The little OPERA theatre of ny (LOTNY), in collaboration with New York based period ensemble New Vintage Baroque,presents the New York City Premiere of Piramo e Tisbe at Baruch Performing Arts Center, 55 Lexington Avenue, NYC, from March 22-25, 2018, with performances on Thursday through Saturday at 7:30pm and Sunday at 3pm. Tickets are $35 and are available at https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/cal/35006. Based upon the story of Pyramus and Thisbe from Ovid's Metamorphoses with a libretto by Marco Coltellini, Piramo e Tisbe is byJohann Adolph Hasse, a pivotal opera composer of the 18th Century celebrated for his sweet and tender melodies. Sung in Italian with English supertitles.
A wall and family feud stand between Pyramus and Thisbe. Their secret plans to unite unravel under the moonlight. Conducted by Elliot Figg,by LOTNY Artistic Director Philip Shneidman, with set design by Neil Patel (Alcina at Washington Opera, The Crucible at The Glimmerglass Festival) and Cate McCrea, costume design by Lara de Bruijn (Rome?o et Juliette at Castleton Festival, Alcina at Boston Conservatory), lighting design by Grant W.S. Yeager (What We're Up Against at Women's Project Theater), and projection design by Alex Basco Koch.
Featured in the cast are mezzo-sopranos Sarah Nelson Craft and Kristin Gornstein as "Piramo,"sopranos Summer Hassan and Kelly Curtin as "Tisbe,"and tenors Glenn Seven Allen and Brian Downen as "Padre," with actors Giovanni Da Silva and Hunter Hoffman.
Johann Adolph Hasse (1699-1783) was born near Hamburg, and began his career as a singer in that city. In 1721 he left for Italy where his training and career as a composer developed and flourished. An early success was his serenata Antonio e Cleopatra presented in Naples and featuring the then new singer Farinelli. Soon after, the opera Artaserse to a libretto by Metastasio was presented in Venice during Carnival of 1725 and helped secure his fame. The opera's celebrated arias performed by Farinelli were hit tunes of their day and furthered Hasse's fame throughout Europe. Other operas and success followed for Hasse and he played a pivotal part in the development of opera seria and 18th-century sacred music.
Notable for his close friendship and collaboration with the influential Italian poet and librettist Metastasio along with his marriage to the highly regarded soprano Faustina Bordoni, Hasse entered into the Saxon Royal service as court kapellmeister in 1733 (one of the best-paid positions of the time), launching a nearly 30-year long stretch of prolific activity that propelled Dresden Opera to its peak of popularity. Highlights from his many operas composed between 1730-1771 include Didone abbandonata, Cleofide, Siroe, La Clemenza di Tito, all to librettos by Metastasio. Among Hasse's many sacred cantatas, I pellegrini al sepolcro di Nostre Signore from 1742 was popular throughout German and Italian lands. A victim of changing aesthetics of the period, Hasse's career also was altered by the Seven Years War in Europe (1756-1763) with the dissolution of the court in Dresden. In 1768 he composed the intermezzo tragico Piramo e Tisbe, to a libretto by Marco Coltellini for a performance in an unidentified country estate outside of Vienna. He revised his opera in 1770 for performance in the city at the Laxenburg Palace Theater. Johann Adolf Hasse spent his last years in Venice with his wife, where he died in 1782. His grave was unmarked until 1820.
Marco Coltellini (1724-1777) was born in Montepulciano and died in St. Petersburg. Active throughout the 18th century in the world of Opera, Coltellini wrote librettos for Traetta, Gluck, Salieri, and Mozart among others. At the premiere of Hasse's Piramo e Tisbe, the multi-talented librettist sang the role of "Il Padre." In 1775 Coltellini created a revised version of the libretto for London with music by Venanzio Rauzzini. Coltellini had based his libretto on one of the most popular tales from Ovid [43 BCE - 17 CE]. Pyramus and Thisbe appear in Book IV of Ovid's narrative poem Metamorphoses which was widely translated, read, and adapted in Europe by writers and students of Latin. Chaucer, Dante, Boccaccio, and Shakespeare are just a few of the authors who have referenced the original star -crossed lovers from ancient Babylon.
