
Orchestra's Opera & Humanities Festival focuses on reconciliation
Opera, art and community dialogue take center stage in Cleveland over the next 10 days.
Why it matters: The Cleveland Orchestra's annual Mandel Opera & Humanities Festival is the celebrated ensemble's signature spring event.
It features various performances, art exhibitions and public forums in partnership with other local cultural institutions, starting Friday and running through May 25.
The intrigue: The theme of this year's festival is "Reconciliation," inspired by the early 20th-century opera "Jenůfa" and its themes of trauma, forgiveness and redemption.
The Cleveland Orchestra, led by conductor Franz Welser-Möst, will perform the opera three times at Severance Music Center on May 17, 22 and 25.
State of play: The full lineup of festivities begins at 8:30am Friday with a symposium on immigration at Severance.
Other highlights include performances by Chucho Valdés Royal Quartet and pianist Michelle Cann, as well as forums and exhibitions hosted by the Cleveland Museum of Art, Ideastream and The City Club of Cleveland.
Flashback: The Opera & Humanities Festival began in 2023 as the brainchild of André Gremillet, president and CEO of the Cleveland Orchestra.
The inaugural theme was "The American Dream" followed by "Power" in 2024.
What they're saying:"The goal was to use our annual opera performances to feature not just the Cleveland Orchestra but the incredible cultural scene we have in Cleveland," Gremillet tells Axios.
"The festival is based on music first and foremost, but we also want to stimulate some interesting conversations on topics that are timely and important to the community."
If you go: The festival features a mix of ticketed and free events.
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Washington Post
2 days ago
- Washington Post
`This House' makes world premiere, exploring Black history through a family's legacy in Harlem
ST. LOUIS — Near the end of 'This House,' a heart-wrenching opera given its world premiere last weekend, the matriarch Ida poignantly intones messages to her family on stage and to the audience. 'History's the only thing to survive,' soprano Adrienne Danrich sings before adding: 'You may have left us, but we will never leave you.'

Associated Press
2 days ago
- Associated Press
`This House' makes world premiere, exploring Black history through a family's legacy in Harlem
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Near the end of 'This House,' a heart-wrenching opera given its world premiere last weekend, the matriarch Ida poignantly intones messages to her family on stage and to the audience. 'History's the only thing to survive,' soprano Adrienne Danrich sings before adding: 'You may have left us, but we will never leave you.' A rumination on love, aspiration, coping and the unyielding weight of the past, the roughly two-hour work that opened Saturday night at the Opera Theatre of St. Louis mixes the living and ghosts ambiguously in a Harlem brownstone. Ricky Ian Gordon's lush score brings to vivid life a libretto by Lynn Nottage and her daughter Ruby Aiyo Gerber, weaving impacts of the Civil War, Great Migration, Black Power movement, AIDS crisis and gentrification. There are five more performances through June 29. 'I just wanted to be able to tell all of these really important moments in Black history,' Gerber said, 'but as they relate to one family up into the current moment, so that there is not this erasure as if the past was the past, which I think increasingly now, especially as we see more and more censorship of Black history, is kind of this pervasive narrative.' Writing began when Gerber was a college senior Now 27, Gerber started 'This House' as a play in 2020 during her senior year at Brown while the coronavirus pandemic unfolded. Her mother, the only woman to win a pair of Pulitzer Prizes for drama, for 'Ruined' and 'Sweat, ' suggested Gerber adapt it with her into an opera composed by Gordon, Nottage's partner on 'Intimate Apparel' at Lincoln Center Theater. Opera Theater of St. Louis commissioned 'This House' for its 50th anniversary festival season as its 45th world premiere. 'Equal parts a family drama, a ghost story and a meditation on inheritance and memory,' company general director Andrew Jorgensen said. Ideas were exchanged when Gordon, Nottage and Gerber met at a Providence, Rhode Island, hotel. Among the changes, an escapist duet the librettists centered around Barcelona was changed to Valencia so as not to be similar to Stephen Sondheim's 'Company.' 'Being a mother-daughter you can be so honest,' Gerber said, recalling her mom telling her of one flowery passage: 'That's corny and I don't think it works.' Nottage still lives in the Brooklyn parlor house where Gerber grew up. 'We have different muscles. I'm someone that comes from the playwriting world,' Nottage said. 