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Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Dr. von Lyric: Pumpkins and Halloween

The bell rings insistently...I open the door. Outside in the dark only illuminated by the porch light stands a sinister group. Oh, brother...I forgot it was Halloween. A  tall girl  in a torn white garment  ,her hair disheveled....she looks mad as a hatter. A bend over youth with a malevolent grin  obviously dressed as some kind of jester. A  figure  all in black with a dress  covered with stars and a gimlet stare . And who is that child covered with blood? ....Carrie?  No....now I get it...hey kid put down that axe.  Please...no tricks from this dangerous group ...and  I haven't prepared any of the usual  treats .   So for them (and you) instead of candy corn, Hershey kisses and some home baked chocolate chip cookies here is a tray full of Youtube  Halloween goodies . Enjoy....and watch out for razor blades in the apples....remember Lizzie got off and is still out there somewhere
Walt Disney LA DANZA MACABRE
   One of the first Disney cartoons (and still pretty extraordinary)
  WALT DISNEY LA DANZA MACABRE THE SKELETON DANCE 1929]


    Another Disney classic evocation of ghosts, ghouls, and things that go creep (or rather bang)  in the night
FANTASIA - NIGHT ON BALD MOUNTAIN

    Another performance of the Saint-Saens  Danse Macabre diabolically arranged by  Vladamir Horowitz played by an (unnamed ) pianist  with almost inhuman fingers of steel
 VLADIMIR HOROWITZ  - DANSE MACABRE


Pianos, a deserted factory, terror, blood and a creepy ballad by Schubert
ANDERSON  & ROE / DER ERLKONIG/STEINWAY PIANO FACTORY)

 What's Halloween without   a Witch? (It's the great Philip Langridge)
MET OPERA ON DVD  - HANSEL and GRETEL - CHRISTINE SCHAFFER

 Or a few singing pumpkins (why not?)  And it's always great to hear the  elegant and witty King's Singers 
THE HALLOWEEN SINGING PUMPKINS 2009]

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Lizzie B: Factoid #1

We'll be running a series of "Lizzie Bordon Factoids" over the next weeks as we get ready for her scary and eagerly awaited  in-person  arrival at the Castle on November 20th .  


Here's # 1  "The Elegance and Mystery  of Chronological Congruence "  

Is it just coincidence or some greater cosmic manifestation  that James M Barrie, Anton Chekov, Gustav Mahler , Grandma Moses and Lizzie Borden were all born in 1860. 
To say nothing of the possibly more apt Annie Oakley (both she and Lizzie were, after all , good with weapons) and the decisively less apt Juliette Low (founder of the Girl Scouts - although  in some ways  Lizzie appeared  as a   kind of  ideal Girl Scout type - kind to animals, charity work, churchgoer  etc ) 
Low also died the same year as Lizzie ...and Annie the year before  And what of the fact that Isadora Duncan died in year of Lizzie"s death - 1927 
And who was born that year? Sidney Poitier, Eartha Kitt , Gina Lollobrigida, Patty Page and Caesar Chavez

Monday, October 28, 2013

Lizzie B: costume sketches

Lizzie Borden
Margaret Borden
Here are the costumes sketches by our designer Terese Wadden. Pay attention to what period and color palette they are set in. 


Reverend Harrington


Captain McFarlane


Abigail Borden
Andrew Borden

Children



In other news, have you heard LIZZIE BORDEN is on Facebook... are you friends with her?


Lizzie: first rehearsal and Facebook


Today is the first rehearsal for BLO's production of LIZZIE BORDEN - a newly commissioned  one act version of Jack Beeson's dramatic opera that in its original  three act version enjoyed  great success at New York City  Opera and at Glimmerglass. With the newly realized  chamber orchestration  that reveals anew  the inherent power of the score, performed in the appropriately Gothic ambiance of the Castle and directed by one of America's boldest and incisive directors, Christopher Alden, this promises to be  crucial  and unmissable part of BLO's season. To celebrate this important launching  , we today start features on Facebook and Twitter. We have been extremely fortunate to engage an intriguing  guest to help us here. The volatile , misunderstood  heroine (or murderess ?) Lizzie herself  a Facebook page - a   forum to present her  uncensored, possibly  revelatory , perhaps controversial  thoughts and musings - and a place where you can interact  (if you dare) with this most notorious, ambiguous and fascinating celebrity . 

Friday, October 25, 2013

Lizzie: Signature Series and John Conklin

I go up to Boston next week to rehearse and then present BLO's  Signature Series  "Lizzie Borden took an axe"  at the Museum of Fine Arts on Sunday November 3 . This is the newest entry in a series that I have been creating over the past 4 years that deals with each of our operas in the repertory for that season but in a varied and wide range of contexts. Rather than a direct analysis of the music or a discussion of BLO's specific approach we explore how ideas or characters  derived from the opera might stretch out into novels, poetry, painting,cinema, history, popular culture. Also rather than  a lecture, we create mini -dramas, theater pieces of about an hour in length. We are lucky to be able to use the elegant and comfortable Remis auditorium at the MFA. For our LIZZIE program I am creating  a collage as it were of various views of the fascinatingly complex Lizzie herself, newspaper accounts of the murders and  excerpts from the sensational trial that transfixed the country. Mixed in with this will be the compelling  music from Jack Beeson's opera we will be presenting in the unique atmosphere of the Castle  opening November  20 (check out our Website for details ). We welcome to the Sunday afternoon event the well known Boston actress Celeste Oliva  and the dynamic  Heather Johnson who sings the title role with BLO . Together they will take  us into the tortured, ambiguous  ( still we ask...did she do it...or not?) and  highly  dramatic  excitement of the   world of Lizzie Borden . Join us
                                                                                                                                  John Conklin

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Dr von Lyric: Jookin?

