the american opera project
Presents
C&V SCENE AND HEARD 2021
NEW OPERA SCENES CREATED IN THE 2019-2021 COMPOSERS & THE VOICE PROGRAM
This September, The American Opera Project (AOP) kicks off its 33rd season with premiere music from five distinctive new operas at an outdoor concert in its home neighborhood of Fort Greene, Brooklyn. C&V SCENE AND HEARD showcases opera scenes from five emerging composers - Matt Frey, Alaina Ferris, Michael Lanci, Mary Prescott, and Jessica Rudman - who created the works during their fellowships in AOP’s opera writing program Composers & the Voice (C&V). The biannual event is a rare look at the creative process in action, hosted by C&V Artistic Director Steven Osgood.
The scenes will be performed by C&V’s resident opera singers Jasmine Muhammad (lyric soprano, Metropolitan Opera), Timothy Stoddard (tenor, Bare Opera), Justine Aronson (coloratura soprano, Bang on a Can Summer Festival), and Mario Diaz-Moresco (baritone, Glimmerglass Opera), as well as guest artists Nina Riley (soprano, Bronx Opera), Victoria Davis (soprano, Washington National Opera), Sophie Delphis (mezzo-soprano, National Sawdust),Blythe Gaissert (mezzo-soprano, Metropolitan Opera, LA Opera), and Cáitlín Burke (mezzo-soprano, Wolf Trap Opera).
SEPTEMBER 26, 2021 | 3pm EDT
Tent next to the Prison Ship Martyrs Monument
Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn, NY
www.nycgovparks.org/parks/fort-greene-park
HELD RAIN OR SHINE!
Health and Safety Protocols
All audience members will be required to show proof of full vaccination (your final dose was administered at least 14 days before the performance date). Masks are optional. At check-in, audience members will be required to show proof of full vaccination using either one of the two mobile apps: the state's Excelsior Pass or the city's NYC COVID Safe or a hard copy/photo of your vaccination card alongside a form of ID. Performers will be distanced but unmasked.
General admission tickets are available via Eventbrite for $25
ALMA
music and libretto by mary prescott
Direction by luke LANDRIC leonard
music direction by kelly horsted
Fai - Nina Riley, soprano
Alma - Cáitlín Burke, mezzo-soprano
Fai enters the room and discovers Alma weeping and disheveled on the ground. Alma reveals her haunted past. Fai becomes terrified and filled with dread for her child and husband. Calling out for them to no response, Fai questions what Alma has done to them. Alma tells Fai to look at herself and her hands. Fai looks into Alma as a mirror and realizes that she herself has killed her husband and child. She cannot bear the grief, and kills herself in Alma's arms. Alma coaxes Fai into the deep sleep of death as she laments her own eternal fate.
protectress
Music by jessica rudman
Libretto by Kendra preston leonard
Direction by katIe madison
music direction by mila henry
Stheno - Justine Aronson, soprano
Euryale - Nina Riley, soprano
Medusa - Blythe Gaissert, mezzo-soprano
Medusa awakes from a horrible nightmare with a scream, causing her sisters Euryale and Stheno to rush in. They try to comfort Medusa as she recounts the dream, in which she relived the trauma of her rape by Poseidon. Having achieved a partial catharsis, Medusa allows her sisters to change the subject to her recent interview in Teen Vogue. Medusa has been living openly as her immortal self and wanted to share her story with the world. Her sisters—both still posing as humans— tease her about the interview. Eventually, they wonder if Athena has read the story and gotten angry. The sisters contemplate that possibility while Medusa remembers another dream she had earlier in the week. This leads to a second outburst, where Medusa focuses on her patron goddess Athena’s betrayal: after Medusa was raped, Athena cursed her rather than supporting her. Euryale reminds Medusa that she has moved on and has a full life. Medusa confesses that she is afraid she can’t take the nightmares for much longer, causing the sisters to vow that they won’t let Athena break her. Euryale and Stheno promise to keep Athena from tormenting Medusa, realizing that they have many allies on whom they can call for help.
