Showing posts with label richard wagner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label richard wagner. Show all posts

Friday, August 22, 2014

Anna Russell Explains The Ring Cycle

Think you'll be confused by the plot of Siegfried without having seen Das Rheingold and Die Walküre first? Fear not! Let British humorist Anna Russell get you up to speed with her succinct, hilarious  analysis of Wagner's Ring Cycle:


(The above embedded video is a playlist of three videos.)

Siegfried opens August 22 and runs August 23, 29 and 30 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. Performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Thursday, August 21, 2014

"Siegfried" Opens Tomorrow at Union Avenue Opera

Clay Hilley
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2014
All Rights Reserved
Union Avenue Opera's four-year journey through Richard Wagner's Ring Cycle continues after the critically lauded Die Walküre from last season with the third opera in the cycle: Siegfried.

Swords are re-forged, dragons slain, a sleeping maiden awakened, treasures reclaimed, and justice dispensed as the power of the gods continues to dwindle. The fearless hero Siegfried, grandson of Wotan, is destined for greatness as he faces a multitude of challenges, including winning the love of Brünnhilde. Siegfried is a wonderful fairytale with the requisite happy ending ... for the moment at least. Siegfried is reduced and adapted by English composer Jonathan Dove. His masterful cuts condense the opera in length to under three hours and will be enhanced by video projections befitting the magnificent grandeur of the Ring Cycle.

Jordan Shanahan and David Dillard
Photo © John Lamb, 2014
All Rights Reserved
THE CAST

Tenor Clay Hilley makes his UAO debut in the title role. He comes to us after engagements as Father Grenville in Dead Man Walking and Radames in Aida. Soprano Alexandra LoBianco, joins him onstage, making her return to the role of Brünnhilde. Last seen as Goro in last season's Madama Butterfly, Tenor Marc Schapman sings the role of Mime, a dwarf that raises the story's hero. Also returning from the Butterfly cast, Baritone David Dillard portrays The Wanderer--the head god Wotan in disguise. Bass Nathan Whitson, Hunding in last season's Die Walküre, returns in the role of the giant-turned-dragon Fafner. Two artists return to roles previously sung in 2012's Das Rheingold: Mezzo Soprano Cecelia Stearman as Erda and Baritone Jordan Shanahan as Alberich. Soprano Kate Reimann sings the role of the Forest Bird.

Cecelia Stearman
Photo © Teresa Doggett, 2014 | All Rights Reserved
THE CREW

UAO Artistic Director and Conductor Scott Schoonover leads the orchestra. Stage Director Karen Coe Miller returns after Das Rheingold and Die Walküre to continue her work on the reduced Ring Cycle. Allyson Ditchey serves as Stage Manager. The design team includes Set and Lighting Designer Patrick Huber, Video Projection Designer Michael Perkins, Costume Designer Teresa Doggett and Production Manager Sean Savoie. Pianist Nancy Mayo serves as repetiteur.


Alexandra LoBianco
Photo © Teresa Doggett, 2014 | All Rights Reserved
FRIDAY NIGHT
LECTURE SERIES

Glen Bauer, Ph.D., Associate Chair of the Webster University Music Department, will give a lecture one hour before each Friday performance (August 1st and 8th at 7:00pm) in the Fellowship Gallery of Union Avenue Christian Church. Lectures are free and open to the general public; no ticket to the performance required. 

Marc Schapman and Clay Hilley
Photo © John Lamb, 2014
All Rights Reserved
OPENING NIGHT RECEPTION

Want a chance to eat, drink and schmooze with cast and crew of Siegfried on Opening Night? UAO hosts an Opening Night Reception on Friday, August 22nd after the performance at Tavern of Fine Arts. Click here for more information.

"SIEGFRIED" IN THE MEDIA

Sarah Bryan Miller of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch covers the production, interviewing Clay Hilley.

Gerry Kowarsky and Marc Bretz of Two on the Aisle sit down with Karen Coe Miller and Alexandra LoBianco to discuss Siegfried and the Ring Cycle.
____________________

Siegfried opens tomorrow, August 22nd, and runs August 23, 29 and 30 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. Performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Monday, August 19, 2013

Review of Union Avenue Opera's "Die Walküre"

Alexandra LoBianco as Brünnhilde and Timothy Bruno as Wotan
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013
Union Avenue Opera is nothing if not fearless, often taking on works that strain the company’s space at the Union Avenue Christian Church to the limit.  Through next Saturday Union Avenue is presenting the second installment of its most ambitious project yet—Wagner's mammoth operatic cycle “Der Ring des Nibelungen.”  And it's pretty darned impressive.

“Das Rheingold,” which Union Avenue did last August, sets up the characters and the story that play out over the course of the cycle. Wagner regarded it as a mere prologue, though, and “Die Walküre” is where the rubber hits the road, dramatically speaking.  It's a tale of incest, murder, and ironic tragedy as the most powerful creature in the world—Wotan, father of the Gods—finds himself undone by his own machinations and powerless against the curse of the magical ring he stole from the dwarf Alberich back in “Das Rheingold”.

As the opera opens Siegmund, one of a pair of twins sired by Wotan with a mortal and separated at birth from his twin sister, stumbles into the home of Hunding, after eluding a vengeful mob. Hunding isn’t home—he is, in fact, part of the mob—but his wife is. Their attraction is immediate and it’s not in the least dampened when they realize that Hunding’s wife is Siegmund’s long-lost sister Sieglinde. Hunding arrives, recognizes Siegmund, and challenges him to a fight to the death in the morning. Sieglinde has other plans; she drugs Hunding and flees with Siegmund, but not before the latter plucks a magical sword from the trunk of a tree in Hunding’s house.

Alexandra LoBianco as Brünnhilde
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013
Back in Valhalla, Fricka is outraged that Wotan is condoning not only adultery but incest as well. She browbeats him into upholding the sanctity of marriage by letting Hunding kill Siegmund, even though Wotan had hoped Siegmund would be the hero who would save Valhalla from the descendants of Alberich. When the Valkyrie Brünnhilde (who, like all the Valkyries, is a daughter of Wotan and the earth goddess Erda) violates Wotan’s orders and tries to save Siegmund, Wotan is forced to punish her by turning her mortal, placing her into a magical sleep, and surrounding her with magical flames that only a true hero can penetrate. His farewell, in the final moments of the opera, is one of the most moving sequences in opera.

