Category Archives: Turandot

More Kauffman Center Praise

William Littler, a music columnist for The Toronto Star, recently wrote an article that talked both about a Moshe Safdie performing arts center that was never realized in Toronto and the newly realized Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts designed by Moshe Safdie in Kansas City.  Along with writing about the parallels and connections between the arts centers and cities (including a mention of the Kauffman family’s Toronto roots), Mr. Littler praises Kansas City for its cultural strengths and particularly the Lyric Opera and the production of Turandot in which he attended last October.  Mr. Littler notes “Turandot marked a coming of age for the company,” and we agree.

Read the entire article

Another Great Turandot Review

Alex Ross, Music Critic at The New Yorker, was in the Midwest recently and part of his trip brought him to Kansas City to see Turandot in the new Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts.  Mr. Ross writes about his trip on his blog (Alex Ross: The Rest is Noise), which took him through Red Cloud Nebraska, Tulsa and Kansas City.

The trip was not all pleasure though.  While in Tulsa and Kansas City Mr. Ross caught some performances for which he has a review in a recent issue of The New Yorker.

For Turandot he writes, “The ‘Turandot,’ directed by Garnett Bruce and designed by R. Keith Brumley, is a markedly more thoughtful show than the Zeffirelli warehouse sale that still clutters the stage of the Met”.  To read more excepts click here.  Note: You must be a subscriber to The New Yorker to read the full review online.

A Record-Breaking Run

Turadot - Lyric Opera of Kansas City - photo: Cory Weaver

Turandot - Lyric Opera of Kansas City - Photo: Cory Weaver

The Lyric Opera would like to thank everyone for supporting Turandot and a great start to the 2011-2012 season.  All 4 performances were SOLD OUT, attendance was at all time Company highs, and Turandot received glowing reviews.

THANK YOU!

Chorister hits the right notes

This week in The Pitch Richard Gibson, a Lyric Opera chorus member in Turandot, is featured in a story titled “The Right Note” by Jonathan Bender.  Read about Gibson’s epic journey from South Africa to Iraq to the Kauffman Center stage.  Find the full story here.

Turandot Opens to Rave Reviews

Turandot photo by Cory WeaverTurandot opened on October 1st and the reviews are in.  See a list of the reviews available below or post your review and tell us what you thought of the production!

Robert Trussell of The Kansas City Star
“…the acoustics were excellent. And the vivid physical production impressed…The principals, the Kansas City Symphony and the Lyric Opera Chorus bring out all the heroic gestures and delicate colors under conductor Ward Holmquist.”  Click to read the full review.

Sarah Tyrrell of KCMetropolis.org
Turandot was the ideal artistic vehicle for this inaugural event of the Lyric Opera of Kansas City’s season, and the audience welcomed the titular princess into their new home with enthusiastic appreciation.”  Click to read the full review.

Paul Horsley of The Independent
“With this production the Lyric Opera is entering a new epoch in its history, and future productions will doubtless be measured by the ambitions of this show.” Click to read the full review (you may need to scroll down to find the review).

Check back later for more reviews or write your own in the comment section below.  One blogger in attendance on Opening Night has already written his, post your own and share your thoughts with our readers. 

Stevie ReynoldsLocation, Location
COMMANDOpera
Turandot Review

Opera Superstar will make Lyric Opera debut Saturday

In case anyone didn’t know, opera superstar Samuel Ramey will portray Timur in the upcoming production of Turandot in the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts.  This is Mr. Ramey’s debut with the Company, and we are so glad that Mr. Ramey could perform not only with us, but also close to his hometown, Colby, KS.

This past spring Mr. Ramey came back to Kansas for the Wichita Grand Opera’s 10th Anniversary Gala, which starred some other native Kansan opera stars.

Click to read about his performance with the Wichita Grand Opera, or visit Mr. Ramey’s website to see what he is doing today – besides getting ready for the opening night of Turandot on Saturday!

10 Questions with Doug Jones

Doug Jones stars as Pong

Doug Jones stars as Pong

Doug Jones, Pong, took some time the other day to answer 10 Questions for us.  Read below to learn what operas Mr. Jones is a fan of and about his Kansas City roots.

1. How did your initial interest in the art form of opera begin?

Mr. Jones: It didn’t really begin until I was actually in one, in the chorus in Dallas while in college. I grew up on musicals, and – if I had had my way – would be singing musicals now … I did musicals when I first moved to Vienna, which was rather ironic, as my intention in moving to Vienna for study was to get serious about singing.

2. Where did you grow up?

Mr. Jones: I grew up in Overland Park, attended Shawnee Mission South High School, and then attended Southern Methodist University in Dallas, and Eastman School of Music.

3. Do you have a significant other? Children? Pets?

Mr. Jones: I have two dobermans, Daisy and Daphne. They keep me grounded – they are my babies.

4. What is an average day like for you? Do you have a set routine?

Mr. Jones: I take the dogs out to the park every morning, then do some vocalizing – or learn new music – then go to the gym in the afternoon. My competition keeps getting younger and younger and I find that terribly annoying – so I make an effort to keep up.

5. What is your favorite opera to watch/experience?

Mr. Jones: Hmmmmm, I enjoy going to see/hear John Adams’ operas – I think it would make me crazy to have to learn it and then rehearse it six hours a day for four weeks. Some operas are more fun to watch, some are more fun to be in.