'Ruby's comfort zone is really poetry and language. and so I thought that between the two of us, we could divide and conquer in some ways.' Opera is set in Harlem brownstone In the resulting story, a house at 336 Convent Ave. was bought in 1919 by Minus Walker, a sharecropper's son. Zoe, a present-day investment banker (soprano Briana Hunter), and husband Glenn (tenor Brad Bickhardt) mull whether to move back to the house and subdivide the property. Zoe's brother, poetic painter Lindon (baritone Justin Austin), doesn't want to leave the house. and his lover Thomas (bass-baritone Christian Pursell) suggests they travel to Spain. Hunter tapped into anxiety, fear, pain and grief to portray Zoe. 'She's an ambitious woman, and she has been through a lot of really horrible, traumatic events through her family,' Hunter said. 'I understand the desire to kind of escape that. She's kind of a classic case of you can't avoid things forever.' Eight of the 10 characters are Black. There's a love triangle, pregnancies and surprise deaths. The house itself sings in 12-tone chords. Ida's Uncle Percy (tenor Victor Ryan Robertson) is a numbers runner who jolts the first act with an aria 'Drink Up!' 'Sportin' Life on steroids,' Gordon said, referring to the dope dealer in 'The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess.' 'We all are haunted by our past, and we all are haunted by our ghosts,' Gordon said. 'The question of living one's life is how does one reconcile the past and go on? How do you move into a future unbridled and free enough to be liberated and not imprisoned by the past?' Conductor has a penchant for contemporary works Daniela Candillari led her third world premiere in less than two years after Jeanine Tesori's 'Grounded' at the Washington National Opera and Rene Orth's '10 Days in a Madhouse' at Opera Philadelphia. Gordon originally envisioned the orchestra as chamber sized to hold down expenses, but Candillari pushed to add instruments. Conducting this is different from leading Verdi or Puccini. 'You can have two conductors read the score in a very different way,' she said. 'Having that direct source. a living composer who can tell you: This is what I heard and this is how I meant it and this is what this needs to be, that's incredibly invaluable.' Forty-eight players from the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra were in the deep pit at the Loretto-Hilton Center for the Performing Arts, a venue with a thrust stage and difficult acoustics. James Robinson, the company's former artistic director, returned to direct the performances and is likely to bring the staging to Seattle Opera, where he became general and artistic director in September 2024. 'It is kind of a ghost story, and I think that's the most important thing, knowing that we're able to bounce back and forth between time periods efficiently,' he said. For Danrich, portraying Ida has a special resonance. She is a St. Louis native and is staying at a hotel three blocks from where she grew up. 'My cousins, my grandmother, my grandfather, me, my sisters, we all lived in that big old house and we called it the big house,' she said. 'I was like, yep, this is my house. I'm actually basing her movements and her mannerisms off of my mother.'

Washington Post
3 days ago
- Washington Post
In a triumphant ‘Tristan and Isolde,' time stands still (for four hours)
PHILADELPHIA — On Sunday afternoon at Marian Anderson Hall, Yannick Nézet-Séguin led his Philadelphia Orchestra through the four-hour entirety of Richard Wagner's 'Tristan and Isolde.' And I don't think I'm overdoing it to say that once it was over, it felt like something Very Important had just happened. Maybe that's because there were several bits of history in the mix — the sort of things that outside the context of opera's most tormented tragedy would qualify as 'fun facts': In addition to being the first Wagner opera that Nézet-Séguin has led with the Philadelphia Orchestra, this was his first time conducting 'Tristan and Isolde' in full. (His second will take place on Sunday, when the program repeats.) Additionally, this is the orchestra's first performance of 'Tristan' since 1934, when it gave the U.S. premiere of the uncut version of the opera, with Hans Grahl singing Tristan and Marga Dannenberg as Isolde. One more: The orchestra uses and in all of the materials where it mentions the title, but I keep typing und. But more than these tidbits, I suspect the palpable heft of the moment as we all mopped our cheeks and filed out through the plaza of the Kimmel Center was due to what we'd just heard — a finely wrought, fully realized performance of 'Tristan' that will reside in my mind as one of the greatest things I've ever heard. And I say 'fully realized' knowing that it wasn't — a good concert performance of an opera makes you forget