Sieglinde, meanwhile, has escaped. She’s pregnant with Siegmund’s child, Siegfried. But that’s another opera.  For a more detailed plot summary of the entire cycle, I refer you to Wikipedia.

The Union Avenue production uses a reduced version of Wagner's original created by English composer Jonathan Dove in 1990 that cuts nearly an hour out of the original’s run time of nearly four hours and takes its three acts down to two. That’s not the sacrilege you might think; Wagner the librettist does not always serve Wagner the composer well, and there’s much in the text that is redundant and discursive. That said, Dove’s edits in the first act delete too much of Siegmund’s back story, in my view, and compress the development of his and Sieglinde’s affection so much that it seems rather rushed. Wotan’s massive blocks of exposition in Wagner’s Act II and III, on the other hand, feel like they could use more editing. Dove also cuts four of Brünnhilde’s seven Valkyrie sisters, which drastically shortens the famous “Ride of the Valkyries” sequence that opens Wagner’s Act III—a pity, as it’s rather stirring stuff.

Melissa Sumner as Helmwige, Cecelia Stearman as Waltraute,
Alexandra LoBianco as Brünnhilde, Lindsey Anderson as Rossweisse,
and Amber Smoke as Sieglinde
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013
Still, this reduced “Walküre” still packs a considerable punch, thanks largely to some heavy-duty Girl Power in the cast.  Amber Smoke (Sieglinde), Elise Quagliata (Fricka), and Alexandra LoBianco (Brünnhilde) are all outstanding, with powerful voices and well-defined characters. Ms. Quagliata is the same powerful presence she was in “Rheingold” while Ms. Smoke perfectly captures Sieglinde’s passion and despair. Ms. LoBianco’s really big moments won’t come until the next two operas are mounted in 2014 and 2015, of course, but based on what I saw and heard here I expect very good things from her in “Siegfried” and “Götterdämmerung”. Melissa Summer, Cecelia Stearman (Erda in last season’s “Rheingold”), and Lindsey Anderson are a formidable trio of Valkyries as well.

On the male side, Nathan Whitson is an appropriately thuggish Hunding (although there’s not much to the part in this reduction), but James Taylor is a bit bland as Siegmund. He’s very interesting vocally, though, in that he’s a baritone who now sings as a tenor. His voice has, as a result, a depth that one doesn’t normally associate with tenors and only very rarely did he seem uncomfortable in his top notes.

Amber Smoke as Sieglinde and
James Taylor as Siegmund

Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013
Timothy Bruno brings the kind of vocal power to Wotan that I missed last year when Kevin Misslich sang the role in “Rheingold.” Unfortunately, he mugs too much and is too physically "busy" (when will actors and directors understand the power of stillness?), undercutting the character's gravitas.  Still, Wotan's famous "farewell" scene with Brünnhilde was appropriately moving.

Dove’s reduced orchestration is for 18 pieces—one per part. Conductor Scott Schoonover has beefed it up a bit with extra strings, but even so, Wagner’s music inevitably loses some of its visceral impact with a band this size. Intonation issues in the brasses, especially toward the end of the second act, didn’t help. The ensemble as a whole played well, though, and Mr. Schoonover’s tempo choices felt more right here than they did in “Rheingold” last year.

Patrick Huber’s unit set is the same one used for “Rheingold.” It’s dominated by a huge screen on which images and video (designed by Michael Perkins, whose innovative work has graced many a local stage) take the place of the elaborate scenery envisioned by Wagner. Those work better here than they did in “Rheingold” (although video playback is still a bit jerky), and are very effective in creating the right moods and sense of place. Unfortunately the screen, the catwalk above it, and the stairs to either side take up so much room that most of the action is played out in a fairly shallow area downstage. Director Karen Coe Miller does the best she can with this space, but it’s hard to create decent stage pictures under those circumstances. It’s also hard for Mr. Huber to light that space, apparently, given the number of times singers’ faces were in shadow.

Teresa Doggett and her crew have done well by the costumes. As in “Rheingold”, Wotan and Fricka are decked out as late 19th century European royalty while the mortals are all in peasant outfits. The Valkyries look appropriately martial, with costumes that have the look but not the bulk of stage armor, so they don’t impede movement or singing. English supertitles by Elise LaBarge and Philip Touchette are, as usual, clear and easily visible throughout the house.

There has not, to the best of my recollection, been a performance of Wagner’s “Ring” in St. Louis in my lifetime and given that our major opera company, Opera Theatre, seems allergic to the composer, there may not be another one for many years, if ever. That means that this may be your only chance to see a locally produced “Die Walküre.” If you have any interest in the “Ring” at all, you should grab it. This may not be a perfect production, but it’s a very good one and well worth seeing.

Union Avenue’s “Die Walküre” has two more performances this Friday and Saturday at 8 PM at the Union Avenue Christian Church, 733 Union at Enright in the Central West End. For more information: unionavenueopera.org. Note that there is a parking lot but it tends to fill up quickly, so you’ll want to get there not later than 7:30 if you can.

