Performing Arts

American Lyric Theater Champions Diversity and Representation with Signature Opera Writers Program

 
From February 27 through April 24, American Lyric Theater conducts a free, eight-week, virtual symposium on writing for the opera stage. The CLDP Opera Writers Symposium will provide artists with practical tools for both first-time and experienced c…

From February 27 through April 24, American Lyric Theater conducts a free, eight-week, virtual symposium on writing for the opera stage. The CLDP Opera Writers Symposium will provide artists with practical tools for both first-time and experienced creatives with an interest in creating new opera.

By Rebecca Davis

(New York, NY) - Leading voices of American Lyric Theater (ALT) and the Composer Librettist Development Program (CLDP) -- including ALT’s Founder Lawrence Edelson; Associate Artistic Director Kelly Kuo; composers Anthony Davis, Justine Chen and Jorge Sosa; librettists Stephanie Fleischmann and Lila Palmer; and dramaturg Cori Ellison – discuss ALT’s Opera Writers Diversity and Representation Initiative (OWDARI). They share the importance of diversity in the creation of new works of opera, their own journeys with the art form and how the American Lyric Theater addresses proactively recruiting musicians and writers of all racial and artistic backgrounds to take part in their flagship biennial Composer Librettist Development Program (CLDP).  

Dramaturg Cori Ellison says, “the best art has always held up a mirror to society, challenging and inspiring us to evolve by facing our frailties or laughing at our foibles, there's so much we can learn from the mirrors held up by the new and diverse voices we're welcoming into our art form.”   

Each artist and leader answered a series of questions on the topic of diversity in opera and what the CLDP does to foster it. Their answers enlighten and inspire.  


Why is it important for opera to be open to new perspectives from both composers and librettists? 

ALT’s Founder LAWRENCE EDELSON: Opera is an extraordinarily impactful way to tell stories - bringing together music and theater through a physical realization on stage or, increasingly, through digital channels of distribution. Ultimately, who tells what stories matters. New perspectives that are representative of contemporary American society are vital to keep opera relevant. It’s important to remember that opera’s origins were as a populist art form. The opera house was the first musical institution to open its doors to the general public. The first opera house was opened in Venice in 1637, presenting commercial opera and run for profit. Public tastes and preferences have shaped opera throughout history, though admittedly, opera has also consciously excluded the perspectives of significant portions of the population - often with racist motivations. If those writing opera in the 21st century don’t reflect the totality of contemporary American society, opera won’t be meaningful - either as art or entertainment. 

Dramaturg CORI ELLISON: The best art has always held up a mirror to society, challenging and inspiring us to evolve by facing our frailties or laughing at our foibles.  Diversity is not a new thing in American society, but the complete and eager embrace of it certainly is, and there's so much we can learn from the mirrors held up by the new and diverse voices we're welcoming into our art form.   

“Malcolm X used the expression "that old pale thing" to describe the legacy of racism that has plagued our country since its inception. Opera can no longer afford to be merely "that old pale thing" that only represents White male composers and librettists and the implicit credo of white supremacy. This is a fundamental question of the survival of the art form.” - Composer Anthony Davis 

Librettist LILA PALMER: Opera is one of many music drama traditions, that speaks to human life through song. We turn to stories with music to learn who we are and see ourselves, to educate, build, enforce and when necessary, break down the myths and driving assumptions of our culture. We do that through the creation of empathy and the possibilities of imagination. Opera has traditionally been created by a limited group of people, and consequently the stories and myths and power dynamics it perpetuates align with both the traumas and concerns of that group. But there are wider audiences to reach, to entertain and to speak to, and we need a wider group of storytellers to do that. 

Composer JORGE SOSA: Storytelling is continuously evolving and is in perpetual transformation, so it is essential that we open up avenues for composers and librettists to share and engage with dramatic ideas that can propel the genre forward in order to assert the art form's relevance. 