 A little dancing (and some really  fancy footwork ) to celebrate the arrival of fall (or just have some fun) 

   Jookin?   check out...
        OPENING CEREMONY BLOG EXCLUSIVE - SPIKE JONZE PRESENTS LIL BUCK
       The Baryshnikovs Of Jookin

     More Yo Yo Ma and some more  unusual dancers ?   Check out...
        BACH  CELLO SUITE NO 6 SARABANDE YO YO MA 
             

    Sublime tango?    Check out....
        GABRIEL MISSE Y NATALIA HILLS -  WELCOME MILONGA  30 SEPT 

        Another  "Dying Swan"  (and perhaps its most famous embodiment after Pavlova) ?  Check out...
        MAYA PLISETSKAYA - SAINT-SAENS - THE DYING SWAN
            

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Dr Von Lyric: Verdi


Giuseppe Verdi
The congruences of chronology have always fascinated me. Coincidence or cosmic planning ?  But surely the overlapping birthdates of  both Verdi and Wagner in 1813 must show some   divine organization. When one adds  the birth of  Georg Buchner (German playwright of WOYZECK source of Berg's opera ) the situation grows complex - and furthermore  it was the year of PRIDE AND PREJUDICE and L'ITALIANA IN ALGERI and the year of Kierkegaard's death
Moving on 100 years we can add Benjamin Britten to our anniversary celebrations. But we must also include the unlikely duo of birthday boys Richard Nixon and Albert Camus...and this was the year of  PYGMALION, DEATH IN VENICE and THE RITE OF SPRING. How will we look back on 2013?
We've missed the celebration of the actual  birthday by a week or so but no matter...here are a few of my choice Verdiana Youtube moments  




Leontyne Price
One of my favorite  Verdi arias sung by one of my favorite sopranos Leontyne Price (I play this for my opera class at NYU as an example of the  quintessential  expression of the spirit and  soul and heart of "Opera"  itself )
LEONTYNE PRICE " D'AMOR SULL'ALI ROSEE" IL TROVATORE 1963

My favorite Verdi ensemble (a whole opera compressed into a few  sublimely dramatic minutes)
two versions:
BENIAMINO GIGLI RIGOLETTO QUARTET 1927
ANNA NEBTREBKO VERDI RIGOLETTO QUARTET (2007)

My favorite Verdi chorus
VERDI - NABUCCO  - VA PENSIERO MET 2002

My favorite Verdi finale
VERDI  (FINALE) FALSTAFF

and really one couldn't do a Verdi page without Callas
RARITY! MARIA CALLAS - LA TRAVIATA  LISBONNE  1958

Happy Birthday  Viva Verdi 

Friday, October 11, 2013

Magic FLute: Opera Gala


On Opening Night, we had our OPERA GALA. Here are a few shots of our glamorous event. You can also find some more on our facebook page


gala co-chairs Lynn Dale, Ann Beha and Jessica Donohue
Magic Flute cast members Michelle Trainor and Meredith Hansen with Music Director David Angus
The Wang Center







Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Dr Von Lyric on Magic Flute

 I 'm glad to be back on the BLO Blog after a bit of time away - traveling, reading, listening, looking . I hope that with due diligence I'll be able to post every Wednesday with items operatic and musical....funny ....serious... unusual....stimulating. A couple of weeks ago I attended a quite fascinating program at the MFA presented by BLO's Signature Series entitled ""The Magic Flute Variations" where among many other rarely performed works all related to FLUTE (including excerpts from Schikaneder's  sequel  DAS LABYRINTH and a few bits  from Goethe's version of the story )  we heard  the relatively  more familiar Beethoven Variations on Papageno's aria "Ein Madchen". So here are some other  takes by various composers on the irresistible music from Mozart's opera  (The BLO production of FLUTE has only a few more performances this week. Catch it if you can)

  Here is the Beethoven with the superb cellist Lynn Harrell


Two more sets of FLUTE explorations  by two  Spanish virtuosos and composers:  guitarist   Fernando Sor (1778 -1839) and the  world famous - in his time  more or less known  the Liszt of the violin-   Pablo de Saraste (1844- 1908)


 SARASTE CONCERT FANTASY ON MOZARTS MAGIC FLUITE - ANTAL ZALAI


   For a much more modern take check out this striking  Berio piece where the theme has been totally taken apart and reassembled so as to be almost unrecognizable.


Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Magic Flute: costume sketches

After a wonderful opening on Friday, and fantastic performance on Sunday, we would like to share with you some of the costumes sketches by our designer Nancy Leary.

Pay attention to how richly detailed they are. This allows the costume shop to build accordingly.