This review originally appeared at 88.1 KDHX, where Chuck Lavazzi is the senior performing arts critic.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

The Critics on UAO's "Die Walküre"

Union Avenue Opera's production of Wagner's Die Walküre continues its run this weekend. Here's a sample of what KDHX's Chuck Lavazzi, Mark Bretz of Ladue News, Gerry Kowarsky of Two on the Aisle and Sarah Bryan Miller of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch have to say about the production:

Chuck Lavazzi:
"[T]his reduced 'Walküre' still packs a considerable punch, thanks largely to some heavy-duty Girl Power in the cast...Ms. Quagliata is the same powerful presence she was in “Rheingold” while Ms. Smoke perfectly captures Sieglinde’s passion and despair...Ms. LoBianco’s really big moments won’t come until ['Siegfried' and 'Götterdämmerung'] but based on what I saw and heard here I expect very good things from her...Melissa Summer, Cecelia Stearman, and Lindsey Anderson are a formidable trio of Valkyries as well...Nathan Whitson is an appropriately thuggish Hunding...Timothy Bruno brings the kind of vocal power to Wotan that I missed last year...Wotan's famous 'farewell' scene with Brünnhilde was appropriately moving...Teresa Doggett and her crew have done well by the costumes."
Gerry Kowarsky:
"Vocal honors in this production must go to Alexandra LoBianco and Elise Quagliata...from her joyous battle cries to her passionate defense of Siegmund to the defiance of her father, LoBianco's Brünnhilde is the complete package...Quagliata finds the humanity in Fricka's indignation and brings remarkable drama to narrative passages that could seem dry otherwise...Nathan Whitson's powerful voice makes him an imposing Hunding...There are only three valkyries instead of eight, but three valkyries is enough when they are Melissa Sumner as Helmwige, Cecelia Stearman as Waltraute and Lindsey Anderson as Rossweisse."
"I hope St. Louis operagoers come out for this production even if they aren't familiar with Wagner's opera. Union Avenue deserves to be supported not only for its daring but also for its achievement."
Mark Bretz:
"Scott Schoonover conducts a spirited reading of Wagner’s lush composition...to complement stage director Karen Coe Miller’s uniformly polished singers in this rendition...Elise Quagliata’s mezzo-soprano soars as the angered Fricka, while Alexandra LoBianco’s clear soprano resonates in the role of the tortured Brunnhilde...James Taylor’s resplendent tenor captures the angst and turmoil of Siegmund...Amber Smoke brings a fitting melancholy to the unhappy Sieglinde...Timothy Bruno has both the look and the power of the tormented god...Melissa Sumner, Cecelia Stearman and Lindsey Anderson round out the convincing cast...[Patrick] Huber complements the settings with some fine lighting and Teresa Doggett’s costumes bring a sumptuous, mythical look to the proceedings."
"Die Walküre looked and sounded very much like a popular favorite on opening night...[it] is a rare chance, indeed, to see this titanic operatic work performed at all, even in Dove’s and Vick's abbreviated version."
Sarah Bryan Miller:
"'Walküre' continues stage director Karen Coe Miller’s smart, imaginative vision...[The opera] is a big sing, and it demands careful casting...Scott Schoonover found voices up to the task...Alexandra LoBianco’s Brünnhilde, the titular Valkyrie, is a major talent, both vocally and as an actress. She’s a real dramatic soprano who uses her voice and body well, and she still sounded fresh at the evening’s end...Mezzo-soprano Elise Quagliata is a superb singing actress as well...Nathan Whitson’s Hunding...was impressive in every way, with a big dark voice that didn’t quit...As Wotan, bass Timothy Bruno offered an outstanding voice, big and opulent, and a somewhat callow characterization, especially in the early scenes...[Amber] Smoke was most impressive in her last moments onstage, when her beautiful high range was finally revealed...[James] Taylor...has a tenor vocal coloring that made him a good choice for the role."
"Any St. Louisan with any interest in opera should take in this production."
Die Walküre continues its run this weekend: August 23 & 24 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. Performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Friday, August 16, 2013

"Die Walküre" Opens Tonight at Union Avenue Opera

Alexandra LoBianco & Timothy Bruno
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013 | All Rights Reserved

Timothy Bruno
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013
All Rights Reserved
Union Avenue Opera's four-year journey through Richard Wagner's Ring Cycle continues on the heels of 2012's successful mounting of Das Rheingold. The second installment, Die Walküre, showcases some of Wagner's most renowned music, including his famous "Ride of the Valkyries." UAO presents Die Walküre in a condensed and reduced version by composer Jonathan Dove. This will be the third time the Ring Cycle has been performed in St. Louis. Patricia Rice of the St. Louis Beacon reports that the last two were brought here in 1889 and 1930 by the touring German Opera Company.

Amber Smoke & James Taylor
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013 | All Rights Reserved
Wotan, ruler of the gods, wishes to protect his children, but is forced to forsake them when his twin offspring, Siegmund and Sieglinde, find themselves entangled in forbidden love. In an attempt to protect Siegmund, Brünnhilde, Wotan's Valkyrie daughter, disobey's her father's command and is duly punished: Wotan strips her of her immortality and puts her to sleep surrounded by a wall of flames that only the greatest hero can conquer.

Elise Quagliata
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013
All Rights Reserved
THE CAST

Three UAO veterans return for Die Walküre: Soprano Alexandra LoBianco, Leonora in 2009's Il Trovatore and the title role in 2011's Turandot, sings the role of Brünnhilde. Mezzo-Soprano Elise Quagliata returns to sing Fricka, the role she portrayed last season in Das Rheingold. Mezzo-Soprano Cecelia Stearman, who sang in Das Rheingold as earth goddess Erda, portrays the valkyrie Waltraute.

Six artists make their UAO debut. Bass Timothy Bruno sings the role of Wotan. Tenor James Taylor and Mezzo-Soprano Amber Smoke portray Siegmund and Sieglinde, respectively. Bass Nathan Whitson appears as Hunding, Sieglinde's husband. Soprano Melissa Sumner and Mezzo-Soprano Lindsey Anderson round out the cast as valkryies Helmwige and Rossweisse, respectively.

Alexandra LoBianco
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013
All Rights Reserved
THE CREW

UAO Artistic Director and Conductor Scott Schoonover leads the orchestra. Stage Director Karen Coe Miller returns after staging Das Rheingold last season. Allyson Ditchey serves as Stage Manager. The Design team includes Set & Lighting Designer Patrick Huber, Projection Designer Michael B. Perkins, Costume Designer Teresa Doggett and Production Manager Sean Savoie. Pianist Nancy Mayo serves as rehearsal pianist.

FRIDAY NIGHT LECTURES

Audience members who missed Scott Stearman's August 8th lecture have another opportunity to learn more about Die Walküre. Glen Bauer, Ph.D., Associate Chair of the Webster University Music Department, will give a lecture one hour before each Friday performance (August 16/23) in the Fellowship Gallery of Union Avenue Christian Church. Admittance to this lecture is free and open to the general public.

