Introducing the 2010 Young American Artists

Young Artists in last year's "Latin Lovers" concert

Young Artists in last year's "Latin Lovers" concert

Our 2010 Young American Artists joined us in Cooperstown this week, and their days are already filled with orientations, costume fittings, coachings and chorus rehearsals.

We are very proud of our Young American Artists Program (YAAP), which provides training and performance experience for talented singers at the beginning of their professional careers.  The program, founded in 1988, has become a core aspect of our Festival. Each year, the program receives about 700-800 applications. About 200 singers are heard in live audition, and between 30 and 40 singers are granted positions. Click here to read about the 2010 program participants.

While here, the singers receive coachings and master classes. Each singer either presents a solo recital in Cooperstown or Cherry Valley or performs in a concert, such as this year’s Killer B’s concert featuring Steven Blier. The Young American Artists generally sing smaller roles in the operas and cover or understudy principal roles (like that of, say, Tosca). This year, however, the entire cast of The Tender Land, which composer Aaron Copland wrote for young singers, will be made up of Young American Artists. Stewart Robertson, who helped found the program in 1988, returns this summer to conduct the American opera.

Introducing the cast of The Tender Land (in order of vocal appearance):

Beth Moss: Rebecca Jo Loeb

Ma Moss: Stephanie Foley Davis

Mr. Splinters: Chris Lysack

Laurie Moss: Lindsay Russell

Top: Mark Diamond

Martin: Andrew Stenson

Grandpa Moss: Joseph Barron

Mrs. Jenks: Jamilyn Manning-White

Mrs. Splinters: Claire Shackleton

Mr. Jenks: Will Liverman

Second Graders Explore Glimmerglass Opera

Cooperstown Central SchoolYesterday, we had close to 80 second graders from Cooperstown Central School join us on campus for a backstage tour, as part of a two-tier educational program offered to area schools.  

June and I worked with the students in November for OPERA-tion Quilt, when they learned what goes into creating an opera production.

To reinforce what they learned in the fall, the students joined us yesterday to see everything first hand. We were impressed with how much they remembered from our November presentation.

As a quick recap, we asked what it takes to present an opera, to which they responded:

“People to sing and act.”    
“A lot of hard work.”    
“Someone to build.”    
“A lot of people.”    
“Costumes.”    
“Someone to plan everything.”    
“People to play instruments.”

And more.

The backstage tour is presented in part by the Bassett Healthcare/Glimmerglass Opera partnership. During the afternoon we took the students on stage, where they sung their school song to get a feel for the theater’s acoustics. Everyone walked through the light booth, and went down into the newly redone orchestra pit. They saw the wardrobe house, where hair and makeup are done, and traveled through the scene and costume shops, where the building for the 2010 Festival has begun.

It was tough getting this all in within an hour, but I think they got back to school in time for the final bell. Milford Central School joins us today!

Cooperstown students on stage.

Cooperstown students on stage.

Glimmerglass Lighting Designer Nominated for Tony Award

Robert Wierzel

Robert Wierzel

Robert Wierzel, lighting designer for this summer’s The Tender Land and Tolomeo, has been nominated for a 2010 Tony Award for his lighting design for Fela! on Broadway.

“I saw Fela! a couple of months ago, and the lighting totally blew me away,” said Abby Rodd, Glimmerglass Opera Director of Production. ”I’m so proud of Robert.”

Wierzel has been designing for Glimmerglass Opera since 1989, and after the 2010 Festival, he will have designed 35 productions with the company. You may remember his work on 2008’s Giulio Cesare in Egitto or 2009’s La Traviata.

When he isn’t designing at Glimmerglass, his work takes him across the country and beyond. In addition to his other Broadway credits, David Copperfield’s Dreams and Nightmares and the play The Deep Blue Sea, he has designed Off-Broadway for New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater, Signature Theatre Company, the Roundabout Theatre Company and Playwrights Horizons. He has collaborated with Grace Jones (Hurricane Tour), the composer Philip Glass and with opera companies of Paris (Garnier), Tokyo, San Francisco, Seattle, Houston, Washington, Chicago and New York. Wierzel has also collaborated with Fela! director and choreographer Bill T. Jones and the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company for 25 years, including work at the Lyon Opera Ballet; Berlin Opera Ballet and The Louvre Museum (Walking the Line). 

Fela! is the true story of the legendary Nigerian musician Fela Kuti, whose Afrobeat rythms ignited a generation. Inspired by his mother, a civil rights champion, he defied a corrupt and oppressive military government and devoted his life and music to the struggle for freedom and human dignity.