Simone de Beauvoir at the museum
music and libretto by alaina ferris
Direction by katIe madison
music direction by mila henry
Amelia - Justine Aronson, soprano
Rose - Victoria Davis, soprano
Evelyn - Cáitlín Burke, mezzo-soprano
Gustave - Timothy Stoddard, tenor
Simone de Beauvoir, Queen of the Vampires - Sophie Delphis
Simone de Beauvoir at the Museum follows the story of Evelyn, an aspiring writer in Brooklyn who is struggling with her life and PTSD from sexual assault. She wants to have a family and an artistic career, but is not sure she can do both — Simone de Beauvoir, after all, chose to never have children so she could write. Evelyn goes on a trip to Paris with her two best friends, Amelia and Rose, to enjoy the sites and each other’s company. At Musée D’Orsay, the group begins to discuss the painting Ramsès dans son harem, when they unexpectedly summon a feminist vampire named Gustave. He joins their analytical discussion of the painting, touching on points of gender equality. Triggered by the talk, Evelyn goes into a fugue state. When she reemerges, Gustave invites them on a tour through feminist history, starting with a literary salon in Paris, 1949, the year Simone de Beauvoir’s Le Deuxième Sexe was published.
marble house
music and libretto by matt frey
Direction by luke LANDRIC leonard
music direction by kelly horsted
Consuelo - Justine Aronson, soprano
Mrs. Astor - Jasmine Muhammad, soprano
Ava - Blythe Gaissert, mezzo-soprano
It is the summer of 1895 in the extravagantly fashionable resort town of Newport, Rhode Island. The elite of New York society arrive to open their houses for the season. At Marble House, 18-year-old Consuelo Vanderbilt is dreading a long summer with her family, having left her newly—and secretly—engaged fiancé back in New York. For her mother Alva, however, this summer represents a much-needed opportunity to reassert herself as head of the social elite following a scandalous divorce from her husband, richest man in the country, William K. Vanderbilt. This won’t be easy – “society,” headed by Alva’s longtime frenemy, The Mrs. Astor, will happily trample one of their own if it means maintaining the social hierarchy.
28th Ave
music by michael lanci
libretto by marella martin koch
Direction by katIe madison
music direction by mila henry
Clara - Nina Riley, soprano
Ed - Mario Diaz-Moresco, baritone
Luba - Blythe Gaissert, mezzo-soprano
It’s a spring day on 28th Ave in a working-class neighborhood in the outer NYC boroughs. Ed, a Vietnam veteran, and Manuel, his 18-year-old grandson, get on each other’s nerves in their cramped apartment. Underscored by Fox News, a minor dispute about the right way to drink milk has escalated to a screaming match, spilling out of their apartment and onto the building's front stoop. As Manuel runs off, Ed sits down to catch his breath and makes an unexpected friend: a sick possum. Ed, Clara the nosy neighbor, and Luba the landlady try to save the suffering creature’s life.
PERFORMERS
COMPOSERS / LIBRETTISTS
DIRECTORS
MUSIC DIRECTORS
Performers
Justine Aronson, Cáitlín Burke, Victoria Davis, Mario Diaz-Moresco,
Blythe Gaissert, Jasmine Muhammad, Nina Riley, Timothy Stoddard
Music Directors
Mila Henry and Kelly Horsted
Directors
Luke Landric Leonard and Katie Madison
Composers
Alaina Ferris, Matt Frey, Michael Lanci, Mary Prescott, Jessica Rudman
Librettists
Kendra Preston Leonard and Marella Martin Koch
Film Director and Editor
Deborah Cowell
Second Camera Operator
Isaac Madison
Piano courtesy of Sing For Hope
Piano design by Jieun Yang
Composers & the Voice is led by:
Steven Osgood, C&V Artistic Director
Matt Gray, C&V Head of Drama
Mila Henry, C&V Head of Music
LEARN MORE ABOUT COMPOSERS & THE VOICE HERE
Composers & the Voice is made possible in part by a generous multi-year award from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and a Grants for Arts Projects award from the National Endowment for the Arts. SCENE AND HEARD 2021 is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.
Past AOP Composers & the Voice fellows have received grants and honors from the following organizations: Aaron Copland Fund for Music, ASCAP, BMI, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the American Music Center, the American Composers Forum, OPERA America, the National Endowment for the Arts, Meet the Composer, the Argosy Foundation Contemporary Music Fund, the Fulbright Foundation, the Atlantic Center for the Arts, the Douglas Moore Fellowship, Tapestry New Opera Works, the Frederick Loewe Foundation, New Dramatists, and the Martha Baird Rockefeller Foundation.