Opening one’s mind to the ideas that composers and librettists of diverse backgrounds bring to the table can open doors that one did not know existed; doors that lead to a better version of ourselves.   And sometimes perspectives not chained to the expectations and traditions of the past are exactly what is needed to open paths to evolution.” - ALT Associate Artistic Director Kelly Kuo

Librettist STEPHANIE FLEISCHMANN: Telling stories is a powerful means for not just making sense of our world but for enacting change. The stories we have to tell are infinite. They encompass everybody’s stories. And they must be told by everybody if we are to represent this complex messy world we live in—if we are to attempt to articulate some sort of truth that expresses who we are as humans. Telling stories via music—a form that has the potential to mine an emotional terrain that reaches beyond language to a place that is, simply, and overwhelmingly human—promises to transgress boundaries, cross bridges, reach beyond the walls that we as a civilization still seem far too intent on constructing between us (whoever we may be) and those who hail from cultures different from our own. And yet American opera has been slow to embrace a vibrant, rich, magnificently diverse, multicultural world. Opera as a form will only thrive if and when it is a medium that upholds a diverse breadth of stories housed within a diverse breadth of forms, a diverse breadth of approaches to telling stories, made by a diverse breadth of makers, within institutions led by a diverse group of leaders, performed by singers who represent the diversity and multiplicity of our communities, directed and designed by artists whose lived experience and cultural legacy is not solely western and white. 

ALT Associate Artistic Director Kelly Kuo

ALT Associate Artistic Director Kelly Kuo

ALT’s Associate Artistic Director KELLY KUOWe only survive and grow as a species through collaboration and the best collaboration occurs only when each party can look at things from a variety of perspectives.  In this respect, opera is no different than any other human endeavor.  Opening one’s mind to the ideas that composers and librettists of diverse backgrounds bring to the table can open doors that one did not know existed; doors that perhaps lead to a better version of ourselves.   And sometimes perspectives not chained to the expectations and traditions of the past are exactly what is needed to open paths to evolution. 

Composer JUSTINE CHEN: Composers and librettists both hold the keys to different forms of expression in opera.  Words have a certain power, and music has a different kind of power.  One can also inspire and unlock the other.  When there are two creators working towards a similar goal, each artist knows how to achieve that goal with one art, when two work together, the combination can magnify and heighten the effect.  When two people from different backgrounds collaborate, a new perspective emerges - similar to the combination of two lines of sight giving the perception of depth. There is a danger of stagnation without new perspectives, so recycling old perspectives is not a way to move forward. 

Composer Anthony Davis

Composer Anthony Davis

Composer ANTHONY DAVISMalcolm X used the expression "that old pale thing" to describe the legacy of racism that has plagued our country since its inception.  In order to be a viable art form for the future, opera can no longer afford to be merely "that old pale thing" that only represents White male composers and librettists and the implicit credo of white supremacy. This is a fundamental question of the survival of the art form.  Can Opera be part of something so much bigger and more representative? 

On Monday, March 22nd, this six-part Q&A with ALT’s expert panel continues via Opera Innovation on Facebook.


American Lyric Theater is currently in the midst of its first ever virtual Opera Writers Symposium, a series of workshops and mini-seminars for composers and writers taking place February 27 – April 24. With the symposium, ALT seeks to introduce musicians and writers from diverse racial and artistic backgrounds to opera and explore how they might use the tools of the art form to tell their stories. ALT also hopes to encourage applications to the Composer Librettist Development Program (CLDP), the country’s only full-time paid mentorship for emerging opera composers, librettists and dramaturgs.  

Symposium classes include:  

  • The Architecture of Opera: Outlining for Composers and Librettists led by composer/librettist Mark Adamo 

  • Dramatizing History and Opera as Activism led by dramaturg  Cori Ellison  

  • Opera, Technology and Innovation led by composers  Kamala Sankaram  and  Jorge Sosa 

  • From Erased to Self-Empowered: Celebrating BIPOC Opera Composers and Librettists led by ALT’s Associate Artistic Director Kelly Kuo  

  • How to Have a Healthy Marriage: Collaboration Best Practices led by ALT’s Founder Lawrence Edelson and dramaturg Cori Ellison 

Guest speakers during the symposium include composers Anthony Davis, Missy Mazzoli, Daniel Bernard Roumain, Huang Ruo and Errollyn Wallen; and librettists Mark Campbell, Thulani Davis (also a poet and playwright), David Henry Hwang, Andrea Davis Pinkney (also a children’s book author), and Royce Vavrek.   

The symposium provides practical tools for both first-time and experienced artists with an interest in developing new works for the operatic stage and serve as an introduction to ALT’s Composer Librettist Development Program (CLDP), a two-year, tuition-free professional training program for writers interested in creating new operas that includes extensive mentorship and direct financial support. No previous experience in writing opera is necessary.  

The CLDP Opera Writers Symposium is completely free, but  advance registration is required for each seminar, please.  Complete program details here. Lead funding for the symposium comes from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.  

The Opera Writers Symposium is part of ALT’s Opera Writers Diversity and Representation Initiative (OWDARI). In consultation with an Advisory Committee comprised of BIPOC artists and related experts in the field, ALT is examining every part of the company’s operations with the goal of addressing structural inequality and racism and increasing participation by BIPOC artists in the company’s flagship mentorship program.  