it's 'just' a concert, and this was one of those. A few folks I spoke to during one of two intermissions even expressed surprise at their relief, freed as they were from extraneous concepts and undue time travel. Light and effective stage direction was provided by Dylan Evans, situating the singers on a platform above the orchestra, where they indeed roiled like the sea beneath Tristan's ship in the first act. If I make it back to Philly this weekend to do it all over again, it will be because of this highly concentrated, assiduously performed and gorgeous-sounding concert treatment. This was also a performance that looked forward. In March of 2026, Nézet-Séguin will lead the opera at his other home base, the Metropolitan Opera, where Yuval Sharon's new production will star tenor Michael Spyres and soprano Lisa Davidsen in the title roles. But Sunday offered a unique and rewarding chance for listeners to get acquainted with Nézet-Séguin getting acquainted with 'Tristan,' an effort that often had him on tiptoes, and not just to show off his Louboutins. Composed between 1857 and 1859 and premiered in 1865, 'Tristan and Isolde' is Wagner's telling of the tale of an Irish princess and a Breton nobleman, drawn together through violence and vengeance but ultimately bound in passion by a potent potion — their love in betrayal of a royal betrothal and defiance of the physical world itself. Were it not for the score's relentless climb, it would be heavy stuff. But from the slow, graceful assembly of themes in the first act to the blissful revelation (and resolution) of its final moments ('Liebestod'), Nézet-Séguin kept his players alive, attentive and attuned to Wagner's singular palette of colors. He stoked Wagner's 'fierce and terrible yearning' in storms of brass and scathing strings; but he also coaxed long stretches of impossible delicacy from the orchestra. The quietest parts were louder than the loudest. For Philadelphians who love their orchestra, it was a also a celebration of individual players. Principal viola Choong-Jin Chang had a sensational long afternoon, as did concertmaster David Kim. From an upper tier, Elizabeth Starr Masoudnia offered an entrancing lament on English horn in the third act, followed by Jeffrey Curnow, sounding the Holztrompete to indicate the long-awaited approach of Isolde by sea. One other fact (slightly less fun) is that these concerts in Philadelphia mark soprano Nina Stemme's final turn in the role of Isolde for the complete opera. The Swedish-born soprano first sang the part at Glyndebourne Festival in 2003 under the guidance of Birgit Nilsson. Two decades later, Isolde seems to reside within her body, her incandescent high notes just one feature of her ample arsenal. Stemme's voice can plunge like a blade (as it did in Act 1, as Isolde hungers for revenge) or leap in orgasmic ecstasy (as it did in Act 3's 'sun drenched day of bliss'). But more than anything, she maximized the tension that keeps the opera's massive emotional arc intact. Tenor Stuart Skelton was a sensational Tristan — his voice big and booming yet surprisingly lithe and lean. The resignation in an aria recounting his tormented past — which did sometimes lose him in the wash of the music — showed canny restraint as he unleashed his full force into the great collapse of Act 3. Mezzo-soprano Karen Cargill was endearing and fiery as Brangäne, switcher of potions and (otherwise) protector of Isolde. She's a mighty mezzo, fully present even when singing from the topmost tier, and gifted with strong, expressive instincts. Her 'Beware!' certainly worked on me, if not on Isolde. Baritone Brian Mulligan was also impressive as Tristan's right-hand man Kurwenal, though the role seemed to take a physical toll on him, a white-knuckle tension attending his hard, steely singing. I quite enjoyed bass Tareq Nazmi, who beautifully rendered King Marke's heartbreak over Tristan's betrayal by leaving shadows of his undermined authority intact. Tenor Freddie Ballentine was smart and affecting as royal tattletale Melot. The tenors and basses of the Philadelphia Symphonic Choir, directed by Donald Palumbo, made bracing contributions as a gang of 'sailors, knights and esquires,' depending on the act. If four hours of focused listening sounds demanding, the average concertgoer need not worry: The run time only makes a difference before the concert starts, when you're making your reservations for the dinner you will absolutely need afterward. In the midst of 'Tristan and Isolde,' time itself seems to come undone — Wagner recalibrates fleeting moments into endless eternities (and vice versa). Like the composer's intermingling themes and the lovers themselves, I left transfigured — the potion has yet to wear off. Richard Wagner's 'Tristan and Isolde' repeats Sunday at Marian Anderson Hall, 300 S. Broad St., Philadelphia.