Papageno- Andrew Garland
Sarastro- David Cushing



First LadyMeredith Hansen
Second LadyMichelle Trainor
Third LadyNicole Rodin
Queen of the Night -So Young Park




Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The Magic Flute: A Conversation with Professor Neal Zaslaw, from Cornell University

Magda Romanska, BLO Dramaturg and Associate Professor of Dramaturgy at Emerson College, talks to Professor Neal Zaslaw about Mozart’s The Magic Flute. Prof. Zaslaw is a world-renowned musicologist and the leading expert on Mozart. Between 1978 and 1982 he supervised recordings of all of Mozart’s symphonies by Jaap Schroeder, Christopher Hogwood, and the Academy of Ancient Music. Time magazine called the results “one of the most important projects in the history of recorded sound.” A decade later Professor Zaslaw was dubbed “Mr. Mozart” by the New York Times for organizing the 1991–92 Mozart Bicentennial at Lincoln Center, which staged performances of all of Mozart’s works.


 

MR: The Magic Flute libretto has undergone many rewrites and re-interpretations. Can you tell us a little bit about the history of some of these rewrites?

NZ: The Magic Flute’s dialogue is never delivered uncut from the stage or on audio or video recordings. It can be found whole only in earnest scholarly publications. Between 1793 and 1798 The Magic Flute was staged in more than sixty central European cities, from Aachen to Saint Petersburg, from London to Zagreb. In none of these productions, the librettos of which I’ve been able to examine, was Schikaneder’s text left unaltered: the dialogue was always cut and revised, and even the texts that Mozart set were sometimes changed. As early as 1794 the play was systematically reworked by Christian August Vulpius for Goethe’s theater in Weimar. Just as interesting is the fact that following Mozart’s death some five weeks after the première of The Magic Flute, and probably even before that, Schikaneder himself was altering the text. Schikaneder revived the show on and off over some two decades, during which time he felt free to 'update' the libretto. You have to remember, at that time, the wealthy would go to the theatre every night, often to see the same show. They knew the most popular productions by heart and so they would recognize each alteration to the text. Those who have dealt with the 18th-century opera and operetta writ large know that such practices were the norm. Stage works were commonly revised for each new production, to update them and to deal with local musical and theatrical resources, local audience tastes, reigning ideologies, and the quirks of patrons.

MR: Our new adaptation focuses on the story of self-discovery: the hero’s quest for enlightenment and autonomy. It is an allegorical representation of a young man’s process of growing up, of becoming a man. There is a personal story about Mozart’s own life that suggests that The Magic Flute might be a parable of his own life story. Can you tell us about it?

NZ: Mozart’s family collected everything having to do with his childhood, every scrap of paper, diaries, literally everything. One of the reasons was that Mozart’s father, Leopold, intended to write a book about Mozart’s childhood, in which he was planning to portray himself as the wise man who raised a perfect child. The book never was written, because at the age of twenty-four Mozart ran away from home. It’s not that he didn’t love his father, but his father was such a powerful figure in his life that he wasn’t able to establish his own identity without gaining independence from his father. The model for the intended book was Christian Gellert’s epistolary book, Geistliche Oden und Lieder (1758), a compilation of letters from a wise father to his son. That book inspired Leopold to write his own.

MR: Can we say that it was meant to be an earliest form of Bildungsroman, a coming-of-age story, chronicling the moral, emotional and psychological growth of the young protagonist? Or, more specifically, Künstlerroman, a story of an artist’s coming to maturity?

NZ: Yes, it was meant to be such a story of education. There is a famous letter from Mozart to his wife, in which he describes how he decided to go to the theatre to see The Magic Flute to see how it’s doing. He sits in the box of a man who clearly seems unimpressed. When the  story gets to the crucial moment at which Tamino is standing in front of temple's three portals, marked Reason, Wisdom and Nature, Mozart attempts to explain the scene's underlying meaning, and when the man simply laughs, Mozart calls him a jackass and leaves the box in a rage. The reason the plot of The Magic Flute seems so inconsistent is that we see it through Tamino’s eyes, and the world for him is inconsistent. In the first act, he sees the world one way, and then, things change, and he sees them the other way. The only scene for which we have a sketch is that scene with Tamino standing in front of the doors. It means that Mozart had thought long and hard about how he was going to do it. It was an important scene.

MR: Can we say that this moment of Tamino’s choice is the climactic moment of the story?

NZ: Maybe you are right. Maybe this scene at the end of the first act is the climactic scene. In the first act, you have to represent the hero’s confusion and his naïve idealism and inability to figure things out. In the second act, he becomes enlightened. In Bergman’s film version, the story is presented as a custody battle between divorced spouses (the Queen of the Night and Sarastro), with the daughter, Pamina, trapped between them. This is one of the best adaptations, which captures in light and color the essence of the story.

MR: The story is allegorical; that is, it requires the suspension of disbelief for us to be carried away by it. Different elements have contributed to its reception. Can you tell us about it?