Tenor Glenn Seven Allen is garnering critical acclaim on theatre, opera, and concert stages throughout the country as a consummate singing actor, lauded for his dynamic interpretations of heroes and leading men, alike. This season, Mr. Allen performs Jack Twist in Brokeback Mountain with New York City Opera, Dan Goodman in Next to Normal with Syracuse Stage, sings the tenor solo in Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 with Glacier Symphony, and performs La bohème with Reclamation Opera.
Mezzo-soprano Sarah Nelson Craft has received wide acclaim for her solo and operatic performances. Opera News called her 2016 Carnegie Hall recital "exquisite" and "glowing," while Parterre Box praised her "fluid, robust singing" in LoftOpera's production of Mozart's Così fan tutte. She has been a soloist at Lincoln Center's Avery Fisher Hall and Alice Tully Hall and performed roles with companies including the Caramoor International Music Festival and Macau International Music Festival. Upcoming engagements include a solo recital for Carnegie Hall's Neighborhood Concerts series and Canteloube's Chants d'Auvergne with Brooklyn Symphony Orchestra.
Brian Downen (tenor)'s 2017-18 season includes appearances at the Metropolitan Opera (cover for Andres, Cochenille, Frantz, and Pitichinaccio in LES CONTES D'HOFFMANN) and El Paso Opera (Mozart Moon, a concert of opera arias and scenes). Career highlights include singing Monsieur Triquet in EUGENE ONEGIN and Lord Cecil in ROBERTO DEVEREUX at the Metropolitan Opera; Belmote in DIE ENTFÜHRUNG AUS DEM SERAIL for Opera Roanoke; Don Ramiro in LA CENERENTOLA for Shreveport Opera; Crepuscolo/Zeriffo in VEREMONDA, L'AMAZZONE DI ARAGONA for Spoleto Festival USA; Damon in ACIS AND GALATEA for Opera Bhutan, the first western opera ever performed in the Kingdom of Bhutan; Harlekin in DER KAISER VON ATLANTIS with Klangforum Wien and Opera Moderne in Vienna. He has also performed at Dayton Opera, Kentucky Opera, Opera Columbus, Cleveland Opera, Knowville Opera, and at the Caramoor Festival.
Mezzo-soprano Kristin Gornstein performs a wide range of repertoire, from baroque to contemporary opera, oratorio, and songs. Recent performances include Ramiro in Mozart's La finta giardiniera in a co-production between On Site Opera and The Atlanta Opera, a role she will reprise in 2018, as well as soprano II soloist in Mozart's Mass in C Minor with the American University of Beirut, and ensemble member in Michael Gordon's opera Aquanetta in the 2018 Prototype Festival. She is an alumna of the Tanglewood Music Center and Caramoor Bel Canto, and holds degrees in Voice Performance from Butler University and The University of Colorado in Boulder. Soprano Summer Hassanis an alumnus of the prestigious Domingo-Colburn-Stein Young Artist program at Los Angeles Opera. She made her LA Opera debut in 2014, and sings with them again in the 2017-18 season as Virginia in The Canterville Ghost. In 2016 she sang Musetta in La Bohème at Wolf Trap Opera. Ms. Hassan was a 2017 Metropolitan Opera National Council Audition Semi-Finalist.
Kelly Curtin, soprano, makes her niche as the Queen of the Night, performing the role five times during this season. Other roles include Olympia (Les Contes d'Hoffmann), Mabel (The Pirates of Penzance), Eurydice (Orphée aux Enfers), Le Feu/Le Rossignol (L'enfant et les Sortilèges), Adele (Die Fledermaus), First Lady (Die Zauberflöte) Despina (Così fan Tutte), Valencienne (Merry Widow), Frasquita (Carmen), Papagena (Die Zauberflöte), and Rose (Street Scene). Upcoming: Josephine in HMS Pinafore with Opéra Louisiane. More information available at www.kellycurtin.com.
