Though Aucoin now has a good deal of professional experience, he was mostly self-taught before coming to college. Last year, he composed and conducted his own opera, which was based on James Merrill’s epic poem “The Changing Light at Sandover.” His opera, which he describes as “a supernatural love story,” premiered in the Horner Room of the Agassiz Theatre and was cast from a largely undergraduate group. Aucoin has also become interested in conducting, and is studying the art with director of the Harvard-
Radcliffe Orchestra Federico Cortese. Last summer he received an Artist Development Fellowship to study conducting in Milan and Florence.
Other performers in “Die Fledermaus” have also studied opera formally. Sofia M. Selowsky ’12, who plays Prince Orlofsky, has been singing opera since fourth grade. She also received an Artist Development Fellowship to do opera training in Salzburg this summer. But as DHO holds auditions through common casting, many cast members do not enjoy this high level of background experience.
SENSORY SYNTHESIS
As these performers take the leap to try opera for the first time, so too may Harvard students. For those willing to try something new, the rewards are numerous. Opera as a genre is not just about music; rather, it is a confluence of many artistic disciplines. “Opera offers a unique combination of dramatic, musical, and visual experiences,” says James Edward Ditson Professor of Music Anne C. Shreffler. One performance stimulates a gamut of aesthetic sensibilities. Audience members do not go to ‘see’ or ‘hear’ an opera, but rather to ‘experience’ one.
Opera streamlines elements of dance, theater, and vocal and orchestral music into one performance. “What is opera but a fusion of all these different art forms?” says Aucoin. This fusion is fundamental to opera and makes performing one a hefty challenge, especially for undergraduates working with limited resources in terms of space, funding, and experienced performers.
This difficulty requires that a multitude of individual efforts go into the creation of the final operatic product. At DHO’s dress rehearsal, violinists are bent intently over their sheet music, while onstage Nelson makes a flamboyant entrance and bursts into song. “That all of these people come from one undergraduate college’s student body is pretty amazing,” says Aucoin, who himself must be fully absorbed in conducting the orchestra while also intimately attuned to how the people onstage are moving.
CAPABLE CONDUCTION
Because opera is a combination of so many different art forms, conducting one is something of a balancing act. Aucoin says that to conduct successfully, “you have to do everything and nothing.” This paradox captures the conductor’s subtle but crucial role in coordinating dramatic action with music. Aucoin’s job obliges him to communicate subtle changes in the mood of the singers onstage to the musicians seated below in the pit. “You have to make everyone feel comfortable, but you can’t get in the way,” he says. Aucoin emphasizes the importance of allowing singers’ spontaneity to flourish, describing the conductor’s role as “a conduit for the energy of the show.” In opera, because so many things are happening simultaneously, it takes only a small error to derail the entire production. This makes the conductor’s position a tenuous one. “Everyone has to be on their A-game all the time,” says Aucoin.
From a staging perspective, opera is more demanding than a stage play because there are in effect two texts to work with: the libretto, or actual text of the opera, and the musical score. “The music becomes something you have to engage with from a staging standpoint,” says Stone. The director took his cues from the music more than from the text, listening to the score in order to isolate the emotions of a particular scene. The large amount of material, both musical and technical, necessitates a greater degree of choreography than is generally required in theater. “It’s inherently useful, going into a scene, to know what is going to fill every bar of music,” says Stone.
ATTRACTING ATTENTION
Professor Shreffler, who has been teaching a seminar on opera at the Humanities Center for seven years, believes that the inherent difficulties and obscurites of opera can be overcome by engaging Harvard students with the form, particularly due to the resources surrounding the University. “Boston is a powerhouse for scholarly research on opera,” she says. The city is home to the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Boston Baroque—both of which are full orchestras that perform the musical scores of operas—as well as the Boston Lyric Opera.
In her years of teaching the seminar in conjunction with two Tufts University professors, Shreffler has seen that opera can connect with both personal tragedy and the political landscape in a modern context. She cites the discussion topic of last week’s seminar, an ongoing production by the Boston Lyric Opera of “The Emperor of Atlantis.” Composed by Jewish-Czech composer Viktor Ullmann in a concentration camp during the Second World War, it is a thinly-veiled, satirical critique of Hitler. For a Boston Lyric Opera performance, it has received extensive media attention, including a review in the New York Times. “This opera, because of the human interest story, the quality of the music, the fact that it’s not so well known, that it’s not another ‘Tosca,’ has attracted a lot of attention [from the media],” says Shreffler.
In addition to the Humanities Center seminar, Shreffler teaches an undergraduate course with Professor of Music Carol J. Oja on the operas of John C. Adams ’69, who is best known for composing “Nixon in China,” an opera chronicling the former president’s 1972 trip currently running at the famed Metropolitan Opera in New York. Like Ullmann’s work, Adams’ demonstrates opera’s potential for political relevance. There have been so many new political operas since that this new body of work is being referred to as ‘CNN opera.’ “Nixon in China” has a deep Harvard connection, which is part of the reason why it is such a focus in Shreffler’s course. In addition to having been written by Adams, the opera is being directed at the Met by Harvard graduate Peter M. Sellars ’80, and Alice A. Goodman ’80 wrote the piece’s libretto. The Dean’s office has provided funds for students of the course to go see the production. “There are a lot of composers interested in writing operas about current events, and I think that helps to make opera relevant,” says Shreffler.
Aucoin witnessed firsthand the contemporary significance of opera during his time at La Scala in Milan, perhaps the world’s most famous opera house. Aucoin’s stint at La Scala coincided with Italian government’s dramatic cuts for funding of the Arts. “Things were in total chaos,” says Aucoin. “Apart from getting a musical education I got to see the inner workings of a very chaotic time in Italy’s musical history.” People were protesting outside the opera house in large numbers, a testament to the important position opera holds in the popular artistic sensibility of Italy.
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