State of the Arts

State of the Arts: January 30, 2013 Archive

The reviews are in for Minnesota Opera's 'Doubt'

Posted at 11:49 AM on January 30, 2013 by Marianne Combs (1 Comments)
Filed under: Opera

This weekend Minnesota Opera launched the world premiere of "Doubt," an operatic version of what has been both a stage play and an Oscar-nominated film.

The opera features a libretto by John Patrick Shanley and a score by composer Douglas Cuomo.

Most critics find this new opera to be 'deft,' 'subtle' and 'complex', but one complains sections are 'overlong and unoperatic.'

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Christine Brewer as Sister Aloysius Beauvier, the school principal and Adriana Zabala as Sister James, a teacher and a nun in Minnesota Opera's Doubt
Photo by Michal Daniel

From Ron Hubbard at the Pioneer Press:

"Doubt" is quite the atypical opera. There are no clear heroes or villains, no romance or obvious betrayal, and no one dies.

But John Patrick Shanley's 2005 play and 2008 film have plenty of conflict and emotional intensity, the characters dueling over essential ideas like truth, justice and religious ideals. And Douglas Cuomo's music serves to expand the emotional palette of Shanley's words, layering levels of meaning onto exchanges and adding extra shadings to an already complex tale.

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Matthew Worth as Father Brendan Flynn, a parish priest in Minnesota Opera's Doubt
Photo by Michal Daniel

From Larry Fuchsberg at the Star Tribune:

Cuomo's music is of quiet power, most moving when most intimate; he knows how to insinuate what cannot be spoken. Though unmistakably American in sound, with echoes of Copland, Bernstein and John Adams, he avoids both pop cliché and music-theater razzmatazz. If Cuomo's vocal lines sometimes seem awkward, his pacing is remarkably deft: the potentially tedious closing scene of Act 1, for example, which veers from a theological critique of "Frosty the Snowman" to oblique charges of impropriety, is a masterpiece of timing.

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Christine Brewer as Sister Aloysius Beauvier, the school principal and Matthew Worth as Father Brendan Flynn, a parish priest in Minnesota Opera's Doubt
Photo by Michal Daniel

From the Associated Press:

On first hearing, it's hard to say how much of the project's success is due to the strength of Shanley's play and how much to Cuomo's musical setting...The composer, who has written one previous opera called "Arjuna's Dilemma" and is perhaps best known for the theme music to TV's "Sex and the City," is clearly talented. He has an ear for subtle dissonance, and his inventive orchestrations are enhanced by judicious use of saxophone, piano and celeste. Shanley has rewritten a lot of the text to make it more singable and has opened up the play by adding choruses for children and for the churchgoers at St. Nicholas parish in the Bronx of 1964.

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Adriana Zabala as Sister James, a teacher and a nun and Christine Brewer as Sister Aloysius Beauvier, the school principal in Minnesota Opera's Doubt
Photo by Michal Daniel

From Heidi Waleson at the Wall Street Journal:

Much of Act I is made up of brief scenes that set up the atmosphere of the school and its boisterous young pupils (an able group of child singers) and reveal the bits of evidence about Father Flynn's supposed crime, with the young teacher Sister James (the bright soprano Adriana Zabala) as an unwilling witness and informant. The three-way confrontation that ends the act is overlong and unoperatic: a missed opportunity for ensemble writing, of which there is little in the piece.

"Doubt" runs through February 3 at the Ordway in St. Paul. Have you seen it? If so, what's your review?

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SPCO musicians seek progress by end of week

Posted at 6:01 PM on January 30, 2013 by Marianne Combs (0 Comments)
Filed under: Arts management, Funding, Music

SPCO musicians say they are trying to speed up the negotiation process, in fear that the 101-day lockout could drag on for several weeks longer.

In their latest counter proposal, SPCO musicians agreed to reduce their annual salary 20% for the 2012-2013 season, 17% for the 2013-2014 season and 15% for the 2015-2016 season.

They are requesting that management responds no later than Friday, February 1.

Representatives of the locked-out musicians of the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra say they continue to have objections to a compensation package proposed by management.

They are particularly opposed a two-tier pay system. Under that proposal, any new musicians joining the orchestra will earn $10,000 a year less than current players.

Last week SPCO interim president Dobson West offered some concessions, including a guarantee that no current musicians will be laid off as the orchestra moves from 34 to 28 players.

However, musicians' negotiator Carol Mason Smith said that in reality the major concessions have been on the part of the musicians.

"We have made concessions as far as the complement of the orchestra, the number of musicians," she said. "We've made compensation concessions, and we are still not seeing the similar kind of drastic change that we have made, we are not seeing it from our management yet."


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This activity is made possible in part by the Minnesota Legacy Amendment's Arts & Cultural Heritage Fund