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by Gioachino Rossini
Libretto by G.M. Foppa
Farsa giocosa in one act
January/February 2007
The Abrons Arts Center
Read press reviews of this production.
credits
Conductor Neal Goren
Production Robin Guarino
Scenic Design Donald Eastman
CAST
Bruschino Marco Nisticò
Sofia Lisa Hopkins
Florville Alek Shrader
Gaudenzio Eric Jordan
Filiberto Matthew Lau
Marianna Emily Langford Johnson
Commissario di Polizia Steven Goldstein
Bruschino figlio Michael Kelly
Figli di Marianna Luigi Trenti-Paroli and Ellis Bareuther
Costume Design Martin Pakledinaz
Lighting Design John Lasiter
Make-Up & Hair Design Hagen Linss
conductor's notes I admit it: I love the human voice. Many of you probably share my passion. No wonder,
then, that Gotham Chamber Opera celebrates great singing, and what greater vehicle
for great singing exists than the operas of Rossini?
The Italy of Rossini's youth was the land of the virtuoso. Having spawned the violin
makers Stradivari, Guarnieri, and Amati by the 18th century, Italy then produced the great
violin virtuosi Corelli and Vivaldi, much of whose music was written to highlight their own
extraordinary skills. For the keyboard, the Neopolitan Domenico Scarlatti wrote over 500
sonatas that challenge the mettle of young pianists and harpsichordists to this day. (J.S.
Bach, who was born in the same year as Scarlatti but in a cooler climate, had other
priorities than the exaltation of the performer.) In the vocal realm, castrati (another Italian
invention) were the superstars of their day, drawing huge fees throughout Europe. This
was the world that gave rise to Rossini.
Given his talents and proclivities, Rossini was born at the perfect time. He combined a
love of virtuosity with a love for the human voice a combination that netted him an
unprecedented level of prestige, artistic influence, and wealth both at home and abroad.
And Rossini was prolific. In 1813, at 21, he premiered Il signor Bruschino, his ninth
opera, at the Teatro San Moisè in Venice (a theater nearly identical in size and proportion
to the De Jur Playhouse). Ten days later, on the other side of town, Tancredi opened at
the Teatro La Fenice. A mere five months later, L'italiana in Algeri received its debut.
Rossini continued working at a feverish pace, displaying the glories of the human voice,
until his retirement from opera at age 37.
We have assembled a cast of extraordinary young performers to beguile you with their
ravishing voices, their vocal acrobatics, and their love of singing. As singers have done
for centuries, they will use every means in their disposal to win you over. No doubt
Rossini would approve. - Neal Goren
producer's notes
Rossini's music overflows with comedy, but the muck of outdated performance
conventions has threatened to dull the vibrancy and gleaming wit of even his most
irrepressible works. His pulse beats quickly and demands a quality of life on the stage
that is specific, detailed, responsive and filled with alacrity. So in directing his operas
these days you therefore have to begin by liberating them.
Il signor Bruschino, with a libretto by Giuseppe Maria Foppa based on the play Le fils
par hazard, ou Ruse et folie, was the last of four one-act farces Rossini wrote on
commission for Teatro San Moisè. By the time it premiered, in 1813, Rossini had almost
perfected the structure of such works. The typical Commedia dell'Arte characters the
young lovers, friends and enemies, police commissioners, innkeepers, servants and
masters are put through the traditional burlesque paces: young love, letters lost,
mistaken identities and unpaid bills. But the language, both of the text and the music, is
fresh, vital, acerbic and filled with humanity.
It can be hard to live up to that combination of wit and complexity, especially in a one-act
miniature. Because of the story's duration and form, there are fewer opportunities for
comic strokes and yet each stroke becomes more meaningful. Of course, comedy in
opera is always painstaking (and painful when bungled) because it relies on linguistic,
musical and dramatic precision known in the theatre as the beat. But you can't start with
the beat and work backward. The point is to make living choices rather than relying on
and replaying stock ones. In short, the comedy must be discovered, not imposed.
The rehearsal room is the place for that discovery. In a Rossini opera, with its locomotive
of recitatives, arias, duets, trios and ensembles moving at an astounding pace, the
rehearsal is where everyone, individually and collectively, must find the beat (or miss the
train). Then, once the beat and all of the choices attendant upon it are discovered, they
have to be set. At times it can feel like Grand Central Station.
As such, the quality of life in the rehearsal room becomes a crucial aspect of the life of
the piece. I am happy to say that Gotham Chamber Opera is a company that is
committed to discovery, collaboration and artistic freedom. We have been allowed the
leeway to approach Rossini with the spirit of the rehearsal room. It's hard to see how we
could keep up with him otherwise. - Robin Guarino
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