NZ: Is Magic Flute a grand opera, a Singspiel, a Hanswurst farce, a fairy tale, a morality play, a magic show, a Bildungsroman, a coded political message, Trinitarian symbolism, the Orpheus story retold, or a Masonic allegory? Because of its complexity and its hybrid nature, The Magic Flute can support any number of interpretations. It is a fairy tale with a serious subtext. The music is a whole other element that makes things emotional and believable, which wouldn’t happen without music. The tension is melodramatic—you have to suspend disbelief at the terror of trial by water and fire. Schikaneder’s theatre was equipped with machines for supernatural effects, such as flying, volcanos, storms, waves, waterfalls, infernos, and rapid set changes.  These effects, these illusions, apparently could be surprisingly realistic in the dim lighting of the 18th-century theaters. The curtain never went down between scenes, so the mutations must have been the equivalent of 'slow fades' in movies.  The music is the element that makes things emotional and 'believable.' The tension is melodramatic—for instance, to experience it you must not only suspend disbelief, but also identify with the tender young protagonists, empathetically channeling their terror and courage as they pass through their trials.  The Magic Flute was, and is, a popular entertainment serving as the sugarcoating on a serious message, but we can never know precisely what the message was. But even though it made Mozart angry, his immortal work can also be considered simply a delightful excuse for an evening of glorious music.

Friday, September 27, 2013

BLO's Interpretation of The Magic Flute

by BLO Dramaturg and Associate Professor of Dramaturgy at Emerson College, Magda Romanska

The Magic Flute is considered one of Mozart’s most enduring masterpieces. The story of how it developed and what it meant at the time it was written has captured people’s imaginations almost as much as the work itself. The story behind The Magic Flute is one of mystery, suspense, and twists and turns that paint a vivid and complex picture of Mozart’s Vienna in the Age of Enlightenment. The opera embodies many philosophical ideals of its era: the quest for self-knowledge, personal growth, and enlightenment; the passionate pursuit of wisdom; the cultivation of the questioning spirit and the open mind; and the need to find balance and moderation and to accept the duality of our lives fully conscious of their powers. Because the opera is structured around a medley of various rituals, some believed to be based on Masonic practices, throughout the centuries, the spectacle of successive productions was built around the perceived notoriety of the enigmatic brotherhood. Boston Lyric Opera’s new version of The Magic Flute strips the story from the accoutrements of the Masonic rituals by recontextualizing the mythical settings. Thus, we attempt to restore the tale to its profound philosophical roots by refocusing on the personal journey toward adulthood and enlightenment. Through trials and tribulations, Tommy (Tamino) finds himself entangled in matters of life and death that force him to rethink his most basic assumptions about love, lust, and commitment, and that teach him how to “think with his heart” by finding a perfect balance between “instincts” and “reason.” To quote Joseph Campbell: “Desire and fear: these are the two emotions by which all life in the world is governed. Desire is the bait, death is the hook.” Throughout the centuries, The Magic Flute has undergone many transformations and rewrites, but our version is the first modern attempt to reclaim the story’s original philosophical and moral dimensions in a way that’s relevant to contemporary viewers. To fully understand, however, the impulse behind such re-imagining of this iconic work, we need to understand the context in which it was initially conceived.

With its new adaptation of The Magic Flute, Boston Lyric Opera attempts to move the story away from the perceived dark magic of the Masons, as many have previously interpreted it, and to restore it to its roots in the ideals of the Enlightenment. Our adaptation focuses on the duality of human nature and the world, as it oscillates between light and darkness, day and night, sun and moon, reason and irrationality. Each character in the story belongs to and symbolizes a different realm, and the story is a parable of the eternal struggle between the dual aspects of our nature. This duality captures the spirit of the Enlightenment, particularly its attempt to find balance and moderation while pursuing the noble cause of reason and self-knowledge. Tamino’s quest for greater self-awareness reflects the classical dictum that “the life which is unexamined is not worth living.” Our story focuses on the hero’s personal journey, which spurs him to summon his “courage to face trials and to bring a whole new body of possibilities into the field of interpreted experience for other people to experience” (Campbell, 1988). The hero must face his demons and overcome personal weakness in order to reach a higher consciousness. It is a story of self-revelation and of growing up, of transformation and acceptance. It is both intimate and mythical.

The majority of past productions of The Magic Flute have tended to focus on the solemn spectacle of the initiation and trial, wrapped in an aura of Masonic secrecy. Thus, for centuries, the opera’s style and form overshadowed its content. The moral and philosophical dimensions of the story of personal growth and enlightenment were lost in the enigma of the brotherhood as interrogated and spectacularized through stagecraft. Although we preserve Mozart’s music almost intact, we move the setting away from its original Egyptian context into Mayan ruins as a way to decontextualize the well-known story and thus to make it fresh and to reclaim its initial philosophical intent. The ruins of the Mayan temple, as mysterious and magical as the ancient Egypt, defamiliarize an all too familiar story, forcing us to listen to it again with renewed attention. The rich mythology of the Mayan culture allows us to refocus our production on universal symbols, such as the power of the snake. With multifaced symbolism, the dominant image of the snake reflects the multifaceted reality of the protagonist’s quest and his ultimate transformation. Snakes regularly shed their skin, leaving the old shell behind and reemerging renewed and different. In Mayan mythology, Quetzalcoatl is a deity whose name means “feathered serpent.” His image adorns many Mayan temples and places of worship. The three different layers of the set of our production symbolize the three cardinal elements—wind, water, and fire. With the modern world steeped in violent conflict between opposing ideals, we attempt to reclaim the idealistic legacy of The Magic Flute, to remind us of the enduring principles of the Enlightenment that placed individual responsibility and authority over the self at the center of the discourse on which our modern state was founded and that came to define our modern consciousness.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Back to School with Boston Lyric Opera

