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Isabel Bayrakdarian: The very model of a modern opera star

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  • Isabel Bayrakdarian: The very model of a modern opera star

    The very model of a modern opera star
    by William Littler, Toronto Star

    The Toronto Star
    May 7, 2005 Saturday

    NEW YORK -- When Isabel Bayrakdarian walks out for her recital onto
    the stage of Roy Thomson Hall tomorrow afternoon, fresh from flirting
    with Don Giovanni at the Metropolitan Opera, she will be accompanied by
    the ghost of a fellow singer who once owned the holograph of Mozart's
    masterpiece, Pauline Viardot-Garcia.

    One of the most celebrated vocalists of the 19th century, daughter
    of a famous voice teacher who sang the tenor lead in the premiere of
    Rossini's The Barber of Seville, Viardot-Garcia reportedly commanded
    a range of 31/2 octaves and a career that took her across Europe.

    What Isabel Bayrakdarian wants us to know is that she was also the
    composer of more than 200 songs, some of which can be heard tomorrow in
    Roy Thomson Hall and even more of which appear on the Armenian-Canadian
    soprano's recent debut album on the Analekta label.

    "Her allure was not her beauty," Bayrakdarian confided over afternoon
    tea the other day, between Met performances. "Someone even said
    she looked like a horse. But dozens of men fell in love with her,
    as they did with Cleopatra." The Russian novelist Ivan Turgenev was
    one of them.

    "I first came across some of the songs through a recording of three
    of them by Cecilia Bartoli, whose singing I love. When I did more
    research I found out that Marilyn Horne also championed some of the
    songs early in her career. But existing recordings did not do justice
    to her large output.

    "Serouj (Kradjian, her recently acquired husband and the piano
    accompanist in tomorrow's recital) and I found more of the songs in
    the Bibliotheque in Paris, at McGill University and in Ann Arbour.
    There is a large collection at the University of Michigan.

    "She spoke several languages and we found that her Italian, French and
    German songs were all stylistically different. We became absorbed and
    went to Analekta with the project to record a whole album of them. It
    is my first project with my husband."

    Although Viardot-Garcia's songs occupy a prominent place in tomorrow's
    recital, Bayrakdarian also wanted to draw attention to the woman's
    close association, as a performer, with the music of Rossini.
    Viardot-Garcia made her operatic debut in London in 1839 as Desdemona
    in the Italian composer's Otello.

    "One of my cardinal rules is not to turn a recital into an opera
    program," the downtown Toronto-based soprano insisted. "Although I'll
    do an aria from Elisabetta, regina d'Inghilterra, Rossini wrote enough
    art songs that I don't have to do half a program of arias."

    Arias are nonetheless what Isabel Bayrakdarian sings much of the time
    these days, thanks to a burgeoning operatic career that is taking
    her to such places as Brussels, Dresden, Salzburg, Paris and Chicago.

    "I thought 2004 was my lucky year," she laughed, "but 2005 isn't so
    bad, either. I am getting ready to take bigger risks with new roles
    now, even in Mozart, where until now I have been working on Susannas
    (in The Marriage of Figaro), Paminas (in The Magic Flute) and Zerlinas
    (in Don Giovanni)."

    It is as Zerlina that she has been appearing in the Metropolitan
    Opera's new production of Don Giovanni, but anyone who thinks of the
    character as an innocent victim of the Don's seductive powers hasn't
    spoken with Bayrakdarian.

    "I think of her as the female version of the Don," she revealed. "I
    may have played her as an innocent years ago, but today I feel she
    is much more calculating. She is a peasant at a time when peasants
    had no rights and she knows very well that her relationship with the
    Don is not about love. She wants the diamonds.

    "She is the most practical character in the opera. And she is certainly
    not a victim. I don't portray any of my characters as victims. It
    gets you nowhere. At the end, when the Don has gone to hell, Donna
    Anna may want to go into a nunnery but she says, let's go for dinner."

    Not that directors always see Zerlina quite as the young Canadian
    diva does. In a recent Salzburg Festival production, she had to appear
    half naked and look visibly mauled, with bruises.

    "Zerlina can be sung many ways," Bayrakdarian suggested. "It has
    difficulties for sopranos, mezzos, rich voices and light voices. But
    it should not be sung by an old singer. Everything has an expiration
    date."

    Her favourite Don? "That's easy. Gerald Finley (another Canadian)
    at The Met. He is not only 100 per cent believable, he is a real
    gentleman. At one performance I slid down the steps of the set and,
    while still singing, he gently lifted me up.

    "Years ago I did a CBC concert and the producer, Neil Crory, had us
    singing the Don Giovanni duet. Little did we realize then that we
    would one day be singing the roles at The Met."

    It was in 2002, in William Bolcom's A View from the Bridge, that
    Bayrakdarian made her debut at the big house at Lincoln Center,
    returning in the Met's first production of Berlioz's Benvenuto
    Cellini. She appears more regularly there at the moment than with
    the Canadian Opera Company.

    "We are working on something for three years from now," she
    acknowledged. "It hasn't been confirmed yet. Anyway, I love singing
    in Toronto, where I can drive to work. My base is always going to
    be in Toronto, although we also keep a place in Madrid, where Serouj
    makes his European headquarters.

    "My next Toronto project is a concert and recording at the Glenn
    Gould Studio (June 6) with Michael Schade and Russell Braun, 'The
    Ultimate Mozart Experience.' Neil Crory is producing again. I think
    he's a genius. He knows voices so well."

    Isabel Bayrakdarian's is a voice the world seems destined to know
    well. Since winning the Metropolitan Opera's 1997 National Council
    Auditions, she has, through a combination of vocal gifts, musical and
    dramatic intelligence, become a prototype of the 21st century opera
    star. And she doesn't look like a horse.

    GRAPHIC: Isabel Bayrakdarian did not portray her Zerlina for the
    Metropolitan Opera's Don Giovanni as merely a victim of the Don,
    who was sung by fellow Canadian Gerald Finley. Bayrakdarian sings a
    solo recital at Roy Thomson Hall tomorrow.
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