Nathan Whitson
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013
All Rights Reserved
OPENING NIGHT RECEPTION

Want a chance to drink and be merry with cast and crew of Die Walküre on Opening Night? UAO hosts an Opening Night Reception on August 16 after the performance at Tavern of Fine Arts. Click here for more information.

DIE WALKÜRE IN THE MEDIA

Steve Potter chats with Karen Coe Miller, James Taylor and Alexandra LoBianco on a recent episode of Cityscape on 90.7 KWMU.

Patricia Rice of the St. Louis Beacon interviews the cast and crew of Die Walküre.

Sarah Bryan Miller speaks with director Coe Miller, conductor Schoonover and lead soprano LoBianco on the Jonathan Dove reduction and the opera's challenges for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

OnStl contributor Chuck Lavazzi previews the production.

________________________

Die Walküre opens August 16 and runs August 17, 23, 24 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. Performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Need a 'Ring Cycle' Crash Course?

Worried about attending UAO's Die Walküre if you've never seen its predecessor Das Rheingold? Fear not! Classical music humorist Anna Russell will catch you up in her witty, famous and irreverent (but always loving) "analysis" of Wagner's Ring Cycle.


(The above embedded video is a playlist of three videos.)

Die Walküre opens August 16 and runs August 17, 23 and 24 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. Performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Free Wagner Lecture Tonight at UAO

Alexandra LoBianco (Brünnhilde) & Bass Timothy Bruno (Wotan)
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2013
All Rights Reserved
Join Union Avenue Opera and Dr. Scott Stearman tonight for a free interactive presentation leading up to the St. Louis premiere of Richard Wagner’s Die Walküre, reduced and adapted by Jonathan Dove. Die Walküre is the second installment of Wagner’s epic Ring Cycle which the company started last summer with its production of Das Rheingold.

Dr. Scott Stearman
Stearman, senior pastor of Kirkwood Baptist Church and adjunct faculty member of Webster University and Missouri Baptist University, returns to UAO after his popular lectures last season to lead us on an exploration of themes in the Ring Cycle and Die Walküre. This lecture begins tonight at 7 p.m. on August 8 in the Fellowship Gallery at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd., and is FREE and open to the public. Attendees will be treated to a guest performance by select cast members of Die Walküre.

Power, Polytheism, Polyamory, & Impotence in Wagner’s Valkyrie.

Can you truly love more than one person? Does love oppose power? Why do leaders fall victim to seductive crass power instead of seeking mutual agreement? Does father really know best? In this talk, Stearman will address these questions as he leads us on an exploration of themes in the Ring cycle and Die Walküre. This second installment in the cycle deals with questions most of us face regularly: questions of love and marriage, sex and responsibility, power and politics, and parents and honor. Die Walküre is a rich, multi-layered work that touches on aspects central to our communal and personal lives. Mr. Stearman’s talk will highlight a few of these in anticipation of the enlightening and stirring performances of Wagner’s Valkyrian masterpiece. There will be a Q&A session following the lecture.

Die Walküre opens August 16 and runs August 17, 23 and 24 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. Performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Rehearsal of UAO's "Die Walküre"

Rehearsals are underway for Union Avenue Opera's Die Walküre, the second part of Richard Wagner's Ring Cycle. UAO's artists arrived in St. Louis on Monday to begin the three-week rehearsal process. Take a look at Conductor Scott Schoonover leading Soprano Alexandra LoBianco and Bass Timothy Bruno in musical rehearsal.

Alexandra LoBianco
Photo © Phil Touchette, 2013
All Rights Reserved
LoBianco returns to UAO, singing the celebrated role of Brünnhilde. Her previous critically-acclaimed performances at UAO include Leonora in Il Trovatore (2009) and the title role in 2011's Turandot.

Timothy Bruno
Photo © Phil Touchette, 2013
All Rights Reserved
Bruno, who has sung for Cincinnati Opera, Toledo Opera and Opera Saratoga, makes his UAO debut as Wotan, ruler of the Gods.

Nancy Mayo
Photo © Phil Touchette, 2013
All Rights Reserved
Rehearsal Pianist Nancy Mayo returns after several seasons with UAO. 

Alexandra LoBianco & Timothy Bruno
Photo © Phil Touchette, 2013
All Rights Reserved

LoBianco and Bruno rehearse the duet between Brünnhilde and Wotan at the conclusion of the opera. 

Die Walküre runs August 16, 17, 23 and 24 at 8pm. Venue: Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Get your Tickets online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Union Avenue Opera: 19th Season Overview


Union Avenue Opera prepares to raise the curtain on its 19th Festival Season this month. Audiences will peer into the private struggles and discord of a 1950s suburban married couple in Leonard Bernstein's Trouble in Tahiti, witness the romance and utter betrayal of a young Japanese geisha in Giacomo Puccini's classic Madama Butterfly, and take a wild ride into Die Walküre, the action-packed second part of Richard Wagner's Ring Cycle.

THE REPERTOIRE


Opening this month, Trouble in Tahiti is a candid portrait of the troubled marriage of a young suburban couple, Sam and Dinah, as they long for the American dream. Experience the roller coaster of emotion as they try to reconcile their love.

The evening continues as the cast of Trouble in Tahiti treats audiences to a special cabaret on the UAO stage featuring clever and tuneful music from Bernstein's songbook including "Tonight" from West Side Story, "New York, New York" from On the Town, "Simple Song" from Mass, "Pennycandystore Beyond the El" from Songfest, and many more.

Trouble in Tahiti will be performed in English with English supertitles on April 19 and 20 at 8:00pm and April 21 at 3:00pm.


One of the world's most beloved operas, Madama Butterfly, Puccini's tragic tale of love and heartbreak, returns to the Union Avenue Opera stage after its last production in 2003. In the harbor village of Nagasaki at the turn of the 20th Century, love blossoms between Cio-Cio-San (Butterfly), a young Japanese geisha, and Lieutenant Pinkerton, an American naval officer. Their marital expectations clash in Madama Butterfly as passion and honor reverberate with the explosive force of Puccini's powerful score, featuring Butterfly's famous aria "Un bel dì" and the exquisite "Flower Duet." A mother, alone and banished from her people, Butterfly pines for her husband. He returns only to humiliate and betray her beyond what she can endure.