A familiar buzz is in the Boston air this week with thousands of students, from pre-schoolers to grad students, going back to school.  At BLO, there’s a similar buzz as we prepare for a new season.  After a summer of adventures including free performances on Boston Common with Outside the Box, a beautiful outdoor concert in collaboration with Boston Landmarks Orchestra on the Esplande, and a concert at the Boston Public Library packing the Rabb Lecture Hall of the BPL Central Branch in Copley Square, there is now great anticipation for going back to the theatre. 

The voices of BLO rang throughout the city this summer; but also, perhaps more quietly, but just as powerfully, rang the voices of New England teachers participating in BLO’s Music! Words! Opera! professional development workshop for teachers at the Hyatt Regency Hotel.  Over the course of five days, eleven general classroom and music educators from Boston Public Schools and surrounding districts, including Lowell, and even Providence, RI gathered together to explore methods and activities to introduce their students to opera.

Working under the guidance of OPERA America Teaching Artists Neil Ginsberg and Clifford Brooks (one of the original authors of the M!W!O! curriculum) teachers modeled the experience of learning about Aïda using the M!W!O! curriculum textbook, and even more impressively, in one short week, modeled the process of writing an original classroom opera with their students by actually writing one themselves.  Going through this collaborative process together allows teachers to experience the process as their students might, but also gives them the opportunity to practice teaching foundational skills in areas like:

•    Dramatic and music performance        •    Music  composition
•    Dramatic writing                                •    Teamwork
•    Problem-solving                                 •    Emotional intelligence
•    Communication skills

Workshop participants touring the ISG Museum

Workshop participants decided early on to write an opera about Isabella Stewart Gardner.  The group took a field trip Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum to do some research and explore the life of Boston’s renowned philanthropist and art collector for their 20-minute opera, Canvas and Wood.  The libretto focuses on a young and resistant museum visitor named Cara who encounters a portrait of Ms. Gardner that comes to life.  Ms. Gardner introduces her to the artwork in her collection, and ends with the audience seeing an older Cara volunteering in the museum as a guide.  The art collector remembers her time as the subject of scandal in Boston, revealed through lyrics such as, Scandel! Scandel! – Brought to Boston through the art that she got lost in!  As they travel through the museum, artwork comes to life and is set to music – including portraits singing Strauss-like, in German, a gypsy sings a rousing call-and-response song in Spanish, a beautiful Mother and Child Magnificent, and even a portrayal of the infamous art theft that robbed us all of some of our artistic heritage.

Teachers will bring this curriculum to their classrooms with support from BLO throughout the year, culminating in a Festival of Classroom Operas presented in partnership with Wheelock Family Theatre.  In writing operas of their own, students will not just be getting an experience in art for art’s sake – though that is tremendously valuable.  They are able to explore the world through an operatic lens in their classroom – whether it’s singing in foreign language, adapting classic works of literature, or bringing historical events to life, opera is a means to explore the world around us, peak students’ curiosity, and tackle big questions.  A perfect example of this is the big question posed by Canvas and Wood, as posed by our M!W!O! workshop facilitator, Clifford Brooks:

Are opera houses static places where people go just to see actual museum pieces, or is the opera house a vibrant living place—where every time you engage with a piece you learn something, you see something opened up?  Do the pieces speak to you in different ways?  Museums wrestle with this all the time, we wrestle with this all the time as we sell [opera] tickets … All of us, as we go through life, we meet pieces of art that have awakened our senses, that we’ve had conversations with.  Either in our dreams, or as we stand there in awe and speak.

As BLO goes back to the theatre, and as these educators go back to school, we’ll endeavor together to keep opera a vibrant, living art form.


Megan Cooper
Director of Community Engagement


To read Megan's reflections on the 2013 Music! Words! Opera! Festival click here.
To watch the ensemble workshop performance of the original opera created by this year's participating teachers click here.

Friday, September 6, 2013

A Personal Note from BLO's General & Artistic Director


BOSTON’S OPERA COMMUNITY: STRONG, DIVERSE AND VIBRANT
Reflections from Esther Nelson
General & Artistic Director,
Esther Nelson

Lloyd Schwartz’s recent Opera News editorial entitled “The Boston Conundrum" (see below for complete text of said article) compels me to tell readers that opera is, in fact, alive and well in Boston.

Despite the lack of a purposed performance space for opera, Bostonians have supported the art form for decades, and I am proud of our loyal patrons who have enabled BLO’s growth into New England’s largest opera company over 37 seasons. I’m also proud of Boston's enthusiasm for opera, evidenced in the community’s support for opera in all forms—amateur groups, smaller ensembles, and fully professional companies—which is why Boston continues to be the place where fledgling opera companies like Odyssey Opera choose to be born. This vibrant, collaborative community is not polarized as Mr. Schwartz suggests.

