GGS Carmélites delivers

Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmélites is a very unusual opera.  It breaks all the rules and yet, done well, is an immensely compelling piece of music theatre.  There are no show stopper arias.  The ensemble numbers are mainly drawn from Catholic liturgy.  And yet it maintains a coherent and compelling narrative arc that builds steadily to an emotionally devastating conclusion.  The Glenn Gould School’s current production at Koerner Hall directed by Stephen Carr gets all the elements right and makes for a memorable evening at the opera.

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Tapestry x GGS

The Glenn Gould School’s Fall Chamber Opera offering this year was four short pieces from Tapestry Opera’s back catalogue.  First up was Ice Time by Ka Nin Chan and Mark Brownell.  It’s the story of a has been ice skater and her futile attempts to get her daughter, who wants to be a civil engineer, to follow in her footsteps (or icy equivalent).  The music is in much the same vein as other works by this composer such as Dragon’s Tale.  It’s a pretty light hearted piece and it got a lively and credible account from Emma Pennell as the daughter and Alexa Frankian as the mother.  As with the other pieces direction was by Dana Fradkin with accompaniment by chamber ensemble conducted by Peter Tiefenbach.

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Please ensure your seatbelt is securely fastened

The GGS’ production of Jonathan Dove’s Flight opened at Koerner Hall last night.  This is going to be a somewhat unusual review and my thoughts about the piece itself should be taken in the context of what I’m about to write.  The basic plot of Flight is, for me, quite literally the stuff of nightmares and by the third act I was having vivid and very disturbing flashbacks.  This undoubtedly skewed my opinion!

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Die Fledermaus revived at TOT

Toronto Operetta Theatre opened a run of Johann Strauss’ Die Fledermaus at the St. Lawrence Centre yesterday.  It’s a revival of their 2018 production and I don’t think my opinion of the production has really changed.  The jokes have been updated a bit; mostly to reflect the anticipated imprisonment of a certain former US president (I wish!).  But basically the schtick is the same.

Scott Rumble as Alfred, Kirsten LeBlanc as Rosalinda

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