Madama Butterfly will be performed in Italian with English supertitles on July 12, 13, 19 and 20 at 8:00pm.


Union Avenue Opera's four-year journey through Wagner's Ring Cycle continues on the heels of 2012's successful mounting of Das Rheingold. The second installment, Die Walküre, showcases some of Wagner's most renowned music, including his famous "Ride of the Valkyries." Wotan, ruler of the gods, wishes to protect his children, but is forced to forsake them when his twin offspring, Siegmund and Sieglinde, find themselves entangled in forbidden love. In an attempt to protect Siegmund, Brünnhilde, Wotan's Valkyrie daughter, disobeys her father's command and is duly punished: Wotan strips her of her immortality and puts her to sleep surrounded by a wall of flames that only the greatest hero can conquer.

Die Walküre is reduced and adapted by English composer Jonathan Dove. His masterful cuts condense the opera in length to under three hours and will be enhanced by video projections befitting the magnificent grandeur of the Ring Cycle.

Die Walküre will be performed in German with English supertitles on August 16, 17, 23 and 24 at 8:00pm.

IN THE PIT AND BEHIND THE SCENES

UAO Artistic Director and Conductor Scott Schoonover is set to conduct Madama Butterfly and Die Walküre this season. Pianist and musical director Henry Palkes leads a jazz combo for Trouble in Tahiti. Stage Director Allyson Ditchey, who last staged UAO’s Acis and Galatea, returns to stage Trouble in Tahiti. Stage director Jon Truitt of Asheville Lyric Opera and Director of Opera at the University of Evansville makes his UAO debut staging Madama Butterfly. Stage Director Karen Coe Miller, director of last season's Das Rheingold, returns to stage Die Walküre. Scenic Designer Patrick Huber and Costume Designer Teresa Doggett will collaborate on designs for Madama Butterfly and Die Walküre. Michael B. Perkins, building upon his video projections from Das Rheingold, will evoke the fantasy world of Die Walküre.

BEFORE THE FOOTLIGHTS

Union Avenue Opera welcomes back several veteran artists:

Trouble in Tahiti: Ian Greenlaw (Sam), Kara Cornell (Dinah), Elise LaBarge, Clark Sturdevant and Anthony Heinemann.

Madama Butterfly: Ann Hoyt Wazelle (Cio-Cio-San), Mathew Edwardsen (Pinkerton), Robert Garner (Sharpless), Debra Hillabrand (Suzuki), Emma Sorenson (Kate Pinkerton), Marc Schapman (Goro), David Dillard (The Bonze), Anthony Heinemann (Yamadori), Nathan Ruggles (The Imperial Commissioner), Debby Lennon (Cio-Cio-San's Mother) Tamara Miller Campbell (Cio-Cio-San's Aunt) and Melissa Payton (Cio-Cio-San's Cousin).

Die Walküre: Alexandra LoBianco (Brünnhilde), Elise Quagliata (Fricka) and Cecelia Stearman (Waltraute).

Several artists make their UAO debut:
  • Bass-baritone Paul Robinson (Uncle Yakuside)
  • Baritone Jay Chacon (The Registrar)
  • Bass Timothy Bruno (Wotan)
  • Tenor James Taylor (Siegmund)
  • Mezzo-soprano Amber Smoke (Sieglinde)
  • Bass Nathan Whitson (Hunding)
  • Soprano Melissa Sumner (Helmwige)
  • Mezzo-soprano Lindsey Anderson (Rossweisse)
TICKETS & INFORMATION

Trouble in Tahiti runs April 19 and 20 at 8:00pm and April 21 at 3:00pm. Madama Butterfly runs July 12, 13, 19 and 20 at 8:00pm. Die Walküre runs August 16, 17, 23 and 24 at 8:00pm. All performances take place in the sanctuary of Union Avenue Christian Church at 733 Union Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63108. Single tickets and Season tickets (at discounted prices) are available by calling the UAO Box Office at 314-361-2881 or visiting unionavenueopera.org

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Video Preview of "Das Rheingold"

Union Avenue Opera's production of Das Rheingold continues its run this weekend, August 24 & 25. Check out this video preview of the production:


Be sure to click here and read what the critics have to say about the production!

Das Rheingold continues its run this weekend: August 24 & 25 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. All performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Review of Union Avenue Opera's "Das Rheingold"

Jordan Shanahan as Alberich and Kevin Misslich as Wotan
How much can you downsize Wagner without putting him out of business?

The late musical satirist Anna Russell once famously cut the entire “Ring” cycle down to twenty hilarious minutes and some change while still telling the bare bones of the story. British composer Jonathan Dove had more serious intentions when he created a reduced version of the first opera in the series, “Das Rheingold”, for smaller opera companies without the facilities or budgets for the original. It lops around 45 minutes off the usual two and one-half hour running time and deletes one character (Mime, forger of the Tarnhelm) without noticeably sacrificing the story or the drama—still a pretty neat trick.

Unfortunately, the Union Avenue production’s use of Michael B. Perkins and Mark Wilson’s admittedly ingenious projected video sometimes falls short of offering the kind of theatrical impact Wagner had in mind (the dragon is especially disappointing), and the music loses some power in this unavoidably reduced orchestration.

Still, there are some great performances and enough fine singing to make it worthwhile.

Besides, to a certain extent the lack of theatrical flash sharpens the focus on the plot, the characters, and their implicit commentary on matters of morality and power. Wagner’s libretti for the “Ring” operas starkly illustrate the cost of abusing power and personal trust—highly ironic, given the way Wagner the man did both.

That said, it’s hard to get the kind of visceral thrills Wagner clearly intended from a 22-piece orchestra or from sets and effects that are only computer projections on the large screen that dominates the industrial-look bare bones set. That’s especially true when—as was sometimes the case on opening night—the tempi are so slow that they drain dramatic tension (the final entry into Valhalla really suffered rom this), the brasses have audible intonation issues, and the projections have a jerky quality that suggests the computer providing them might be underpowered.