6. What is your favorite opera to perform in?

Mr. Jones: Usually I’d answer whichever one I am in at the time. I just had the opportunity to perform in Shostakovitch’s Lady Macbeth of the Mzensk District in Tel Aviv, a piece I did ten years ago. It is an incredible score – I never ever got tired of listening to it; and he wrote it at, what? – 26 or 27 years of age.

7. Have you performed your role in Turandot before?

Mr. Jones: That’s an interesting story – I have actually done both Pang and Pong in the same production, but at different times. I was in a production staged by Francesca Zambello for the Opera Bastille in Paris – very modern, with none of the Chinese trappings that one comes to expect. It was a very exciting production, but has very much “warped” my sense of what Turandot is about. I first performed Pang in 1998, then came back to do Pong in 2003. It is initially confusing to have performed both roles – but after a while one settles in to the correct role (with a bit of luck). My colleagues have been very understanding when I accidently sing one of their lines (or worse – not sing one of mine).

8. Do you have any interesting anecdotes you can share about the experience?

Mr. Jones: I am very grateful to have coached the roles with Bob Kettelson, a dear friend of mine – I have made a dedication to him in the Turandot program. He was Muti’s assistant at La Scala for several years, and he was so generous and patient with me.  Anything I do which sounds remotely correct with regards to Italian language or interpretation is entirely due to his tutelage. When I return to this score, he is there in every bar.

9. The opera role you haven’t performed, but would like to perform the most in your career?

Mr. Jones: I would love to perform David in Meistersinger. I have covered the role in San Francisco but I never got to perform it. It is a pity that productions, because of the sheer size and scope of the piece, are not done very often.

10. If you bumped into me at a coffee shop and learned that I had never been to an opera before, what would you say to entice me to give it a try?

Mr. Jones: I’d probably lie and tell you they give out free drinks at intermission. And dress up. And don’t take any candy in wrappers. If you were a complete philistine I’d tell you to consider that those singers are singing without microphones, with a 70 piece orchestra – and you won’t hear Britney Spears doing that any time soon …

Turandot Media Coverage

With the new production of Turandot only 4 days away there is a good amount of media coverage available to learn more about the show, the singers, the director, and many other aspects of the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts debut for the Lyric Opera.  Click on any of the links below to ready about the production, this post will be updated to include continuing coverage.

KCUR
Building the Lyric Opera of Kansas City’s “Turandot”

KCMetropolis.org
Interview: Elizabeth Caballero, soprano

Interview: Garnett Bruce, director

The Kansas City Star
Lyric’s ‘Turandot’ looked to modern China for costume designs

Lyric’s ‘Turandot’ is opera on a grand scale

Kansas native makes his KC debut in ‘Turandot’

Kansas City Business Journal
Kauffman Center stage lets Lyric Opera of Kansas City amp up performances

The Pitch
Iraq war veteran Richard Gibson finds his voice — and gives it to the Lyric Opera

10 Questions with Scott Wichael

Scott Wichael

Scott Wichael makes his Lyric Opera debut as Pang

Turandot is approaching quickly, but that doesn’t mean the stars can get out of sitting down with us for 10 Questions.  Scott Wichael, Pang, made time for us recently to talk about his connection to Kansas and why he will take opera over reality TV any day of the week.  Read about Scott, who is making his Lyric Opera debut, below.

1.  How did your initial interest in the art form of opera begin?   

Mr. Wichael: My mother was a music teacher and my father was an Episcopalian priest, so music was always an important part of my childhood.  Opera was introduced to me by my mother.  She grew up in NYC and attended performances at the Metropolitan Opera.

2.  Where did you grow up? 

Mr. Wichael: I was born in and lived most of my childhood in Iowa, but I consider Hays, KS to be my hometown as I went to High School and college there.

3.  Do you have a significant other? Children? Pets? 

Mr. Wichael: I have a wife, Gina, a 4 year old daughter, Allison and a cat, Sophie.

4.  What is an average day like for you? Do you have a set routine? 

Mr. Wichael: When I am not at a gig, during the school year, I am either at home with my daughter or teaching.  Unfortunately, that leads an ever-changing schedule.

5.  What is your favorite opera to watch/experience? 

Mr. Wichael: I absolutely, love Otello! Other favorites include Turandot, Susannah, Rape of Lucretia and Albert Herring.

6.  Have you performed your role in Turandot before? 

Mr. Wichael: This will be my first time doing the whole role.

7.  What story about your personal/professional life do you wish reporters would tell when promoting your work for a producing Company, but have not? 

Mr. Wichael: That I have learned more patience and self reliance due to the, at times, overwhelming rejection one receives in the music business.

8.  What facts about you would our audiences be surprised to learn?

Mr. Wichael: My father was completely tone deaf.

9.  The opera role you haven’t performed, but would like to perform the most in your career?

Mr. Wichael: Mime in Siegfried.

10.  If you bumped into me at a coffee shop and learned that I had never been to an opera before, what would you say to entice me to give it a try?

Mr. Wichael: Do you like stories about love, death and/or comedy?  Maybe you should try them set to incredible music!  It sure beats American Idol or Jersey Shore!

Samuel Ramey excited to perform in KC

samuel rameyInternational opera superstar Samuel Ramey arrived in Kansas City the other day to begin rehearing for the Lyric Opera inaugural production in the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, Puccini’s Turandot.

Mr. Ramey has been blogging all summer about his visit to Kansas City. You can read his blog entries by clicking here.