Theater, Dance, Comedy and Performance in Chicago

411 Seven Days in Chicago: Dual Roles

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On Friday, May 9, opera history will be made for the city of Chicago. Millennium Park, in conjunction with the Harris Theater and the Chicago Opera Theater, will simulcast one of the most famous operas of all time, “Don Giovanni,” from the Harris Theater to the large screen at Jay Pritzker Pavilion. Brian Dickie, the general director at the Chicago Opera Theater, hopes to bring in new fans who may have never bared witness to an opera before. “There will be a proportionate amount of people coming in just because it’s free and there at Millennium Park,” Dickie says. “I would hope that some may be so thrilled that they become opera lovers forever.” For those worried about seeing their first opera on the big screen instead of on stage, the Harris Theater and Jay Pritzker Pavilion share the same backstage, so there will be a curtain call for both crowds. Dickie also says their crew and director have enough experience to make it look almost as good. “Opera translates quite well to the screen I would say,” Dickie says. “It’s obviously no substitute for seeing one in person, but it is still very exciting.”

Review: The Barber of Seville/Lyric Opera

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RECOMMENDED

One of the practical realities of the enormous expense of producing opera is that all productions—both the good and the bad—will pop up again. This can be a pleasure if a production was interesting and creative the first time around, but a real chore if not. The current Lyric Opera production of Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville” was first seen here nearly twenty years ago and has been revived every half a dozen years or so since, which means that if you enjoyed John Conklin’s free-floating red furniture across sky blue backgrounds with clouds the first time around, you’ll enjoy it again and again and again. If, however, you were left wondering what any of this had to do with “Barber of Seville” in the first place, your confusion is likely to multiply with each viewing. This revival was intended for Juan Diego Flórez, who wowed us in Rossini’s “Cinderella” two seasons ago and is the Rossini tenor of the moment, but who swallowed a fishbone in sunny Barcelona and somehow thought recovering there was preferable to doing so in a gray and cold Chicago in February. Go figure. Oh yes, and since the baritone set to play Bartolo was covering for another no-show who was set to sing the lead in “Falstaff,” there ended up being as many musical chairs in the casting as there are chairs left on the ceiling. With expectations that low, this is a “Barber” that despite coming up a few hairs short, is still a fun experience. Holding things together through all of these changes, Italian conductor Donato Renzetti keeps the orchestra flexible enough for all of the singing yet brisk and light at all times. And despite some vocal mismatches, everyone could be heard and blended as well as possible. Iowa tenor John Osborn may not have Flórez’ glorious timbre and flexible technique, but he does a solid job, especially in the masquerade scenes and grew more confident as the evening went on. Midwest mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato may not have the dark color that some of us prefer for Rosina but her vocal agility and her acting ability more than compensate. Those of us who have experienced Chicago baritone Philip Kraus’ trademark portrayal of Bartolo over the years at Chicago Opera Theater and his many comic performances at Light Opera Works—a company he founded and shepherded for a decade and a half before his own board unceremoniously dumped him—are delighted to see him singing and acting better than ever in a role that has truly become his own at his hometown opera company. (Dennis Polkow)

At the Civic Opera House, 20 N. Wacker, (312)332-2244. This production is now closed.

Bombs Away: Peter Sellars returns to Chicago

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By Dennis Polkow

“Does he still have the spiky hair?” asks a visitor who hasn’t seen director Peter Sellars in years. “Yes,” offers a Lyric Opera staffer, “and oddly enough, there is no mousse, no hairspray, it’s just—well, spiky.” Actually, as a now 50-year-old (but still boyish-looking) Sellars makes his way from the rehearsal stage, his hair looks like a surfeit of snakes standing at attention.

If opera is the domain of the director, there is no director more legendary and eccentric than Sellars, who not only revolutionized the genre with his bold, modern interpretations of the classics, but also by commissioning iconic new works as well that often touch deep social nerves. We haven’t seen Sellars in Chicago for nearly two decades—okay, he did direct a “Merchant of Venice” at Goodman back in 1994—but he sent shock waves throughout the opera world by staging “The Mikado” here on motorcycles in 1983 and then making “Tannhäuser” a disgraced televangelist in 1988. Sellers grins ear to ear when he is told that Lyric’s general director Bill Mason counts these daring and radical productions as among the finest that Lyric ever produced.    

Despite the fact that Sellars has been a constant collaborator with composer John Adams for more than two decades now, “Doctor Atomic” is the first Adams opera that Sellers is directing at Lyric Opera. Their inaugural 1987 “Nixon in China” was heard last year at Chicago Opera Theater and “El Nino” was heard at Ravinia, but “Doctor Atomic” is the first Adams opera ever presented at Lyric and the first production that Sellars has directed at the company since “Tannhäuser.”

Ironically, Adams was not an opera lover, nor even an opera goer, but Sellars told Adams that his music contained such drama that he simply “insisted” that Adams had to work in the form. “Nixon in China” was Sellars’ idea, as have been most of their collaborations. “Not ‘El Nino,’ ” Sellers is quick to point out. “A nativity play? No, that was a commission.”Adams came to Sellars, however, with “Doctor Atomic,” and Sellars was against it at first.

