Jacqueline redux

Most new Canadian operas get an initial run (if they are lucky) and then disappear.  Luna Pearl Woolf and Royce Vavrek’s Jacqueline is unusual in that following it’s premiere at Tapestry Opera in Toronto in 2020 it also played in San Francisco in 2024 and is now back in Toronto for a revival at Tapestry; once again directed by Michael Mori.  There’s even, we are told, a fourth run at a yet to be disclosed company in the works.  In some ways it’s not such a surprise.  In these cash strapped times the appeal of a very good full length opera that only requires two soloists; no orchestra, no chorus, ought to be obvious!

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Tanya’s Secret

Tanya’s Secret is a queer-trans adaptation of Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin.  It’s a production by Opéra Queens who seem to be a Montreal based group created during the pandemic and doing their first show in Toronto; in this case at the Betty Oliphant Theatre.  Actually it’s not a particularly radical adaptation compared to, say, some of Against the Grain’s transladaptations.  It’s sung in Russian (with some Ukrainian interpolations including a Lysenko art song) with subtitles on screens either side of the stage).  The plot isn’t really changed at all though the ball scene in Act 3 gets a sort of drag queen competition element.  The big change is that some roles are assigned to the “wrong” gender.  Tatiana is sung extremely well and acted even better by Mike Fan.  Catherine Carew is a strongly sung and impressive Gremin doubling as the very different Madame Larina. Christina Yun’s Lensky is ardent and she makes a nice fist of “Kuda, kuda”.  (Who needs tenors?)  Oddly this doesn’t really come across as all that radical.  The necessary transpositions occasionally create the odd awkward high note but it’s very singable and generally well sung.

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Jacqueline

Jacqueline is a new opera by librettist Royce Vavrek and composer Luna Pearl Woolf.  It will premiere at Tapestry next month.  It deals with the life and career of cellist Jacqueline du Pré.  Du Pré was a celebrity in her own life time.  She made her Wigmore Hall debut at age 16 in 1961 and quickly established herself as one of the all time greatest exponents of her instrument with a rather special relationship with the Elgar concerto.  Marriage to Daniel Barenboim, conversion to Judaism and “membership” in the rather remarkable circle of musical Jews in New York followed.  Her physical ability to play the cello though began to decline in 1971 and a formal diagnosis of multiple sclerosis was made in 1973.  She lived for another 14 years but never played again in public.

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