Rebecca Davis Public Relations
Rebecca Davis
347.432.8832
rebecca@rebeccadavispr.com

 

Exercises on The Presence of Odradek: Translating a Live Production for the Virtual Stage

 
Photo: Bare Opera and Culture Hub NYC

Photo: Bare Opera and Culture Hub NYC

By Briana E. Hunter

(New York, NY) - We are now months into the quarantine, and the realities of the global pandemic have created a new normal. The hustle and bustle of daily life has come to a crashing halt. Restaurants have closed table-service, clothing stores have locked their doors, and businesses have sent their employees home. 

Like so many other institutions, opera companies around the world shuttered their doors amid the threat of a global pandemic. Performances were cancelled and artists sent home. With voices trained to reach the balconies of grand opera houses, these artists must settle for a more modest venue. For some, their (miniscule) apartments are their new stage. For others, it is a childhood bedroom. Their new audience? The vacuums left leaning against walls and the opera scores they’ve accumulated over the years.  

To be clear, we are the lucky ones, the ones who can afford to remain in isolation. And yet, despite our privileges, this new normal is maddening for artists who gain energy through communal experiences. All have mourned missed openings or debuts. Many now sing into tiny cameras on phones and tablets, seeking connection. And while social media and virtual connectivity provide a temporary salve, we still long for a return to the stage. We miss being immersed in the delicious, resonant experience of musical collaboration.

Bare Opera is no exception to this upheaval. In a co-production with Culture Hub NYC, Bare was set to produce “The Presence of Odradek” just as the COVID-19 crisis shook New York City to its core in March. When it became apparent that an in-person show would no longer be possible, the team worked quickly to reimagine Odradek for a virtual medium. By incorporating virtual reality (VR) technologies, the show promises an immersive experience in your living room. 

Sneak peek of our live, online world premiere on May 12, 2020 of new opera The Presence of Odradek by David Rosenmeyer. Combining dance, opera, live projecti...

Overall, our approach gestures to a potential solution for opera in the time of Coronavirus. To better understand our redirect to virtual performances, I chatted with Odradek’s creative team about their approach and how they managed to successfully innovate and pivot toward an online platform. 

I began with Director, Singer, and Creator Malena Dayen, and composer David Rosenmeyer (who also happens to be her husband).

B:  When did you find out the live performances wouldn’t be possible for this show, and at what stage were you in the process?

M: In March, we were in the middle of workshops when we realized that we had to change our plans. We decided to explore the possibilities of live streaming, trying to stay as live and creative as we could.

B: What were the biggest challenges you faced in converting your original production to a VR online live experience?

M: When we started working on the live streaming idea, we decided not to try to replace the theatre experience, but to play and have fun with the new rules. Most of the ideas we were working on originally adapted and evolved in the VR performance, others we had to give up. The issues with the sound, mixing live performances from different locations, at times combined with pre-recorded video, was challenging from a technical point of view. 

D: It was definitely a challenge (musically) and in certain parts I had to accompany a singer without actually hearing/listening to him, but having their video stream on a monitor so I could calculate the moments to be together based on the movement of his lips. 

M: [She laughs]…we tried different creative ways, and we’re still trying to make it better in the upcoming performances. Overall I thought the VR online live experience was exciting and I can’t wait to keep working in this medium, even after we are allowed back into the theatre!

B: I couldn’t agree more. The VR experience was unreal!  Malena, can you tell us a little bit about how you met Sangmin (Video/Tech designer)? 

M: When I started directing (I started as an opera singer), I enrolled in an MFA at CUNY Brooklyn College to study Performance and Interactive Media Arts.  That’s where I met Sangmin Chae, [he] was my classmate. 

B: That’s right, this is not the first time you and Sangmin, and even Troy (choreographer) have worked together.

M: Yes, [Sangmin and I] collaborated on several projects together, including my three (past) productions with Bare Opera: Piazzolla’s “Maria de Buenos Aires,” “Don Giovanni,” and now “Exercises on the Presence of Odradek.” Troy Ogilvie also collaborated in all three [above] productions. She’s an amazing choreographer who creates very poetic and specific languages for each production. Both Sangmin and Troy, as well as my husband, composer David Rosenmeyer, have been involved from the beginning in this project.

B: We absolutely love working with you all and are so happy you have continued to produce work with us.  How did you come up with the concept for this show…what’s it about? 