Most of the time the band sounded fine, though, and the projected settings for the Rhine, Valhalla, and Niebelheim did create the right atmosphere. The production works far more often than it doesn’t, and given the near impossibility of what Union Avenue is trying to do here, I can’t help but admire it.

It helps that there are some standout performances, the most obvious being baritone Jordan Shanahan as Alberich, the dwarf whose renunciation of love allows him to create the Ring from the stolen Rheinmaidens’ gold. He’s a complex character, unscrupulous and a bully, but also wronged by the gods and less deluded than they about the cost of the Ring’s power. Mr. Shanahan’s Alberich is powerfully sung and dramatically convincing.

Todd von Felker and Nikolas Wenzel are solid as the giants Fasolt and Fafner, and tenor Marc Schapman radiates detached amusement as the wily fire god Loge. Kevin Misslich is a good physical type for Wotan but, at least on opening night, he didn’t always seem fully engaged with the character and his voice was sometimes drowned out by the orchestra.

The women in this cast are mostly very strong singers and actors. Elise Quagliata, who was so stunning in “Dead Man Walking” last season, turns in another fine performance as Fricka. Both she and Cecelia Stearman, in the cameo role of Erda, the Earth Goddess, are commanding figures that demand and get attention with their vocal power and concentration. Elizabeth Beers Kataria, Megan Hart, and Katja Heuzeroth harmonize beautifully as the Rheinmaidens.

My complaints about some tempo choices aside, Scott Schoonover does well by the score and the sound overall is as beefy as you can probably get in that small pit. He even managed to squeeze in a couple of the tuned anvils (or a reasonable facsimile thereof) that Wagner calls for in the Niebelheim sequence.

Teresa Dogget’s costumes mostly work very well, with Wotan’s family all in white outfits reminiscent of late 19th century European royalty, Erda in earth tones, and Alberich and the Nibelung supernumeraries looking like peasants from the same period. The exaggerated shoulders and Frankenstein boots of the giants give them an appropriately massive look while not visibly impeding their movement. Loge’s red-accented costume and punkish white wig, however, just looked goofy to me.

Patrick Huber’s lighting, while unavoidably rudimentary, nevertheless does the job and Elise LaBarge’s English supertitles are, as usual, clear and easily visible throughout the house. Stage director Karen Coe Miller does a heroic job of pulling everything together and making it all work as theatre despite the overall difficulty of the project.

Add it all up and you have an ambitious and highly flawed mini-“Rheingold” that retains the essential musical and theatrical values of the original but does so in a rather diminished form. If you have never seen any of the “Ring” operas, this would be a great opportunity to start making their acquaintance. It will be interesting to see what Union Avenue does with Mr. Dove’s downsized versions of the other three operas in the cycle, which it will mount on an annual basis through 2015.

Meanwhile, “Das Rheingold” concludes with performances Friday and Saturday, August 24 and 25 at 8 PM at the Union Avenue Christian Church, 733 Union at Enright in the Central West End. For more information: unionavenueopera.org.

Chuck Lavazzi is the senior performing arts critic for 88.1 KDHX, where this review originally appeared

Monday, August 20, 2012

The Critics on UAO's "Das Rheingold"

Union Avenue Opera's production of Wagner's Das Rheingold continues its run this weekend. Here's a sample of what Mark Bretz of Ladue News, Gerry Kowarsky of Two on the Aisle, Chuck Lavazzi of KDHX, Chris Gibson of BroadwayWorld.com and Sarah Bryan Miller of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch have to say about the production:

Mark Bretz:
"Director Karen Coe Miller’s spirited telling of Das Rheingold, along with the noble contributions of artistic director and conductor Scott Schoonover and a reduced orchestra, make for an auspicious beginning on UAO’s ambitious four-year quest...Projection designer Michael Perkins, with the aid of projection consultant Mark Wilson, fills the screen with lavish landscapes as well as a surreal appearance for the castle that reaches into the sky...[Jordan] Shanahan's anguish as the continually frustrated dwarf is palpable in his portrayal, while [Elise] Quagliata puts considerable depth into her depiction of the queen angered by Wotan's poor decisions...Marc Schapman's Loge is suitably deceptive and cunning, and Joy Boland is fine in the minor role of the hapless Freia...Cecelia Stearman is striking in her brief scene as Earth goddess Erda." 
"Union Avenue Opera's engaging Das Rheingold offers a tantalizing hint as to what UAO's four-part presentation can achieve."
Gerry Kowarsky:
"The most impressive aspect of the production is the combination of Patrick Huber's set design and Michael Perkins' video design...I liked the way the costumes distinguished between the three races in the opera: gods, giants and dwarves...The production is well cast...Jordan Shanahan's Alberich is outstanding...Karen Coe Miller's direction for the most part tells the story effectively...I can hardly wait for next year's Die Walküre." 
Chuck Lavazzi:
"[Jordan] Shanahan's Alberich is powerfully sung and dramatically convincing...Tenor Marc Schapman radiates detached amusement as the wily fire god Loge...Elise Quagliata turns in another fine performance as Fricka. Both she and Cecelia Stearman, in the cameo role of Erda, the Earth Goddess, are commanding figures that demand and get attention with their vocal power and concentration...Elizabeth Beers Kataria, Megan Hart, and Katja Heuzeroth harmonize beautifully as the Rheinmaidens...Scott Schoonover does well by the score and the sound overall is as beefy as you can probably get in that small pit...Teresa Doggett’s costumes mostly work very well...Stage director Karen Coe Miller does a heroic job of pulling everything together and making it all work as theatre despite the overall difficulty of the project." 
"If you have never seen any of the “Ring” operas, this would be a great opportunity to start making their acquaintance."
Chris Gibson:
[A]ny Wagner has the ability to be stirring and surprisingly cinematic in execution, and this presentation is no exception...[Tenor Marc Schapman] brings a playful presence to the proceedings...Cecelia Stearman makes a bright appearance as Erda, an Earth Goddess, who talks some sense into Wotan once he's received the ring, but finds its power invigorating...Scott Schoonover conducts this piece with considerable aplomb, capturing the bombast inherent in Wagner, but also the delicacy as well..." 
"If you've never seen Wagner, then by all means, you must take in a performance of the Union Avenue Opera's Das Rheingold."
Sarah Bryan Miller:
"The pared-down version of “Das Rheingold” at Union Avenue Opera is definitely Wagner Lite. For some people, it might just be Wagner Without Fear."
"[D]irector Karen Coe Miller and her production team of scenic designer Patrick Huber and video designer Michael B. Perkins came up with the best possible solution for the sets...That enabled them to put on an impressive introductory show...Teresa Doggett’s costumes suited the production; those for the giants were a lot of fun...Clark Sturdevant’s sweet-voiced Froh and John Maynard’s sturdy Donner were standouts...Marc Schapman’s Loge, the capricious demigod of fire, had the right degree of snark...Baritone Jordan Shanahan, uglified, was terrific as Alberich, the dwarf who renounces love, steals the Rheingold and sets the whole cycle in motion...Todd von Felker and Nikolas Wenzel, as the shambling giants Fasolt and Fafner, sang richly and were nicely differentiated...Schoonover had the flow of the score in hand." 
"You can never have too much Wagner. On to “Die Walküre”!"
Be sure to revisit this post for a review from Gerry Kowarsky and Bob Wilcox of HEC-TV's Two on the Aisle.

