Showing posts with label acis and galatea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label acis and galatea. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Review of Union Avenue Opera's "Acis and Galatea"

The production of Handel’s 1739 pastoral opera Acis and Galatea that graced Union Avenue Opera’s stage this past weekend was pretty much a perfect fit for the company and its space. With a small orchestra (ten pieces including harpsichord continuo), a cast of seven, and a modest set, it was pretty much what you’d expect from a company of UAOT’s size and technical capabilities.

Which was, of course, the most surprising thing about it.

Because if Union Avenue is about anything, in my experience, it’s about pushing their operatic envelope to the breaking point, be it with local premieres (Dead Man Walking), unusual collaborations (Porgy and Bess with the Black Rep), or just shows that you’d think would be too darn big for that space (last season’s Turandot and this season’s upcoming Das Rheingold). From that perspective, Acis and Galatea looks like an unusually safe choice.

From the perspective of what local audiences are likely to turn out for, though, it was right up there with the company’s usual gutsy decisions. Baroque opera is not, in general, a big seller. The musical conventions and presentational acting style that go with it are so far from contemporary ideas of musical theatre that they might as well be from another planet. Besides, there are only so many arias da capo most of us can listen to before our eyes start to glaze over.

It was not surprising, then, that when I attended on Sunday afternoon the house was small and apparently somewhat baffled by the entire business.

That’s a pity, because Union Avenue’s production was really quite fine. The orchestra played beautifully and the cast sang and acted in a style completely appropriate to the material. Even the set (a riot of live plants) was exactly right for a piece that began life as a one-act masque to be performed in a formal English garden. Baroque opera has limited appeal for me, but even I was able to appreciate what a completely admirable presentation this was.

The singers of Acis and Galatea were notable not only for the ease with which they negotiated those florid early 18th-centry vocal lines, but also for the way in which their voices matched each other and blended. Nobody was noticeably more or less powerful than anyone else. The solo quartet passage for the nymphs and shepherds at the end of “Mourn all ye muses” was especially impressive in that regard.

Those nymphs and shepherds were Elise LaBarge, Nathan Ruggles, Elizabeth Schleicher, and Philip Touchette. The principles were Juliet Petrus (Galatea), Marc Schapman (Acis), and David Dillard (the “monstrous giant” Polyphemus, made even more so by costumer Teresa Dogget’s creepy mask and wardrobe dresser Amy Ruprecht’s body makeup). Congratulations to all of them and to conductor and company artistic director Scott Schoonover and stage director Allyson Ditchey as well.

Acis and Galatea was performed Friday through Sunday, April 27-29, 2012.  Union Avenue’s 2012 season continues June 29 through July 7 with Verdi’s Un Ballo in Maschera (something I don’t think has been done locally in my lifetime) and Wagner’s Das Rheingold in a version “adapted and reduced” by British composer Jonathan Dove (whose remarkable opera Flight had its St. Louis premiere at Opera Theatre back in 2003). That last one will, I think, be something to see, if only to find out how they plan to get the Rhine, Nibelheim, and Valhalla on that stage.

Operas are always performed in their original languages with projected English text clearly visible from everywhere in the theatre. Performances take place at the Union Avenue Christian Church, 733 Union at Enright in the Central West End. For more information, you may visit unionavenueopera.org.

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

Monday, April 23, 2012

Union Avenue Opera's "Acis and Galatea" Opens Friday Night

Shepherd meets Nymph...both are smitten. 
They fall madly in love despite Fate's decree: no joy shall last. 
Thus enters a jealous Monster... who also loves the Nymph. 

Will the Shepherd and Nymph's love prevail against all odds? This question and more will be answered in Union Avenue Opera's season opening production of George Frederic Handel's Acis and Galatea, a mythical tale of love, loss and immortality. Audiences will be captivated by the verdant scenery and the ravishingly beautiful, lush score. Acis and Galatea marks Union Avenue Opera's first-ever Handel opera and a return to the company's roots in producing Baroque operas such as Blow's Venus and Adonis and Purcell's Dido and Aeneas.

Artists in the title roles make their Union Avenue Opera debut. Tenor Marc Schapman sings the role of the shepherd Acis with Soprano Juliet Petrus as the sea nymph Galatea. Returning after his delightful turn as Sergeant Sulpice in La fille du Régiment during the 2010 season, Baritone David Dillard sings the role of the monster Polypheme. A quartet of nymphs and shepherds rounds out the cast and shares the arias of the character Damon: Sopranos Elizabeth Schleicher and Elise LaBarge, Tenor Philip Touchette and Baritone Nathan Ruggles.