Most critics do not share Mr. Schwartz’s opinions of BLO’s work. The Boston Globe described BLO’s Opera Annex productions  as “part of the national dialogue” because of their role as entry points for new opera audiences, drawing crowds that comprise musical insiders, young hipsters and out-of-town press, clad in everything from Sunday best to jeans and a t-shirt. The New York Times observed that BLO “presents only a handful of productions a year but clearly intends them to catch the interest of operagoers around the country.”

Our local music critics understand that the challenge of running an opera company demands both artistic and business sense, with Boston Globe music critic Jeremy Eichler calling BLO’s efforts “a significant step toward modernization as a company without creating the perception of drastic change that might frighten traditional subscribers away.” The city’s collaborative spirit is made manifest in partnership programs with the Museum of Fine Arts, Handel and Haydn Society, Boston Public Library, Boston Children’s Museum and Zoo New England, all who join BLO’s efforts to take opera deeper into the community fabric for all to experience.

Boston is home to internationally renowned conservatory, college and university opera programs and I am proud of the immense talent that both trains and lives in and around Boston. The city is a hotbed of emerging artists, and the opera community provides a platform from which these future stars can, and do, launch international careers. The artists of the community, professional or emerging, are afforded opportunities among all opera companies in town. Each of us, regardless of our size or history, are here to support the art and the artists.

I agree with Mr. Schwartz that opera companies should have artistic leadership at the executive table, and BLO is fortunate to have Music Director David Angus and Artistic Advisor John Conklin, both internationally respected artists. However, most successful artists like David and John actively pursue their artistic careers rather than manage the business complexities of larger institutions.

The city’s richness in opera is rooted in its people—their support and their optimism—for this vital living art form. It turns out that what Mr. Schwartz calls a “conundrum” is actually an embarrassment of riches that has kept Boston’s love affair with opera vibrant and strong; a romance that endures.

                                                                                                                   
"The Boston Conundrum" (As seen in the September issue of Opera News Magazine)
Critic LLOYD SCHWARTZ looks at the state of opera in the Massachusetts capital.

Though Boston has from time to time been a major international opera center, those periods never lasted. The celebrated Boston Opera Company, which had many of the world's greatest singers on its roster and a major conductor (Felix Weingartner), lasted only six years (1909–15). Its jewel of an opera house went unused for decades and was torn down in 1958. Sarah Caldwell's Opera Company of Boston had a better run, thirty-two years, before its last gasp in 1990 (with a world premiere — the late Robert DiDomenica's Balcony). Peter Sellars staged some of his most exciting and innovative productions in and around Boston, but when he tried to form an opera company, Boston Opera Theater, it collapsed after one production, despite spectacular reviews and sold-out houses for his celebrated Nozze di Figaro set in Trump Tower. Currently, Boston is still reeling from the sudden demise in 2011, in mid-season, of Opera Boston, which for eight years attracted the most serious and curious opera-lovers; the company was just about to produce the first Boston staging of Michael Tippett's dreamy allegory The Midsummer Marriage.

It's a mystery why such visionary companies have failed, while Boston Lyric Opera, which has a checkered history of misguided productions, slouches toward its thirty-eighth year. There are lots of theories. Boston, people say, with its world-class and well-endowed symphony orchestra and art museum, is simply not an opera town; except for supporting the Metropolitan Opera tours, its "Society" movers and shakers have had little interest in opera. Is opera too sexy for Puritanical Boston? Or too expensive for Brahmin penny-pinchers? Or too risky for corporate support? Opera is the most collaborative art form — some element or other is more likely to go wrong in an opera than in a symphony. Boston is musically conservative; the vast majority of BSO audiences prefer Brahms to Bartók. In 1986, Caldwell gave Boston its first Janácˇek opera, The Makropulos Case, starring Anja Silja, with glamorous black-and-white costumes designed by couturier Alfred Fiandaca. It was a dazzling production of a gripping work. It got rave reviews and a lot of publicity. But it didn't fill the house.

Some people blame Boston's lack of a proper venue for opera. Caldwell bought and renovated an old vaudeville house and called it the Opera House, but it was more adequate for the audience than for the participants. BLO uses the cramped, acoustically challenged Shubert Theatre, designed for plays and out-of-town musical-comedy tryouts. Audiences are uncomfortable, but they still come to undistinguished productions of La Bohème and Tosca. Perhaps artistic temperament doesn't jibe with the need to run a tight ship. What made Caldwell's and Sellars's productions memorable, even great, was their intense focus on the stage. Caldwell was notorious for her last-minute revising. In the deepest way, these two artists weren't interested in money. A student of Boris Goldovsky and a disciple of Walter Felsenstein, Caldwell believed in opera as drama. Though she often ran over budget, her budgets were remarkably low. Unfortunately, she also wanted to conduct, and that was often a distraction from her theatrical imagination. Yet her innate musicality meant that she was almost invariably serving the music.