Das Rheingold continues its run this weekend: August 24 & 25 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. All performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Eine kleine Wagnerhumor

Unsure about attending Union Avenue Opera's Das Rheingold? Overwhelmed by all the drama, characters and leitmotifs to keep track of? Let classical music humorist Anna Russell explain it all succinctly and hilariously with her famous "analysis" of Wagner's Ring Cycle.



(The above embedded video is a playlist showing all three parts in succession.)

Das Rheingold opens August 17 and runs August 18, 24, 25 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. All performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

"Das Rheingold" Opens Friday at Union Avenue Opera

Baritone Jordan Shanahan as Alberich
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2012, All rights reserved.
Union Avenue Opera begins a four-year odyssey in presenting Richard Wagner's Das Rheingold, the first of the composer's epic Ring Cycle. Condensed and reduced by English composer Jonathan Dove, this adaptation retains the essence of Wagner while making it accessible to UAO’s intimate setting.

A saga of epic proportion replete with giants, gods, goddesses and a dragon, Das Rheingold opens in the waters of the river Rhine, where three Rhine-maidens guard the river’s magical gold. Enraged by their scorn, conniving dwarf Alberich steals enough of this precious metal to forge a ring that gives its bearer unimaginable power. Meanwhile Wotan and Loge, two powerful gods, conspire to steal the gold as ransom for the goddess Freia who has been kidnapped by the giants. The ensuing struggle for possession of the ring drives this dramatic opera.

Composer
Jonathan Dove
Composer Jonathan Dove originally wrote this condensed and reduced version for Opera Birmingham with the intent that all four operas could be performed in the span of two nights and sung in an English translation. When deciding how UAO would present all four operas, Artistic Director Scott Schoonover chose to present one opera per season through 2015 and, in accordance with the company's mission statement, have the libretto sung in the original German.

This will be the third time the Ring Cycle has been performed in St. Louis. Patricia Rice of the St. Louis Beacon reports that the last two were brought here in 1889 and 1930 by the touring German Opera Company.

THE CAST

Union Avenue Opera presents several familiar artists: Bass-Baritone Kevin Misslich (title role in 2005's Falstaff) sings the role of the god Wotan. Mezzo-Soprano Elise Quagliata (Sister Helen Prejean in last season's Dead Man Walking) sings the role of the goddess Fricka, Wotan's wife. Tenor Marc Schapman (Acis in April's Acis and Galatea) sings the role of fire god Loge. Soprano Joy Boland (Emilia in 2008's Otello) sings the role of the goddess Freia. Tenor Clark Sturdevant (Father Grenville in Dead Man Walking) sings the role of Froh. Mezzo-soprano Cecelia Stearman (Mrs. Boucher in Dead Man Walking) sings the role of earth goddess Erda. Bass-Baritone Todd von Felker (Samuel in July's Un Ballo in Maschera) sings the role of the giant Fasolt. Baritone Jordan Shanahan (Joseph de Rocher in Dead Man Walking) sings the role of the dwarf Alberich.

Megan Hart, Elizabeth Beers-Kataria,
Katja Heuzeroth & Jordan Shanahan

Photo © Patrick Huber, 2012,
All rights reserved.
Five artists make their UAO debut. As the three Rhinemaidens: Sopranos Elizabeth Beers-Kataria (Woglinde), Megan Hart (Wellgunde) and Mezzo-Soprano Katja Heuzeroth (Floßhilde). Bass-Baritone Nikolas Wenzel sings the role of the giant Fafner. Baritone John Maynard sings the role of the god Donner.

THE CREW

UAO Artistic Director Scott Schoonover conducts. Stage Director Karen Coe Miller makes her Union Avenue Opera debut. Allyson Ditchey serves as Stage Manager. The Design team includes Set Designer Patrick Huber, Projection Designer Michael B. Perkins, Costume Designer Teresa Doggett. Pianist Nancy Mayo serves as production répetiteur.

OPENING NIGHT RECEPTION

Want a chance to hobnob with cast and crew of Das Rheingold on Opening Night? UAO hosts an Opening Night Reception on August 17 after the performance at Tavern of Fine Arts. Click here for more information!

WAGNER LECTURE SERIES

UAO's FREE Educational Series continues Thursday night, August 16 at 7:00pm at Union Avenue Opera, with Scott Stearman's lecture On God, Gods, and Ecstatically Singing for Sex: Wagner’s Love of Love in the Ring Cycle. Glen Bauer, Ph.D., Associate Chair of the Webster University Music Department will also give lectures one hour before each Friday performance (August 17/24) at Union Avenue Opera. All lectures are FREE and open to ticket holders and the general public.

Das Rheingold opens August 17 and runs August 18, 24, 25 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. All performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Your "Das Rheingold" Media Hub

St. Louis media is buzzing over Union Avenue Opera's production of Wagner's Das Rheingold. Don't want to miss anything? Want to learn more? Look no further than this blog post for links to news stories and multimedia.

