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OPERA: Has child, will travel - a lot: Interview with Isabel

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  • OPERA: Has child, will travel - a lot: Interview with Isabel

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    May 6 2008

    OPERA: INTERVIEW

    Has child, will travel - a lot

    Colin Eatock talks to Canadian soprano sensation and biomedical
    engineering grad Isabel Bayrakdarian about life on the opera circuit
    with her five-month-old son
    COLIN EATOCK

    Special to The Globe and Mail
    May 6, 2008

    Isabel Bayrakdarian opens the door to her dressing room at Toronto's
    Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts. On the windowsill is the
    long, auburn wig she will wear as Mélisande, in the Canadian Opera
    Company's production of Pelléas et Mélisande opening tonight. Hanging
    on the closet door are her radiantly colourful costumes.

    The conversation, however, soon turns to babies - a topic of much
    interest to Bayrakdarian these days. "It ends with us not knowing
    whose baby she has," she says of Debussy's only opera, "whether it's
    Pélleas's or Golaud's - or whether she had conceived before meeting
    Golaud. Mélisande is unlike any other role I've portrayed, because
    musically and dramatically it's so very ambiguous."

    The 34-year-old Toronto-based soprano continues, explaining how the
    ending of the work has a personal significance for her, as a new
    mother herself. "The first time we rehearsed the final scene - when
    Mélisande is too weak to raise her arms to hold her newborn child - I
    found it very disturbing." For the performances, she has requested
    that the eyes on the theatrical doll be closed, so as not to look so
    lifelike.

    The birth five months ago of Ari, to Bayrakdarian and her pianist
    husband, Serouj Kradjian, hasn't slowed her down. While she did have
    to withdraw from rehearsals for The Marriage of Figaro at New York's
    Metropolitan Opera in the fall as her due date approached, she has
    bounced right back into professional life. She has recently appeared
    in concerts and recitals in New York; San Francisco; St. Paul, Minn.;
    and Kansas City, Mo.; and in a production of Don Pasquale in Denver.

    "My baby has been travelling with me ever since he was one month old,"
    she says. "He's been very co-operative - it's almost as if he knew
    what he was getting into! When he's older, things will change, but
    that's a bridge we'll cross when we get to it."

    It was 10 years ago Bayrakdarian sang her first role with the COC: the
    Sandman in Hansel and Gretel. She was just 24, fresh out of the COC's
    Ensemble Studio training program. If her degree in biomedical
    engineering didn't point to a singing career, her win at Placido
    Domingo's Operalia Competition in 2000 certainly did. Since then, her
    ascent to the heights of her profession has been swift and sure -
    guided by a careful selectivity and a wide-ranging eclecticism.

    "Initially," she recalls, "I turned down a lot of engagements, when
    other singers were saying, 'Oh my God, I would love to have that
    opportunity.' When I was 21, I was asked to sing Liu in Turandot, but
    said no thank you."

    Deciding that Puccini's big-voiced roles could wait, she turned to
    Mozart: to Zerlina in Don Giovanni, Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro
    and Pamina in The Magic Flute.

    Critics have been impressed with her Mozart. The New York Times
    declared her Pamina "beautiful in every way you can be: in singing, in
    comportment, in looks." And the San Diego Union-Tribune recently
    credited her with bringing "alluring expertise" to the role of
    Susanna.

    Yet she willfully resists being pigeonholed. "I've always been known
    as a Mozart interpreter. I've done a lot of Susannas - you could wake
    me up a 3 a.m. and I could sing it, and prompt the other performers at
    the same time. But sometimes you need the thrill of learning something
    new. I don't understand how some singers can bring freshness and
    novelty to a couple of roles that they do all the time. I'm not one of
    those singers - I need the stimulation of new excitement."

    Even as she built a reputation for Mozart, Bayrakdarian cultivated
    other musical interests: 20th-century opera and Italian bel canto
    roles. "I'm very fortunate," she notes, "because people who do casting
    'get' me. I have been offered interesting parts because the people who
    make the decisions know that if they ask me to do a role, I'm going to
    do it justice."

    Also, her skills as a recitalist have won her much praise. "What
    impressed me most," reported a critic for Opera News magazine, after a
    2005 Carnegie Hall performance, "was that she chose not to take the
    audience by storm; instead, she captured it by stealth."

    And she has followed pathways that have led her away from the
    tried-and-true classical repertoire. She sang on the soundtrack of The
    Lord of the Rings movie The Two Towers, and also for Atom Egoyan's
    film Ararat. She has taken an interest in Latin-American music and has
    recorded a CD of tango songs for CBC Records.

    It was Bayrakdarian's first journey to Armenia in 2004 that inspired
    her current fascination with the music of her ancestral homeland. "In
    Armenia," she says, "when you walk on the ground, you feel 1,700 years
    of Christianity right in the soil. ... it puts in perspective a huge
    history you can't really grasp if you're not there. I promised myself
    I would return, and I have."

    In the capital city of Yerevan, she performed with the Armenian
    Philharmonic Orchestra and with local folk musicians. The trip was
    documented in the film The Long Journey Home, aired on CBC. (She can
    also be heard singing in Armenia, accompanied by a group of musicians
    playing a flute-like instrument called the duduk, on YouTube.) In the
    fall, she will undertake a tour with some of the musicians she worked
    with in Armenia; there's a Toronto performance at Roy Thomson Hall on
    Oct. 17.

    For the next few months, however, opera is dominating her schedule:
    Pelléas et Mélisande in Toronto, followed by The Marriage of Figaro in
    Munich (her last Susanna for a while) and the title role in The
    Cunning Little Vixen in Japan.

    Beyond that, she is deliberately vague. "I don't believe in having a
    five-year or a 10-year plan. I already know my two-year plan - I have
    it in my calendar. But how I fill the voids in between my engagements
    is something that I like to leave to the unexpected. Who knows?"

    Pelléas et Mélisande runs on various dates at Toronto's Four Seasons
    Centre until May 24 (416-363-8231).
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