For several decades, Caldwell built an audience that would follow her to gymnasiums and flower markets and movie theaters, to see not only Bohème and Traviata but the first American performance of Schoenberg's Moses und Aron. Her unforgettable opening tableau, with Donald Gramm and Richard Lewis as the two brothers standing back-to-back in a pool of light, was an indelible image that illuminated the central theme of this recalcitrant opera better than anything else I've ever seen or read. She directed American premieres of Prokofiev's War and Peace, Berlioz's Benvenuto Cellini, Rameau's Hippolyte et Aricie, Boris Godunov with Mussorgsky's original orchestration, Verdi's original French version of Don Carlos, and such challenging contemporary works as Luigi Nono's Intolleranza, Peter Maxwell Davies's Taverner and Bernd Alois Zimmermann's Soldaten.

There were, inevitably, missteps in her handling of budgets, which alienated donors. Ditto her handling of artists. Joan Sutherland sang several of her most important roles in Boston, but when the prima donna discovered that Caldwell had sold tickets for the dress rehearsal of Traviata without telling her, that became Sutherland's last Caldwell production. Was Caldwell just not paying attention when she had the townswomen in Fidelio greet their long-imprisoned husbands with babies in their arms? Productions became less and less inspired, and her financial woes increased.

One possible path to salvation for Caldwell was her brief association with Sellars, the last stage director to make a significant mark in Boston. Sellars started doing opera while he was still a Harvard undergraduate. His four-hour-long Ring cycle, at the Loeb Drama Center (soon home to the American Repertory Theater) had more memorable images per minute than most complete Rings. Between 1980, when he directed his first Don Giovanni, in New Hampshire, with witty Edwardian sets and costumes by Edward Gorey, and 1987, when Caldwell included Sellars's masterpiece, Handel's Giulio Cesare, in the Opera Company's subscription season, Sellars had been collaborating with Emmanuel Music director Craig Smith on their now famous Handel and Mozart productions, which dug deeper into the works than most productions do, and always with a profound musicality. Their Mozart wasn't prissy; their Handel wasn't stodgy. Orlando — set at Cape Canaveral and on Mars — was part of Robert Brustein's American Repertory Theater season and had more performances than Handel's original.

Sellars and Smith were also gathering a stock company of inspired singing actors — including Susan Larson, Lorraine Hunt (not yet Lieberson), Jeffrey Gall, James Maddalena and Sanford Sylvan — who "got" and embodied what their directors were up to. Not every critic approved, but these were productions everyone had to see. Wanted to see.

But Caldwell and Sellars were not an ideal match. There were charges and countercharges of condescension and insubordination. Neither had ever had a rival. A plan to have Sellars codirect the Opera Company came to nothing. In 1990, Sellars and Smith inaugurated a new company, Boston Opera Theater, with Le Nozze di Figaro set in Trump Tower. Had so many ticket-buyers ever lined up for any opera in Boston? But because it was staged at Boston's legendary Colonial Theatre, a union house (in which the stage crew got paid even when there was no performance), BOT lost a fortune and went bust.

One response to Caldwell's hegemony was the sprouting up of small splinter groups. Boston's current leading company, Boston Lyric Opera, began in 1977 as the consolidation of some of these, several of which, such as Associate Artists Opera and the New England Chamber Opera Group, were quite ambitious. But BLO remains a promising enterprise that rarely fulfills its promise. For one thing, it's been mainly managers, not practicing artists, who have been in charge. Janice Mancini Del Sesto, BLO's general director between 1992 and 2007, was originally a singer, but her greater talent seemed to be as an arts "organizer." Her predecessors included John Balme, a conductor with little evident instinct for how opera works onstage, Anne Ewers and Justin Moss. In its three decades, despite the presence of talented individuals such as its music director of sixteen years, Stephen Lord, BLO has demonstrated no consistent ambition apart from "let's put on an opera" and is admired less for its productions than for its fundraising.

The company's occasional good ideas rarely led to any follow-through. In 1990, around the time that Caldwell's OCB folded, Moss began a program to revive an American opera every season. There were solid, unimaginative productions of Blitzstein's Regina and Kurt Weill's Lost in the Stars, then two operas for which "revival" was merely a euphemism — Carlisle Floyd's Wuthering Heights and Stephen Paulus's Postman Always Rings Twice. In 1992, at the close of Moss's tenure, BLO cosponsored a workshop of an opera in progress by Robert Aldridge with a libretto by Herschel Garfein based on Sinclair Lewis's Elmer Gantry. There was a public performance of excerpts, with Lorraine Hunt hair-raising as the evangelist Sharon Falconer, and two years later another workshop performance. BLO promised a full production but dropped both this project (Del Sesto said the decision was "financial rather than artistic") and its American opera commitment, though occasional American operas have turned up in later seasons. At least Hunt returned in several major roles — Berlioz's Béatrice, Handel's Xerxes and her only complete Carmen.

Perhaps Del Sesto's best idea was "Carmen on the Common" — two free public stagings of Bizet's popular masterpiece on Boston Common in 2002, with an appealing young cast. More than 100,000 people attended. Aida was to have been next. But Del Sesto, for once, couldn't raise the necessary funding, and the whole idea was abandoned.

What BLO has consistently lacked is the creativity to make something special out of limited resources. Some productions were borrowed; some used scenery from one company and costumes from another; many were significantly cut (Carmen withouta "Chansonbohème"!). Productions veered between the conventional and the cockamamie.