PRINT MEDIA
  • Patricia Rice of the St. Louis Beacon interviews the artists of Das Rheingold and provides history on Wagner's Ring as well as its performance history in St. Louis.
  • Sarah Bryan Miller interviews Scott Schoonover and Rheingold stage director Karen Coe Miller for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
RADIO & AUDIO
  • Jim Althoff of Cityscape interviews Karen Coe Miller and Wagner lecturer Scott Stearman.
  • Scott Schoonover guests on KDHX's Break A Leg with hosts Deborah Sharn and Scott Miller to discuss the production and the Jonathan Dove reduction of the score.
  • Those who missed Scott Stearman's August 9th lecture--Sublime, Beauty from a Sinister Soul?--can hear it now via YouTube.
Want a chance to hobnob with cast and crew of Das Rheingold on Opening Night? UAO hosts an Opening Night Reception on August 17 after the performance at Tavern of Fine Arts. Click here for more information!

UAO's FREE Educational Series continues Thursday night, August 16 at 7:00pm at Union Avenue Opera, with Scott Stearman's lecture On God, Gods, and Ecstatically Singing for Sex: Wagner’s Love of Love in the Ring Cycle. Glen Bauer, Ph.D., Associate Chair of the Webster University Music Department will also give lectures one hour before each Friday performance (August 17/24) at Union Avenue Opera. All lectures are FREE and open to ticket holders and the general public.

Das Rheingold opens August 17 and runs August 18, 24, 25 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. All performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

UAO Kicks Off Free Wagner Lecture Series Tonight

Union Avenue Opera kicks off its Wagner Lecture Series this evening, beginning with the first of two free educational series presented by Scott Stearman, Senior Pastor of Kirkwood Baptist Church. 

Thursday, August 9 at 7:00 p.m.: Sublime, Beauty from a Sinister Soul? Wagner’s music, his Anti-Semitism, and his relationship to Nietzsche
In this interactive presentation, Scott Stearman will begin by discussing why, 199 years after Wagner’s birth, Wagner is still one of the most venerated composers of all time and one of the most despised. He has been rightly honored for transforming the operatic and classical music world. Wagner has been blamed for contributing to what happened in Germany in the 1930s and 1940s. His reputation suffered because of his relationship with a much younger Friedrich Nietzsche – Nietzsche ultimately rejected Wagner on philosophical principles. Their relationship gives us insight into what Wagner came to believe and what ultimately he was attempting to do with his unparalleled compositions.
Attendees will be given a first look at the set and treated to a guest performance* by the cast of Das Rheingold (*August 9 only).

Scott Stearman
About Scott Stearman
Scott Stearman has been Senior Pastor of Kirkwood Baptist Church since 2003. He has served churches in Oklahoma, Athens, Greece, and Paris, France (1995-2003). He is an adjunct faculty member at Webster University in religion and Missouri Baptist University in humanities. Stearman earned a Bachelor of Arts from Oklahoma Baptist University with majors in religion and history, a Masters of Divinity in biblical languages from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, and a doctor of Philosophy in ancient philosophy from the University of Oklahoma. His interest in Wagner dates back to his “Tristan transformation” in his late 20s. in recent years he has been privileged to see the Ring cycle at Lyric Opera and Metropolitan Opera in addition to making the pilgrimage to Bayreuth, Germany twice.

Stearman will be presenting a second lecture On God, Gods, and Ecstatically Singing for Sex: Wagner’s Love of Love in the Ring Cycle on August 16 at 7:00 p.m. Stay tuned to Operatic Saint Louis for more information.

Das Rheingold opens August 17 and runs August 18, 24, 25 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. All performances begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Union Avenue Opera's "Das Rheingold"

Bass-Baritone Kevin Misslich (Wotan)
Baritone Jordan Shanahan (Alberich)
Photo © Ron Lindsey, 2012, All rights reserved.
Union Avenue Opera has begun its four-year odyssey of presenting Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen in a production adapted and reduced by British composer Jonathan Dove. The first opera of the Ring Cycle, Das Rheingold, opens in less than two weeks.

A saga of monumental proportion replete with giants, gods, goddesses and a dragon, Das Rheingold opens in the waters of the river Rhine, where three Rhinemaidens guard the river’s magical gold. Enraged by their scorn, conniving dwarf Alberich steals enough of this precious metal to forge a ring that gives its bearer unimaginable power. Meanwhile, Wotan and Loge, two powerful gods, conspire to steal the gold as ransom for the goddess Freia who has been kidnapped by the giants. The ensuing struggle for possession of the ring sets in motion a course of events that will alter the order of the universe and set the stage for the subsequent three operas (Die Walküre, 2013; Siegfried, 2014; Götterdämmerung, 2015).

Set Under Construction
Photo © Patrick Huber, 2012, All rights reserved.
Cast and crew arrived in St. Louis last week to begin rehearsals. Expect to see and hear some familiar artists including Soprano Joy Boland as Freia, Bass-Baritone Todd von Felker as the giant Fasolt, Mezzo-soprano Elise Quagliata as Fricka, Bass-Baritone Kevin Misslich as Wotan, Baritone Jordan Shanahan as the dwarf Alberich as well as several artists making their UAO debut. 

Set Under Construction
Photo © Patrick Huber, 2012, All rights reserved.
Making her UAO debut, stage director Karen Coe Miller promises a multi-media production of Das Rheingold utilizing several projections and lighting effects to evoke the opera's fantasy world. Set crews have been hard at work building Patrick Huber's multi-leveled set design.

Stay tuned to Operatic Saint Louis for so much more on UAO's Das Rheingold, including several educational opportunities and a reception to mingle with cast, crew and fellow operagoers. Also, don't forget to connect to Union Avenue Opera on Facebook and Twitter to play trivia for fun and prizes in the "Countdown to Wagner" leading up to Opening Night!

Das Rheingold opens August 17 and runs August 18, 24 and 25 at Union Avenue Opera, 733 N. Union Blvd. All performance begin at 8:00pm. Production sung in German with projected English supertitles. Tickets may be purchased online at www.unionavenueopera.org or by calling 314-361-2881.