“As artists, we are not equipped to show Auschwitz, Hiroshima, Nagasaki,” Sellars says. “At a certain point, art trivializes things that are truly unspeakable and should not be aestheticized in any way. For me, what was therefore necessary was to draw very clear lines around what we did have the capability of showing and talking about and what we didn’t, and to have the humility in the face of the subject matter to confine ourselves to one twenty-four-hour period: the first atomic test on July 16, 1945.”

The genesis of “Atomic” is the San Francisco Opera asking Adams for a contribution to its 2005 “Faust” season of operas, with Robert Oppenheimer suggested as a modern Faust figure who sold his soul to create the first atomic bomb. “We set to work with Alice Goodman, who had written the librettos for ‘Nixon’ and ‘Klinghoffer,’” Sellars recalls, “and Alice is the person who said, ‘Actually, at the end of his life, Faust signed away and lost his immortal soul, whereas at the end of his life, Robert Oppenheimer realized that he had one.’” Ultimately, Sellars himself ended up writing the libretto, and he is flanked in his backstage office by dozens of books about physics and the bomb. “It’s not an accident that ‘Doctor Faustus’ was such a powerful image in the twentieth century, and we ended up honoring Christopher Marlowe and Thomas Mann with our play on their title. Mann’s novel was very important for the generation that created the bomb, and they were seeing themselves in those images. It really is a Greek tragedy, taking place across a single twenty-four-hour period. The audience walks in with Hiroshima, Nagasaki, the Cold War and nuclear accidents and cover-ups as the future that these men are bringing into the world.”

Sellars is clear that, for him, Oppenheimer begins heroically, “with the idea that the Nazis were going after the bomb and that our beating them to doing it was the only thing that could prevent them from taking over the world. But once Germany surrendered and we realized that there had been no German atomic program as such, we went ahead with the program anyway and unleashed it on civilian cities in Japan to establish ourselves as the world’s lone superpower. Did 350,000 people have to die to test our experiment?

“The fallout of this action is that right now, at this moment, in silos in Russia, there are nuclear warheads at hair-trigger alert, pointing at the city of Chicago.  Why?  We are not at war.  We need to complete the steps that Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev began in the back of a limo, of eliminating all of them.  It’s not a question of North Korea or Iran having them: there is no reason for any of them to exist, anywhere.  The toxins that have been released since 1945 means that cancer is the disease of choice and every one of us knows someone who is in chemotherapy right this minute.  Every one of us has Strontium-90 in our blood cells and bone marrow at this moment from atomic blasts; it is in our milk, our bones, it is throughout the world right now as we continue to be assured that such high levels of radioactivity are perfectly safe.”

He continues, “What is abundantly clear is that nobody can use these weapons. It’s no longer one nation versus another, you release a toxicity that creates a cloud that goes throughout the world. Henry Kissinger and George Schultz are currently at the forefront of the movement to eliminate these weapons. This is no longer conservative versus liberal. This is an issue for all of humanity. We have to eliminate seventy years of profoundly misguided policy and not carry it forward into the twenty-first century.”   

“Doctor Atomic” at the Civic Opera House, 20 North Wacker, (312)332-2244.

Review: The Return of Ulysses/Chicago Opera Theater

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One of then-new Chicago Opera Theater general director Brian Dickie’s first acts in his inaugural 2000 season was to pair British conductor Jane Glover—who would go on to become music director of Music of the Baroque but was at the time unknown to Chicago—and New York stage director Diane Paulus—best known at the time for her off-Broadway disco version of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” called “A Donkey Show”—to collaborate on Monteverdi’s “Orfeo” and initiate the first-ever area cycle of the three extant works of the man who invented musical theater as we now know it. That first “Orfeo” caused such a sensation that it went on to New York, something even a Lyric Opera production has never done, and the pair also ended up inaugurating a Mozart-DaPonte cycle as well, which will conclude next season with “Don Giovanni.” Meanwhile, this season sees the completion of the Glover/Paulus Monteverdi cycle with “The Return of Ulysses,” Monteverdi’s musical re-telling of the central section of Homer’s “Odyssey.” Happily, this highly anticipated production does not disappoint and on virtually every level is a remarkable experience. French mezzo-soprano Marie Lenormand brings the perfect pathos and gorgeous sound to the role of Ulysses’ long-suffering wife Penelope and British tenor Mark Le Brocq infuses the title character with the world-worn weariness and clear tone needed. The gods and mortals that surround them are creatively cast and benefit from Candice Donnelly’s stunning costumes and lighting designer Aaron Black’s clever use of color. The overall staging is significantly elevated by architect Rafael Vinoly’s unit set, a true work of art in itself. Glover and company make sure that the score is energetic and Italianate at all times. (Dennis Polkow)

 

“The Return of Ulysses” runs at Millennium Park’s Harris Theater, 205 East Randolph, (312)704-8414, through April 7. $35-$120. 