UAO Artistic Director and Conductor Scott Schoonover conducts a chamber orchestra in the pit. Stage Director Allyson Ditchey directs her first summer production for Union Avenue Opera, having directed a revival of Amahl and the Night Visitors this past December. Steven Hitsman serves as Stage Manager. Teresa Doggett serves as Costume Designer.

Acis and Galatea runs this weekend only: April 27, 28, 29(m). Friday and Saturday performances begin at 8pm; Sunday matinee at 3pm. Opera will be performed at Union Avenue Christian Church located at 733 N. Union Blvd in St. Louis (map). Production sung in English with projected English supertitles. Tickets range $30-52. For Ticket Purchases or any other questions, call 314.361.2881 or visit http://www.unionavenueopera.org/

Monday, April 9, 2012

Union Avenue Opera: 18th Season Overview

Union Avenue Opera’s 18th Festival Season begins this month. It’s a summer of shepherds, nymphs, love triangles, sorcery, betrayals, mermaids, monsters, gods…and a magical, all-powerful ring!

THE REPERTOIRE

Opening this month, Acis and Galatea is George Frederic Handel’s mythical tale of love, loss, and immortality. Witness the tragic love of Galatea, a beautiful sea nymph, and the young shepherd Acis. Jealous monster Polyphemus is also in love with Galatea, and in a rage he takes Acis’s life; a grief-striken Galatea immortalizes her beloved as an everlasting fountain. Audiences will be captivated by the verdant scenery and by the ravishingly beautiful and lush score played by an onstage orchestra. Presented in English with projected English supertitles.

Don’t miss the mystery and intrigue of Giuseppe Verdi’s magnificent Un ballo in maschera. Riccardo and Amelia share a forbidden love, but the beguiling Amelia is married to Riccardo’s closest friend and confidante Renato. Amelia enlists the aid of sorceress Ulrica in an effort to extinguish her illicit love for Riccardo, but discovers her secret is already out. The culmination takes place at a lavish masked ball as this love triangle turns deadly. Presented in Italian with projected English supertitles.

Concluding the 2012 Festival Season is the start of a four-year odyssey for Union Avenue Opera: Das Rheingold, the first of Richard Wagner’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 two giants. The ensuing struggle for possession of the ring drives this dramatic opera. Presented in German with projected English supertitles.

IN THE PIT AND BEHIND THE SCENES

UAO Artistic Director and Conductor Scott Schoonover is set to conduct all three productions this season. Stage Director Allyson Ditchey, who last staged UAO’s Amahl and the Night Visitors, returns to stage Acis and Galatea. Returning after yet another critically-acclaimed Turandot last season, Mark James Meier stages Un ballo in maschera. Stage Director Karen Coe Miller, a member of the music faculty at Oklahoma City University, makes her UAO debut with Das Rheingold.

BEFORE THE FOOTLIGHTS

Union Avenue Opera welcomes back artists from past seasons:

Acis and Galatea: David Dillard (Polyphemus), Elizabeth Schleicher, Elise LaBarge, Philip Touchette and Nathan Ruggles.

Un ballo in maschera: Denise Knowlton (Ulrica), Jon Garrett (Chief Magistrate), Thomas W. Sitzler (Silvano), Anthony Heinemann (Servant), Todd von Felker (Samuel), and David Dillard (Tom)

Das Rheingold: Kevin Misslich (Wotan), Elise Quagliata (Fricka), Jordan Shanahan (Alberich), Cecelia Stearman (Erda), Todd von Felker (Fasolt), Joy Boland (Freia), and Clark Sturdevant (Froh)

Several artists make their UAO debut:
  • Soprano Juliet Petrus (Galatea, Acis and Galatea)
  • Tenor Marc Schapman (Acis, Acis and Galatea)
  • Tenor Emanuel-Cristian Caraman (Riccardo, Ballo)
  • Baritone Andrew Cummings (Renato, Ballo)
  • Soprano Rachael Holzhausen (Oscar, Ballo)
  • Soprano Courtney Mills (Amelia, Ballo)
  • Soprano Elizabeth Beers Kataria (Woglinde, Rheingold)
  • Bass-Baritone John Maynard Burton (Donner, Rheingold)
  • Tenor Kevin Hanek (Loge, Rheingold)
  • Soprano Megan Hart (Wellgunde, Rheingold)
  • Mezzo-Soprano Katja Heuzeroth (Flosshilde, Rheingold)
  • Bass Nikolas Wenzel (Fafner, Rheingold)
TICKETS & INFORMATION

Acis and Galatea runs April 27, 28, 29 (m). Un ballo in maschera runs June 29, 30, July 6, 7. Das Rheingold runs August 17, 18, 24, 25. All performances begin 8pm, except for a matinee, marked (m), at 3pm. Tickets may be purchased by calling 314.361.2881 or visiting http://www.unionavenuopera.org/