Giovanni Da Singer is an Actor, Dancer, and recent graduate from Syracuse University BFA Musical Theater '17. Originally from Los Angeles, California. Most recently he was seen on tour in Leonard Bernstein's Candide in various opera houses throughout France and Europe. Hunter Hoffman is thrilled to be returning to LOTNY after playing Samuel Pepys in last season's production of Carlisle Floyd's Prince of Players. Recent credits include: Sweat (Broadway), Troilus and Cressida (NYSF), Romeo and Juliet, Much Ado About Nothing (South Brooklyn Shakespeare), Otello, Manon Lescaut (Metropolitan Opera - Supernumerary), The Merchant of Venice (The Gallery Players). Thank you to Philip, Brad, and Fredi. www.hunter-hoffman.com.
Elliot Figg (Conductor) returns to LOTNY as conductor and harpsichordist after the 2016 U.S. premiere of Chevalier de St. Georges' L'Amant Anonyme. Other recent engagements include: assistant conductor and harpsichordist for Vivaldi's Farnace, and for Cavalli's Veremonda, both with Spoleto Festival USA; and assistant conductor and harpsichordist for Dido and Aeneas with L.A. Opera. Elliot is an active member of several New York-based early music and contemporary ensembles, including New Vintage Baroque, ACRONYM, Ruckus, and New York Baroque Incorporated. He is a graduate of the Historical Performance Program at The Juilliard School where he studied harpsichord with Kenneth Weiss. He has also studied with Arthur Haas at the Yale School of Music. Elliot received his Bachelor's and Master's degrees in music composition from the University of North Texas, where he studied composition with Cindy McTee and Joseph Klein, and harpsichord with Lenora McCroskey.
Philip Shneidman (Director) founded the little OPERA theatre of ny. Recent productions include the NY Premiere of Carlisle Floyd's Prince of Players, an original adaptation of Chevalier de Saint-Georges L'Amant Anonyme, Floyd's Slow Dusk & Markheim, and Gioachino Rossini's Opportunity Makes the Thief. Previous seasons include Gluck's The Reformed Drunkard; an evening of two one-act operas by Gustav Holst entitled Travelers. Other opera includes Eugene Onegin and Dialogues of the Carmelites at The Mannes College of Music, Purcell's The Tempest at Rutgers. His theater directing credits include: Fully Committed (Adirondack Theatre Festival); and Romeo & Juliet (Queens Theatre in the Park), A Drowned Girl [1919](HERE). As an assistant Director on Broadway he worked on The Full Monty, and the Gutierrez productions of A Delicate Balance and The Heiress.
Neil Patel (Set Design) Recent work includes Alcina at Washington Opera directed by Anne Bogart and Time and the Conways on Broadway directed by Rebecca Taichman. Film/TV: The Path (Hulu), Little Boxes (Netflix), In Treatment (HBO). This year Neil designed the exhibition Space Force Construction for the VAC Foundation in Venice and Moscow and The Art Institute of Chicago. With LOTNY: Travelers, The Reformed Drunkard, Opportunity Makes the Thief, Slow Dusk & Markheim. neilpateldesign.com
Lara de Bruijn (Costume Design) recent designs include Alcina, The Rake's Progress at Boston Conservatory, Blasted at Calderwood Pavilion, Wittenberg at Peterborough Players. Her opera work at the Castleton Opera Festival includes Don Giovanni, Roméo et Juliette, and the world premiere of Scalia & Ginsberg. With LOTNY: Man in a Black Coat, Travelers, The Reformed Drunkard, Opportunity Makes the Thief, Slow Dusk & Markheim, Prince of Players. See more at laradawndesign.com
Grant W.S. Yeager (Lighting Design): NY: What We're Up Against (WP Theater); Now. Here. This. (Vineyard); Between Worlds (NWS); A Tribute to David Bowie (Radio City); Designer for The New York Pops Orchestra 2012-present; 50+ concerts at Carnegie Hall. Regional: The Nest (Denver Center); Dear Elizabeth (Dorset Theatre Festival); Shida (ART); Joseph... (Dallas Theater Center); www.grantyeagerdesign.com
