Konstantin Krimmel: a commanding presence
Featured
Latest Posts

Brenda Rae earns her ovation in O18 Lucia
ReviewAs a musical force, opera is an art form that relies on the power of the unamplified human voice to move audiences. The voices of this cast undoubtedly provide the power to bring this opera to life. Whether you have never seen Lucia before, or you are a bel canto connoisseur, these vocalists and musicians make for a rewarding and awe-inspiring night at the opera.

Sky on Swings a must-see of O18
ReviewThe most captivating moments in the opera are those that involve only von Stade and Simpson together onstage. They create a sense of emotional intimacy and truth, by superb acting and unshakable presence. Their performance is the epitome of genuine artistry and truthful expression.

Psycho meets Sartre at the Nigredo Hotel
ReviewDirector Alan Corbishley describes Nigredo (blackening) as a process that ancient alchemists believed was necessary to create the Philosopher's Stone, and thus find immortality. In psychology, this process is a metaphor for the "dark night of the soul" that is necessary for a person to confront in order to reach acceptance of oneself.

Lyric Opera kicks off a starry season at Millennium Park
ReviewThe night's theme, (and requisite hashtag) #LongLivePassion was on-point — we were treated to some of opera's most impassioned moments from Puccini's beloved "O mio babbino caro" to the seductive "Mon coeur s'ouvre à ta voix" from Saint-Saën's Samson et Dalila. It was a glamorous, fun-filled night that featured the headliners of the Lyric's upcoming production of La Bohéme as well as four young artists from the Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Center.

Don't miss: Odyssey Opera's season opener
Interview"This year marks the bicentennial of the birth of French composer Charles Gounod, and it felt like the perfect time to explore his lesser-known works. We are thrilled to be opening our season with the U.S. premiere of Gounod's La reine de Saba, composed in the years between Gounod's acclaimed grand operas Faust and Roméo et Juliette."

A summer Mozart menu
ReviewAfter such a substantial appetizer there was a reasonable interval before the entrée. It is at this point appropriate to mention the reconfiguration that Mostly Mozart brings to David Geffen Hall. The stage extends beyond the proscenium into the auditorium. Seating is placed at either side of the extended portions of the stage and, when a chorus isn't performing, behind it.

Relentlessly sinister: Rigoletto at Wolf Trap Opera
ReviewThe production, directed by Crystal Manich, is pretty standard as *Rigolettos* go, the Italian renaissance evoked in the costumes and scenery, and all the characters do what they always do - the Duke rapes, Rigoletto rages, Gilda falls foolishly in love, Sparafucile murders. There is an added element of surreal projections on the architectural set which proved more a distraction than an enhancement.

Don Giovanni in 2018: in search of a "concept"
Op-edAnd, let's be honest, we've all seen these productions, in which even basic narrative details of a piece are obscured, confused, ignored or senselessly "deconstructed" with sometimes baffling outcomes.

Swept away: Roméo et Juliette
ReviewThe contemporary setting didn't feel like a gimmick but a way to make the characters that much more relatable, and the overall effect was that of a John Hughes movie. Muller's approach gets teenagers and how they feel emotion so intensely that it can turn fatal in an instant.

Nicole Lizée on the Mosaïque Project
Interview"For the past few years I've been thinking a lot about Canadian culture - or Canadiana - and, more specifically, Saskatchewan culture and identity. I've written two large-scale works in addition to this one that explores this as a premise. I feel I've just started this exploration."