In Joseph Conrad's 1902 literary masterpiece Heart of Darkness, Marlow, a riverboat captain, voyages from London into the African Congo at the height of European colonialism. Over a hundred years later, Marlow is still travelling - including stops in New York where Orson Welles' The Mercury Theatre on the Air broadcast a version, and in Hollywood the story was transformed into Francis Ford Coppola's 1979 Vietnam epic Apocalypse Now ...then more recently to Fort Greene, Brooklyn, where for the past five years a chamber opera by composer Tarik O'Regan and librettist Tom Phillips has taken shape under the guidance of the local opera company, American Opera Projects. On November 1, Heart of Darkness will return to London for its world premiere at the Royal Opera House's Linbury Theatre in a co-production with London's Opera East Productions.
Tenor Robert Hoyt as Marlow at the Brooklyn workshops of the opera Heart of Darkness produced by American Opera Projects.
Unable to find assistance for the initial developmental stages of their work on their home isles, the London-based team of Tarik O'Regan (AOP's Composer in Residence during 2009/10 season) and Tom Phillips came to American Opera Projects (AOP), in Brooklyn, to help nurture the opera. AOP General Director Charles Jarden writes that "Tarik and Tom's inspired vision of the novella's transformation into music theater, combined with Tarik's rigorous attention to the AOP feedback mechanism-strengthening new work - was an ideal match from the beginning. AOP has gone on to commission a new opera from Tarik that we look forward to presenting in Fort Greene in 2012." As part of AOP's First Chance opera development program, the staff assembled a cast of singers to participate in the first public concert reading at ART/NY's South Oxford Space in Fort Greene in June 2006. Over the next few years, additional workshops would be produced at South Oxford Space, as well as the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ and Symphony Space in Manhattan where The New York Times described the piece as "... a dense, dreamlike chamber opera heavily tinged with exoticism, like 'Death in Venice' on steroids." At each performance, the composer and librettist dutifully noted the audience response to the work, crafting the piece into a moody one-act that conveys all of the complex themes and characters that made Conrad's novella a must-read in English classes all over the world.
The positive feedback on these workshops filtered back over the Atlantic where the opera Production Company Opera East productions would help interest ROH2, dedicated to bringing "new and innovative work to the Royal Opera House," and to ultimately co-produce the premiere at ROH's Linbury Studio Theatre in Covent Garden, London starting November 1, 2011.
"I'm delighted that this exciting collaboration has come to fruition at the Royal Opera House," says O'Regan. "It's been a wonderful journey for Tom and myself: one that began in Brooklyn with American Opera Projects and has arrived in London with Opera East and ROH2. With much of my work on the opera undertaken in New York and with Tom based mostly in London, it's been a transatlantic creative partnership in the truest sense. Our seafaring protagonist, Marlow, would approve we hope!"
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Tarik O'Regan (composer)2010 marked the premiere of O'Regan's BBC Proms commission, Latent Manifest, by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and the broadcast of a self-penned documentary, Composing New York, which he presented for BBC Radio. In 2011 his new oratorio, Acallam na Senórach, was released to rave reviews. This marks O'Regan's third album on the Harmonia Mundi label. Tarik O'Regan's music is published exclusively by Music Sales. www.tarikoregan.com
Tom Phillips (librettist)
Tom Phillips, born 1937, is one of Britain's premier artists with an international following. He is a Royal Academician and best known for his use of text within artworks, as in his treated novel A Humument (Thames & Hudson 1980, revised 2005). He is a visitor at the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton on a regular basis and is also well known as a writer and composer in his own right. His own opera, Irma, has been frequently performed and twice recorded; he has also acted as set designer for English National Opera. www.tomphillips.co.uk
Joseph Conrad (author, Heart of Darkness)
1857-1924, English novelist, b. Berdichev, Russia (now Berdychiv, Ukraine), originally named Jósef Teodor Konrad Walecz Korzeniowski. Born of Polish parents, he is considered one of the greatest novelists and prose stylists in English literature. His notable early works include The Nigger of the Narcissus (1897), Lord Jim (1900), and the novellas Youth (1902), Heart of Darkness (1902), and Typhoon (1903). The novels Nostromo (1904), The Secret Agent (1907), Under Western Eyes (1911), and Chance (1913) are regarded by many as Conrad's greatest works. Marked by a distinctive, opulent prose style, Conrad's novels combine realism and high drama. Their settings include nautical backgrounds as well as high society, and international politics. Conrad was a skilled creator of atmosphere and character; the impact of various situations was augmented by his use of symbolism. He portrayed acutely the conflict between non-western cultures and modern civilization. His characters exhibit the possibilities for isolation and moral deterioration in modern life.
AMERICAN OPERA PROJECTS
American Opera Projects' mission is to champion innovative works of music theater, to expand the art form, and to identify, develop and present new works by emerging and established talent. AOP's goal is to create a lasting legacy of relevant music theater and to inspire new audiences with a fresh appreciation for new opera and theater. AOP is a driving force behind the revitalization of contemporary opera and musical theater in the United States through its exclusive devotion to creating, developing, and presenting new American opera and music Theatre Projects.
AOP's First Chance series presents concert performances of new operas in an intimate format that allows for direct conversation between audience and artist. Operas to receive fully-staged premieres after passing through AOP's First Chance program include Séance on a Wet Afternoon (New York City Opera, Opera Santa Barbara), Before Night Falls (Fort Worth Opera) and the upcoming Heart of Darkness (London's Royal Opera House), among many others. www.operaprojects.org
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