Alex Basco Koch (Projection Design). Selected credits - Concert Design: The Magnetic Fields 50 Song Memoir. Broadway: Irena's Vow (Walter Kerr). Off-Broadway: Buyer & Cellar (Barrow Street; Rattlestick); Body of an American (Primary Stages); The Liquid Plain (Signature Theatre); Lenin's Embalmers (Ensemble Studio Theatre). Regional: Marley (Center Stage, Baltimore); Invisible Man (Court Theatre, Chicago; Studio Theatre, Washington DC; Huntington Theatre Company, Boston); ReEntry (Center Stage, Baltimore; Round House, Washington DC; Actors Theater of Louisville). www.alexbascokoch.com
The little OPERA theatre of ny (LOTNY) is a chamber opera company that was founded in September of 2004. The most recent production, the 2017 New York premiere of Carlisle Floyd's Prince of Players, was widely praised, described by the New York Times as "well made and stylish." Other recent productions include Chevalier de Saint-George's L'Amant Anonyme, which was heralded as "an exercise in restrained beauty;" and the 2014 production of Carlisle Floyd's Slow Dusk & Markheim was warmly received, described as "ambitious and rewarding" by Opera News. Past seasons have included Rossini's Opportunity Makes the Thief, a production that Opera News called a "lively and enlightening contribution... to New York City's operatic life"; Gluck's 1760 comic opera, The Reformed Drunkard; and a double bill entitled Travelers, which included two rarities by Gustav Holst (The Wandering Scholarand S?vitri). A "Critic's Pick" in The New Yorker and The New York Times, Travelers garnered critical praise.
The NY Times commending the operas "delicate balance of grandeur and intimacy." In 2011, LOTNY presented the New York stage premiere of Mozart's youthful opera, Mitridate, re di Ponto to sold-out houses, and received widespread press coverage. Earlier seasons have included the U.S. premiere of César Cui's A Feast in the Time of the Plague with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's Mozart and Salieri in a double-billed program entitled 2 Little Tragedies of Pushkin; Mozart's La finta giardiniera: and a performance of Virgil Thomson and Gertrude Stein's opera, The Mother of Us Allat The Box.
Other work with living composers include the production of Inessa Zaretsky's Man in a Black Coat as part of Target Margin's Last Futurist Lab at The Bushwick Starr. Concert presentations have included, The Bohemians, music of Giacomo Puccini, presented at Socrates Sculpture Park as part of the city wide September Concert for 9/11. www.lotny.org
Praised by The New York Times for its "buoyant pulse...appealing energy" and "thoughtfully conceived" programming, New Vintage Baroque is an adventurous period instrument ensemble dedicated to the creation of21st century repertoire for early instruments. Founded in 2011 by Baroque oboist Lindsay McIntosh (Juilliard 2014), New Vintage Baroque is committed to bringing audiences the highest level of historical performance practice. Unique among Baroque ensembles, New Vintage unites past and present musical styles, offering new commissions by diverse modern composers alongside the music of the Baroque era.
Of their performance of Handel's Rinaldo with Boston Opera Collaborative, The Boston Globe cited New Vintage's "graceful, songful playing... a major element in the production's success." Other recent projects included a yearlong residency at Yale's Lewis Walpole Library (CT), where NVB created three new musical programs inspired by the collection. In 2015 the group toured New York and the Netherlands with a newly commissioned cantata Virginiana by Gregory Spears'. Most notable and recent has been the release of their Baroque pop album, Passionate Pilgrim on Naxos/Vision into Art (VIA). Called "music that is unstuck in time" by The Wall Street Journal, Passionate Pilgrim weaves "Beatlesesque" (Steve Smith) tunes with discredited Shakespearean poetry, in a collaboration with composer collective Oracle Hysterical.
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