Esther Nelson, who succeeded Del Sesto in 2008 and serves as the company's general and artistic director, initiated a program known as "Opera Annex," which presents one non-standard work per season in an unusual venue. BLO's finest moment was last year's production of Peter Maxwell Davies's chilling ghost-story The Lighthouse, at the JFK Library on Boston Harbor. Director Tim Albery turned the awkward auditorium into an abandoned island surrounded by buoys, with aisles covered in guano-painted tarps. At the climax, the glaring light of a real lighthouse just outside the library was spine-chilling. After three decades, finally — a real gesamtkunstwerk.

Other efforts have not been so successful. A 2010 "Opera Annex" revival of The Turn of the Screw at an armory had a huge closed-circuit TV screen showing what was "happening" offstage — draining its mystery. This season, the cast of Così Fan Tutte had to learn an unsingable 1890 English translation ("Cease not, remorseless love!"), compounding rather than eliminating the need for supertitles; and The Flying Dutchman, copying a concept from Bayreuth, had two younger, silent Sentas wandering about, confusing the action and ignoring the music. During the sea-swept overture, in which Wagner depicts the Dutchman's ship crashing through the waves, the director gave us a young Senta wiping the blood around her mother's corpse.

Years earlier, some key members of the BLO board, fed up with the repertoire and low standards, jumped ship to support the Boston Academy of Music, founded by tenor Richard Conrad in 1980. Conrad had both a clear vision and a vivid theatrical imagination. On limited budgets, BAM produced both grand and light opera — from Donizetti's rare Linda di Chamounix, with soprano Elizabeth Parcells, to an even rarer staging of the Kurt Weill–Ira Gershwin Lady in the Dark, with Delores Ziegler doing a star turn. But in 2002, after twenty-two years, Conrad was ousted by his own board, which was evidently tired and fearful of supporting an essentially one-man operation. BAM morphed into Opera Boston.

Still performing at the tiny Majestic, an elegantly restored 1903 opera and vaudeville house, Opera Boston, under the direction of Carole Charnow, became the go-to company for opera-lovers tired of Tosca. Opera Boston's repertory was an impressive mix of obscurer classics (Donizetti's Lucrezia Borgia, Gluck's Alceste, Rossini's Tancredi, Verdi's Luisa Miller) and daring modern works, including an inspired production of Shostakovich's savagely satiric The Nose, before the Met got to it. The company's Opera Unlimited series of even newer operas was mainly the inspiration of Opera Boston's music director, Gil Rose, an opera conductor who actually embraces new music. (He also leads "BMOP" — the Boston Modern Orchestra Project.) Rose included such exciting pieces as Thomas Adès's dark sexual melodrama Powder Her Face and John Harbison's haunting setting of Yeats's one-act ritual play Full Moon in March.

Opera Boston's biggest coup was the Boston premiere in 2004 of John Adams's Nixon in China, which it got to do, according to Richard Dyer — the distinguished former classical-music critic of the Boston Globe (who was briefly employed by Opera Boston after his retirement) — "because Jan Del Sesto refused to accept Stephen Lord's plan to do it at the Lyric." This created the Opera Boston image and the widespread opinion that Opera Boston was the artistically adventurous company, though Dyer points out that this is an oversimplification in both directions: "The unforeseen benefit of having two companies was that each of them became better because of the presence of the other." In 2010, Opera Boston gave the world premiere of Zhou Long's Madame White Snake. Neither Cerise Lim Jacobs's libretto (part Chinese folk-speak, part contemporary psychobabble) nor Zhou Long's colorfully orchestrated mixture of ancient Chinese and modern orchestral sounds escaped banality, but it won a Pulitzer Prize.

Then came the unthinkable. In 2011, shortly before Opera Boston's scheduled Midsummer Marriage and less than a year into the tenure of its new general director, Lesley Koenig, the trustees shut it down. The company had no endowment (not for want of trying on Charnow's part) and was losing money. Randolph Fuller, president emeritus, had been supporting Opera Boston since its inception, providing as much as twenty percent of its annual operating budget in some seasons. The accumulated deficit, according to the final auditor's total, was more than $1 million. The board was in shock. So was the community. (Boston mayor Thomas Menino wanted to know why the company didn't appeal to him for help.) Fuller then put up the money for a memorable concert version of the Tippett, with Rose conducting BMOP, which Opera Boston subscribers could attend free of charge. But as Dyer asks, "Why could one imagine that Boston could support two opera companies when in fact it has never adequately supported one?"

Recently, there was potentially good news: Gil Rose has announced the  formation of a new company — Odyssey Opera of Boston. The idea is not to compete with BLO (which, he says, may have been one source of Opera Boston's downfall). Every fall, Odyssey means to do a concert version of a grand opera too big to stage in Boston. Its first, this month, will be no less than Wagner's early epic Rienzi, with the powerhouse Lithuanian tenor Kristian Benedikt in his American debut. Then, in late spring, there would be three or four fully staged chamber-scale operas. (Under consideration are works by Haydn, Bizet, Adolphe Adam, Martinů and Philip Glass.) Meanwhile, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Boston Early Music Festival and ART will have their occasional high-end offerings, and a handful of small chamber groups (Intermezzo, Guerilla Opera, Opera Hub, Boston Opera Collaborative, Commonwealth Lyric Theatre) will continue to put on some of the liveliest, most innovative productions in town.