M:“The Presence of Odradek” is based on Franz Kafka’s “The Cares of a Family man.”  It plays with Kafka’s text as well as poems by Avot Yeshurun, exploring how art is able to give presence to absence.

D: As for the music, Malena and I would have long conversations about the piece.  Our vision for the stage (which later became the video screen), the topics that interested us, and the techniques we wanted to explore, like making a collage with improvisations. Then I’d just let it marinate inside me until a deadline forced it to become something to share... 

B: Well, I think we are all experiencing the very large presence of absence all over the world.  What do you want the audience to take away from the experience?

M: There’s really no wrong way to experience this piece.  I hope our audiences join us with curiosity and sensibility. I hope they enjoy the agency they have to explore VR and the chat functions, as they wish. I hope they find this piece both mysterious and revealing at the same time.

Screen capture from “Exercises on The Presence of Odradek” | Photo: Bare Opera and Culture Hub NYC

Screen capture from “Exercises on The Presence of Odradek” | Photo: Bare Opera and Culture Hub NYC

Inspired by Malena and David, I knew I needed to talk to Sangmin Chae (the magician behind the video/tech engineering) and find out more about his VR world.

B: Could you talk a bit about the technology behind Odradek?  How do we get these incredible effects and visuals?

S: Our plan was to use a variety of holographic techniques for the performances, but we had to make a lot of technical changes due to the COVID-19 situation. So, we chose VR technology. We received a lot of help from Culturehub. I’m currently working there as a Creative Technologist where I develop, test, and implement various technologies for artists.  In particular, we are studying VR, AR, and Telepresence, and in this performance, we applied various VR technologies and cylinder hologram technologies to the performance.

B: For those of us who are less tech literate, what does that all mean?

SVR refers to experiencing a virtual world through VR devices that block the real world. Because 360-degree virtual reality unfolds, it is called VR to experience a perfect virtual space that is far from reality! On the contrary, AR is a technology that overlaps three-dimensional virtual interest based on the real world, such as the background environment, based on the location information system based on gyroscope information. What we have in common is that we both have to create a virtual world. Telepresence technology is a technology that remotely brings people from afar and makes them look like they're in the same space. It is mainly used for video conferencing, and I incorporated it into the performance.

B: Thank you Sangmin, this is fascinating.  I can’t wait to see what you come up with in the future!

S: Thank you, Briana!

Screen capture from “Exercises on The Presence of Odradek” | Photo: Bare Opera and Culture Hub NYC

Screen capture from “Exercises on The Presence of Odradek” | Photo: Bare Opera and Culture Hub NYC

Lastly, I caught up with choreographer Troy Ogilvie.

B: What are the differences in designing movement/choreography for the physical space versus the VR world?

T: I enjoy the intimacy and controlled agency of VR. I find that there’s a delicious intimacy in dance that more easily translates into film than onstage, simply because proscenium productions typically require more distance. Even if we are able to curate that kind of intimacy - the sound of fabric, a finger tracing an elbow - in maybe a more immersive setting, there is still a lot of room for distraction while on film you get to be really clear about what is paid attention to. What we gain in intimacy and control, we lose by severing that electric, irreplaceable synergy between performers and audience that exists when everyone shares the same physical space.

B: This is not your first time working with Sangmin and Malena, what makes your collaborations so special and unique? Describe your process of working together.

T: Malena always brings these incredibly inspiring ideas and references to our first meetings about a project. I can't help but get excited about the material and her thoughts. She then gives me such trust and freedom that I really feel like I do my best work when collaborating with her. I have worked less directly with Sangmin, but as far as I'm concerned he's a magician and I'm always blown away by what he creates.

B: How would you describe your artistic voice?

T: Ha! Good question. My answer will probably be a bit sideways. I’m interested in movement that is untranslatable - that is itself and neither a metaphor nor pantomime (which is its own art form!).  I search for movement that is direct. The same way that effective poetry cuts through prose's syntactical red tape, I hope that my choreography - which is always in collaboration with the performer - cuts through affectations of style and this idea of “dance for dance's sake.”  I also love a show! It's always fun to find the most resonant tension between abstraction and entertainment so that you can both charm and challenge your audience.

My sincere thanks to Malena, David, Sangmin, and Troy for their time and unique insights!

LEARN MORE ABOUT

“Exercises on The Presence of Odradek”

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Briana Elyse Hunter is Bare Opera’s Marketing and Communications Director.

A mezzo soprano “of astounding vocal and dramatic range,” Briana is represented by Aaron Grant at L2 Artists