Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Here's the book on the Opera Company production

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Here's the book on the Opera Company production

    Philadelphia Daily News, PA
    Oct 26 2006

    Here's the book on the Opera Company production


    By TOM DI NARDO
    For the Daily News
    MIMI DIES, AND everyone cries.

    Since its debut in Turin, Italy, 110 years ago, Giacomo Puccini's "La
    Boheme" has gripped audiences emotionally like no other opera.

    Everyone can relate to youthful friendships, first love and
    heartbreak. And the music stirs our imaginations and our heartstrings
    every time.

    Using stories from Henri Murger's four-volume work, "Scenes from the
    Bohemian Life," published in the mid-1800s, librettists Luigi Illica
    and Giuseppe Giacosa fashioned the tale of four poor friends who
    share a shabby Parisian apartment, and the contrasting loves of the
    writer and painter.

    The Opera Company of Philadelphia is staging this masterpiece, one of
    the most performed operas in the repertoire, for the first time since
    1998. It opens tonight at the Academy of Music. The Academy of Vocal
    Arts did it last year, too.

    In 1996, inspired by the opera and by the deaths of some close
    friends, Jonathan Larson created the rock musical "Rent," resetting
    the moving story from Paris to the AIDS-infected world of New York's
    Alphabet City.

    Mimi survives in "Rent," but Larson did not. In a tragedy worthy of a
    Puccini opera, he died of an aortic aneurysm immediately after the
    show's first full staging and never saw it become a hit, moving to
    Broadway and film.

    "La Boheme" also was a smash on Broadway in Baz Luhrmann's updated,
    2002 staging.

    As long as there are operatic stages, "La Boheme" will draw audiences
    into the lives of these beloved and universal characters, and few
    eyes will be dry as the curtain falls.

    The story

    Act I: Rodolfo the writer and Marcello the painter are bemoaning the
    bitter cold in their Parisian apartment, when Colline and Schaunard
    finally arrive with supplies.

    After Benoit the landlord is tricked and sent away without the rent
    he has come to collect, the friends decide to celebrate Christmas Eve
    at the Cafe Momus. Rodolfo stays alone to finish his work. Answering
    a knock on the door, he meets a young woman named Mimi, whose candle
    has gone out.

    They sing about their lives in ravishing arias and a duet and swiftly
    fall in love. Mimi insists they join the friends at the cafe.

    Act II: At the Cafe Momus, Musetta arrives with a rich patron,
    Alcindoro, exciting her old flame, Marcello. She flirts and sings her
    famous aria, finally sending Alcindoro on a phony errand so she can
    reunite with Marcello, and they all leave together. Alcindoro returns
    and is presented with the tab.

    Act III: Months later, Mimi arrives at the outskirts of Paris to see
    Marcello, who consoles her about her breakup with Rodolfo. Mimi hides
    when Rodolfo appears. He first tells Marcello that Mimi was
    unfaithful but finally admits that he left because she is sick and
    may be dying.

    He realizes Mimi has heard the truth, and they pledge to reunite
    until the spring. Meanwhile, Marcello and Musetta fight in the
    background.

    Act IV: The four friends clown, dance and pretend to duel in their
    apartment until Musetta suddenly breaks in with Mimi, who is very
    ill. Musetta leaves to hock her jewelry, and Colline sings an aria to
    his beloved coat before leaving to sell it - all for money to pay a
    doctor.

    Rodolfo and Mimi recall their meeting in a reprise of their first
    music. Mimi's life ebbs away without Rodolfo realizing it,
    heightening the opera's heartwrenching finale.

    About this production

    The company's music director, Corrado Rovaris, conducts, with its
    general director, Robert Driver, handling the directing chores.

    Lighting is by Ruth Hutson, still finding new effects in her sixth
    "Boheme." Costumes were designed by the always imaginative Richard
    St. Clair.

    Opera Company production center director Boyd Ostroff designed and
    built the sets for the 1998 staging. They've been loaned out to other
    companies six times since then. (The company's sets for "Die
    Fledermaus" hold the record - 19 loans.)

    The cast

    The stunning Armenian soprano Ermonela Jaho (who sang magnificently
    at rehearsal) makes her company debut as the consumptive Mimi. Tenor
    Roger Honeywell, who had a role in last year's "Margaret Garner,"
    sings his first Rodolfo, and baritone Troy Cook makes his company
    debut as the painter Marcello.

    Soprano Sari Gruber returns after scoring here in "Don Pasquale" two
    seasons ago to sing the flirty Musetta. The other bohemians are
    portrayed by company favorite baritone Richard Bernstein (Colline),
    who played Figaro in the Mozart classic last season, and
    Curtis-trained baritone Alex Tall as Schaunard.

    Kevin Glavin, a master of the comic repertoire, plays both the
    landlord Benoit and Musetta's sugar daddy, Alcindoro.
Working...
X