Click here to read an interview with Wierzel about his design process for Fela! on LiveDesign.com.

The 2010 Tony Awards will be telecast, live on CBS on June 13 at 8:00 p.m.

Safety First

Orientation

Orientation

Seasonal staff has begun to arrive, which means the summer is almost upon us. This past Monday, we had about 20 people arrive, including our Costume Director, Technical Director, Props Artisans and Carpenters. Each Monday, we have orientation for the incoming staff and interns. I believe next week we will see close to 40 people in orientation. You may remember June’s entry about our safety program. Well, we have started to put the program to work. Everyone who joins the Glimmerglass team hears our policies and our emergency procedures. They receive a campus tour (which includes the locations of all fire extinguishers), and go through courses on back safety and hazardous materials,  among many others. Anyone working with certain hazardous materials during the summer must also be fitted for a respirator. Each summer we hire a Safety Coordinator to make sure everyone receives the training they need. Here is an example of the orientation schedule for incoming staff, created by Safety Coordinator Jenn:

Orientation Schedule

Orientation Schedule

Respirator Fit Testing

Respirator Fit Testing

The Faces Behind “The Tender Land”

On Monday evening, the Glimmerglass Opera Guild held the first installment of the annual “Talking Opera” series at Christ Church in Cooperstown. The free series is presented each spring and includes educational seminars that delve into the upcoming Festival productions.

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men

About 70 people arrived to hear the first seminar offered by Dr. Fiona M. Dejardin, Professor of Art History at Hartwick College. Dejardin’s teaching at Hartwick centers on 19th and 20th Century Art, history of photography and print, women and art and more. She was the perfect person to discuss the inspiration for Aaron Copland’s second opera, The Tender Land, which was ultimately inspired by Let us Now Praise Famous Men, by writer James Agee and photographer Walker Evans. Let Us Now Praise Famous Men is a mostly documentary-style book that explores the lives of three sharecropper families in the South during the 1930s.

Dejardin led the audience through Copland’s thought process in discerning the subject matter for his only full-length opera, and we learned that there were initial thoughts of using Erskine Caldwell’s novel Tragic Ground. Actually, “Stomp Your Foot Upon The Floor” from Act II of The Tender Land was drafted for his original concept. Dejardin played this song for the audience and then remarked, “If you didn’t know this was The Tender Land, you would probably still know it was Copland.”

But it was the photographs in the beginning of Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, which only sold 1,000 copies when it was initially published, from which librettist Erik Johns took his cue. In fact, Dejardin said Johns did not actually read the book, but merely looked at the photographs of the Southern tenant farmers and their living spaces.

Lucille Buroughs

Lucille Buroughs

Photo historian Dejardin displayed the photographs of the people who inspired the characters in The Tender Land – Allie Mae Burroughs (Ma Moss) and Lucille Burroughs (Laurie).

She also discussed the differences between Let Us Now Praise Famous Men and The Tender Land. While both take place in the 1930s, The Tender Land takes place in the Midwest as opposed to the South, and Laurie is much older than the character’s initial inspiration – 10-year-old Lucille Burroughs.

These are just a few of the interesting and insightful comments Dejardin expressed during her hour-long exploration of The Tender Land and its manifestation. The audience was thrilled with what they had learned about the American opera, which will open July 10.

Allie Mae Burroughs

Allie Mae Burroughs

“Dr. Fiona Dejardin’s presentation was a superb glimpse into the background of Aaron Copland’s opera The Tender Land. The talk touched on several areas of particular interest to me personally – photography, rare books, architecture, and, of course, opera,” said Guild President Ed Brodzinsky. “What makes this so fascinating to me is how so much history and art has come together in this work – the music of Aaron Copland, the libretto of Erik Johns, the photography of Walker Evans, the writing of James Agee – and how all of that is used to interpret a period in American history in such a real way.”

The “Talking Opera” series continues May 17 at 7 p.m., when General & Artistic Director Michael MacLeod will discuss Handel, Mozart, and the Early Music Movement.

Glimmerglass Opera Spring Gala

Glimmerglass Opera hosted its Spring Gala to benefit our Young American Artists Program last Tuesday (this post is a little late in arriving). We honored filmmaker James Ivory at the event, and countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo performed. If you’re interested in reading more about the evening, click here to read Panache Privee’s coverage. We also posted some of Ken Levinson’s photos from the evening on Flickr. Feel free to peruse!

The Gala was held at The Metropolitan Club in New York City.

The Gala was held at The Metropolitan Club in New York City.