Review: Nixon in China/Chicago Opera Theater

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When John Adams’ “Nixon in China” premiered in 1987, it was viewed with suspicion and disdain not only because Watergate and the Cultural Revolution had been such recent events but because Minimalism was seen as a populist and naïve overreaction to the kind of academic ghetto that the American composer had fenced himself into, epitomized by Milton Babbitt’s anti-audience essay, “Who Cares if You Listen?” Yes, Philip Glass, the High Priest of the movement had written operas, and one of them, “Satyagraha,” was even heard at Lyric Opera at the time. But whereas Glass kept—and is still keeping—to a stricter form of Minimalism that emphasizes subtly shifting patterns within the repetitions, Adams began using arpeggios as cells or musical gestures that began evolving into larger structures with Wagnerian orchestrations to build dramatic tension and release and allowing an ever-widening palette of dynamics and popular, jazz and world-music idioms. Nowhere has this approach been more effective than in “Nixon,” a work of remarkable originality that is finally getting its Chicago premiere two decades after the fact by Chicago Opera Theater which despite Lyric’s “Towards the 21st Century” decade-long aberration of presenting newer works has always been the more daring of the two companies. Read the rest of this entry »

Review: The Abduction from the Seraglio/Chicago Opera Theater

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If anyone needed a reminder of how ahead of his time Mozart was in virtually every respect in this 250th anniversary year if his birth, the first major area staging in more than two decades of the most popular of his operas during his lifetime, “The Abduction from the Seraglio,” should serve as a powerful reminder. Chicago Opera Theater’s welcome production of this masterpiece manages to bring us more true-to-life characterizations of Muslims and Middle Eastern culture than may be found in much of today’s Western movies and media. The only opera in which Mozart named the heroine after his own wife, its remarkable portrayal of love and marriage and what is required for both offer more sage advice than could be had in a dozen Dr. Phil books. The luxurious cast includes soprano Leah Partridge scaling the stratospheric heights of Konstanze with seeming ease and tenor Michael Colvin as her robust-sounding beloved, but no less impressive is rival couple Sarah Coburn and Matthew Garrett. Northwestern senior and recent Metropolitan Opera prizewinner Paul Corona has an obvious bright future ahead of him and makes a commanding Osmin, although his Mozartean technique and lower range are in need of work. Jane Glover conducts with the clarity, balance and energy that distinguish her many topnotch Mozart performances, and though Australian director Justin Way brings out the work’s dramatic nuances and plot twists impressively, the bland and truncated set design more often than not serves as a distraction to his efforts. (Dennis Polkow) Read the rest of this entry »

Review: The Padlock, Dido and Aeneas/Chicago Opera Theater

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British conductor extraordinaire Raymond Leppard was an early-music pioneer long before such a field existed, and it is great to see him back at the podium after a long absence from area stages conducting an engaging double-bill for Chicago Opera Theater. Though area mezzo-soprano Susanne Mentzer has suffered from the long-practiced Lyric Opera dictum that a prophetess is never appreciated in her own home, she has made the world her stage, literally, and makes her COT debut as Dido in the Henry Purcell one-act opera of the legendary lovers. Though preferring to gloss over the vocal runs of the work’s technically demanding brisker sections, Mentzer’s glorious timbre and poignant pathos in the finale alone make this a very special evening and director Lillian Groag staging of the tragic finale packs a true emotional punch often lacking in operatic stagings. By contrast, the frivolity of Charles Dibdin’s “The Padlock” opens the evening and serves as a clever framing device for the presentation of “Dido.” Though some of the chatty unsung dialogue of the work could be cut, the music is engaging and tuneful and has been lovingly reconstructed by Leppard himself. This is exactly the kind of edgy and engaging program that COT excels in: using resources and repertoire untapped by Lyric Opera that would otherwise go unheard. (Dennis Polkow)

7:30pm, Feb. 23, 25, Harris Theater, 205 E. Randolph; (312)704-8414.

Review: The Marriage of Figaro/Chicago Opera Theater

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Following up on its 2002 updating of Mozart’s “Cosi fan tutte”—which took place in a singles bar—Chicago Opera Theater now turns its attention to that most perfect of musical comedies, “The Marriage of Figaro.” Conductor Jane Glover and director Diane Paulus are back for their fifth COT collaboration, their best yet. Figaro and his fiancée Susanna now reside in modern-day Miami, a surprisingly effective and clever transposition of the work’s lampooning of 18th-century class relationships. Cell-phone text messaging, pill popping, football fanatics, loud outfits, swaying palm trees and partying the night away stand alongside Mozart’s music quite convincingly, revealing characters that are as sharply drawn and as relevant as ever. Even purists who might be put off by the updates will be so blown away by the first-class singing and the exuberance and immediacy of this stellar young cast that regrets should definitely not be sent. (Dennis Polkow)

“The Marriage of Figaro” plays at the Harris Theater, 205 East Randolph, (312)704-8414 through May 14.