salome comes from a Biblical tale, though highly erotic and controversially murderous.

Daniel Weisman - Jan 28, 2020
A vague ensemble opera: Flight

A vague ensemble opera: Flight

It seemed to be a two-and-a-half-hour opera about people being their worst in a confined space. It was, basically, a series of vignettes that could be amusing and meaningful in a shorter format.

Callie Cooper - Jan 28, 2020
Expecting magic from Opera Atelier's 2020-21 season

Expecting magic from Opera Atelier's 2020-21 season

Frankly, we should all be so lucky to get real-time commentary by Pynkoski. He's endlessly interested and interesting; he even had me craning my neck to see what he was on about with this business about downbeats being up in a choreographed fencing duel. For nearly 35 years, Opera Atelier has been putting up shows that, take it or leave it, have an aesthetic that is 100% fleshed out.

Jenna Simeonov - Jan 28, 2020
A "vital and contemporary" evening in BERLIN: The Last Cabaret

A "vital and contemporary" evening in BERLIN: The Last Cabaret

With the world premiere nature of this show and the resurrection of some of this music, it should come as no surprise that the songs disappeared from our cultural lexicon because they’re not musically memorable. I kept waiting for a showstopper, but none were forthcoming

Sam Darling - Jan 25, 2020
Leading ladies steal Barber of Seville at COC

Leading ladies steal Barber of Seville at COC

Directed by Joan Font with choreography by Xevi Dorca, this revival of the 2015 production with set and costumes by Joan Guillén, is described in the program notes by the director as "action that could happen" in the 19th century, or even today in Toronto. I do beg to differ.

Greg Finney - Jan 23, 2020
"Disturbingly relevant": BERLIN: The Last Cabaret

"Disturbingly relevant": BERLIN: The Last Cabaret

"We chose July 13, 1934 for our piece, the day Hitler made a speech claiming responsibility for the "Night of the Long Knives," where two weeks prior, he ordered the S.A. division of the Nazi Party, including Röhm who uneasily protected Queer artists, massacred due to a purported threat of mutiny."

Jenna Simeonov - Jan 22, 2020

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