Houston Grand Opera (HGO) will present its forty-first world premiere, To Cross the Face of the Moon / Cruzar la Cara de la Luna, commissioned by HGO through its Song of Houston project. Music by José "Pepe" Martinez, music director of Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán, with libretto by acclaimed Broadway director and author Leonard Foglia, the opera will be performed in concert by a cast that includes mezzo-soprano Cecilia Duarte, baritone and HGO studio alumnus Octavio Moreno, and Martinez, together with Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán, on Saturday, November 13, 2010, at the Wortham Theater Center in Houston, Texas. This will be Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán's only Houston performance in 2010.
The new opera was the brainchild of HGO General Director and CEO Anthony Freud, who
attended a performance by Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán and was struck by the resonances between mariachi and operatic traditions. "Opera arias and mariachi songs tell human stories of love and loss, family and country; through music they aim their narratives straight at the heart," says Freud. "It seemed to me that the two traditions were a natural fit. I wanted to be certain that we respected the integrity of both traditions in the piece we created, so it was also natural to turn to Pepe Martinez to compose it, given how strongly he has influenced contemporary mariachi repertoire, and to
Leonard Foglia, whose truly operatic style of storytelling and theatricality is his signature, to write the lyrics." He added, "I am truly thrilled that we will have the honor of performing the world premiere with Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán, who are supreme practitioners of the art of mariachi music."
Composer and music director José "Pepe" Martinez has been writing for and performing and
recording with Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán since 1975; the ensemble has been in existence since
1897, and most of the storied composers, arrangers and performers in the mariachi tradition have at one time or another been in the ensemble. The 13-piece ensemble includes violins, trumpets, guitarrón, guitar, vihuela and harp. Internationally acclaimed, the group tours annually in the United States and throughout the world, and has produced more than 50 recordings. "In my career, I have written many different kinds of songs which told many different stories," said Martinez. "This is the first time I have written in an operatic context, but the story and the characters are very moving, and I think the mariachi tradition helps bring them to life in a way that is both relevant and very exciting."
To Cross the Face of the Moon chronicles three generations of a family, divided by countries
and cultures. "The emotional and spiritual connection to one's country of origin, the challenges of
being a stranger in a strange land, the very nature of home are at the heart of the immigrant experience, and of the opera," said Foglia, who makes his home in Querétaro, in Central Mexico.
"At its heart, Song of Houston is an extraordinary series of projects that celebrate the people
who define the unique character of our city," commented
Sandra Bernhard, Director of HGOco,
which produces and manages the Song of Houston project. Its first commission was The Refuge,
which premiered in November 2007, told stories collected from Houston's African, Central American, Indian, Mexican, Pakistani, Soviet-era Jewish and Vietnamese communities. "We wanted to focus our efforts on the Mexican community in Houston because of the multi-generational nature of their experience here. This project gave us the opportunity to explore a universal theme of home and belonging and to collaborate in a way that honors a unique musical tradition. We're honored to be bringing something new and very special into being."
A first-of-its-kind collaboration with Talento Bilingu?e de Houston will follow the concert performance at Wortham Theater Center. The work will be fully staged and presented at Talento
Bilingu?e de Houston with HGO's vocal cast and a Texan mariachi ensemble. There will be four
performances of the fully staged version on December 3, 4 and 5, 2010. "This event marries the magic of culture and song in a premiere stage engagement celebrating Houston's Latin community," says Juan Esquivel, President and CEO of Talento Bilingu?e de Houston. "We are proud to combine efforts with HGO to bring a world-class performance for a multi-diverse and multicultural audience right to the heart of Houston's East End." Tickets for the November 13 world premiere of To Cross the Face of the Moon / Cruzar la Cara de la Luna go on sale on September 7, 2010, and range in price from $35 to $125. They can be purchased online at
www.houstongrandopera.org, or by calling
Houston Grand Opera Customer Care at 713-228-6737.
Houston Grand Opera PresentsTo Cross the Face of the Moon / Cruzar la Cara de la Luna
A Mariachi OperaMusic by José "Pepe" Martinez - Libretto by
Leonard FogliaStarring Cecilia Duarte,
Octavio Moreno, and
David GuzmanFeaturing José "Pepe" Martinez as Chucho
with Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán
Performed in Spanish and English with surtitles
Saturday, November 13, 2010
8:00 p.m., Brown Auditorium, Wortham Theater Center
500 Texas Street - Houston, TX 77002
Tickets and Information:
www.houstongrandopera.org / 713-228-6737
SYNOPSISWhere is home? Is it where we are born? Or where we live most of our lives? Is it with the
family we leave behind or with the new ones we create?
To Cross the Face of the Moon / Cruzar la Cara de la Luna chronicles three generations of a
family, divided by countries and cultures. As a Mexican/American man deals with the approaching
death of his father, he is forced to face these questions about his own place in the world - straddling two cultures - as well as that of his immigrant father and his American daughter. As long buried secrets are revealed, he finds himself dramatically re-evaluating his own understanding of what makes a family.
Like the Monarch butterflies that migrate every year to the birthplace of his father, the members
of the Velasquez family must travel both physically and spiritually between Michoacán and Texas and look deep into their hearts before they learn where they truly belong.
BIOGRAPHIESAnthony Freud was appointed as HGO's third General Director and first CEO in July 2005. Since
joining
Houston Grand Opera he has seen the completion of a five-year strategic plan; brought to the stage acclaimed new productions of Humperdinck's Hansel and Gretel, Rossini's La Cenerentola
(Cinderella) and Verdi's Aïda, as well as the world premieres of The Refuge (Christopher Theofanidis), Three Decembers (
Jake Heggie), and Brief Encounter (André Previn); launched a multi-year cycle of works by
Benjamin Britten; established HGOco, a radical initiative aiming to deepen HGO's relevance throughout Houston and to restore culture and the arts to positions of central importance in our communities; and created the Founder's Council for Artistic Excellence, a multi-year giving society plus the NEXUS Initiative, an audience development program that provides underwriting for free and affordably-priced performances for new audiences.
Before joining
Houston Grand Opera, Freud served as General Director of the Welsh National Opera (WNO), and produced 120 performances annually throughout England and Wales. From 1992 to 1994, Mr. Freud was Executive Producer for Philips Classics, where he oversaw large-scale recording projects for such artists as
Jessye Norman, Seiji Ozawa, Sir
John Eliot Gardiner, and Bernard Haitink. Mr. Freud graduated, with honors, with a law degree from the University of London King's College, London.
Mr. Freud has served as Chairman of Opera Europa, Europe's largest professional opera association, and currently serves as Chairman of the Board of Opera America. Mr. Freud has served on the juries of many international singing competitions, and chaired the jury of the BBC Cardiff Singer of the World Competition for a decade. In 2006 he was appointed a Trustee of the United Kingdom's National Endowment for Science, Technology, and the Arts. He is an honorary fellow of the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama, and he was named Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Queen Elizabeth II during her 2006 Birthday Awards.
José "Pepe" Martinez was born in Tecalitlán, Jalisco, Mexico, and joined his first mariachi band as a violinist at the age of 12. He began writing music when he was 19 years old, and formed his own mariachi ensemble in 1966, called Mariachi Nuevo Tecalitlán, which was one of the most dynamic mariachi bands in Mexico throughout the mid-1960s and early 1970s. In 1975, he joined Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán. His work with Mariachi Vargas established Martínez as a composer and arranger and brought into being a sonic style that has become synonymous with "el mejor Mariachi del Mundo". "Somos Novios" and "El Cascabel" are two of the first songs Martínez rearranged for his
New Group; original works such as "Violín Huapango," "Lluvia De Cuerdas" and "Mexicanísimo" and the popurri "Viva Vera Cruz," with its rapid violin ricochets - a Martinez signature - followed. Today, Martínez continues writing, learning, performing and breaking new ground in the creation of mariachi music as Music Director of the ensemble. To Cross the Face of the Moon / Cruzar la Cara de la Luna is his first opera.
Leonard Foglia directed
Terrence McNally's 1996 Tony Award-winning play Master Class on
Broadway - his other credits include Wait Until Dark by
Frederick Knott. Off-Broadway, his credits
include One Touch of Venus for Encores! at
City Center; If Memory Serves by
Jonathan Tolins; By the Sea, By the Sea, By the Beautiful Sea by
Terrence McNally,
Joe Pintauro, and
Lanford Wilson at the
Manhattan Theatre Club and the Bay Street Theater Festival and Lonely Planet by
Steven Dietz at
Circle Repertory Company. At
Houston Grand Opera, he has had a close association with the works of
Jake Heggie, having directed the world premieres of The End of the Affair (2004) and Last Acts (2009). He will direct Heggie's Dead Man Walking at
Houston Grand Opera later this season.
Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán was founded in 1898 by Gaspar Vargas in Tecalitlán, Jalisco.
Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán is considered to be the most important and influential group in the
history of mariachi music, playing an integral role in the evolution of the genre. In the 1930s, its
leadership was taken over by Silvestre Vargas, son of Gaspar; he and
Ruben Fuentes, the first trained musician ever to direct the ensemble led Mariachi Vargas into the modern era of films, recordings and broadcasts. Among the prominent musicians who have worked with Mariachi Vargas in the ensuing decades were Pedro Infante, Miguel Aceves Mejia, Lola Beltrán and Jose Alfredo Jimenez. Mariachi Vargas has toured the world and shared its music with people of all cultures on more than 800 recordings.
HGOco's Song of Houston project brings company and community together to collaborate on
musical storytelling projects. It was recognized with a Leading Lights Diversity Award from the
National Multi-Cultural Institute in 2010 - the first time in the Institute's twenty-seven year history
that an opera company has received this prestigious national award. Song of Houston continues in
2011 with two new programs: East + West, a four-year exploration of the Houston community as a
meeting place of Eastern and Western cultures, and a celebration of Houston's first-responder heroes in commemoration of the tenth anniversary of 9/11.
Talento Bilingu?e de Houston was founded in 1977 as "Teatro Bilingu?e de Houston" (Bilingual
Theater of Houston). This non-profit organization has evolved into a Latino Cultural Arts Center that presents a full season of Performance Arts Series, Gallery Exhibits, programming for families through the Target Literacy program and the Flor y Canto summer art camp, plus a new program engaging the community with the environment title Planeta Verde Now. The center is located in the East End, a mile from downtown Houston. The renovated building is an 18,000-square-foot facility leased from the City of Houston Convention and Entertainment Facilities Department. The facility has a 240-seat theater, professional dance studio, rehearsal room, a gallery space, commercial kitchen and administrative offices. The facility was redeveloped with a $992,000 Community Development Block Grant through the City of Houston Housing and Community Development Department in 1996. In 2002, the Board of Directors adopted a business plan prepared for the Cultural
Arts Council of Houston and Harris County (CACHH) that targeted Talento Bilingu?e de Houston as the appropriate agency in the City of Houston to develop itself further as a Latino Cultural Arts Center. The business plan succeeds by expanding programs that meet the needs of a diverse and growing Latino population that lives in Houston and those who visit the Houston Greater Area. The Center has also become a destination venue for other multicultural organizations.
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