Houston Grand Opera
Houston Grand Opera (HGO), located in Houston, Texas, was founded in 1955 by German-born impresario Walter Herbert and Houstonians Elva Lobit, Edward Bing, and Charles Cockrell.[1] HGO's inaugural season featured two performances of two operas, Salome (starring Brenda Lewis in the title role) and Madame Butterfly. David Gockley succeeded Walter Herbert as general director in 1972 and remained in the post until accepting the general directorship at San Francisco Opera in 2005.
Gockley was succeeded at Houston Grand Opera by Anthony Freud, previously the general director at Welsh National Opera. When Freud resigned his post at HGO in 2011 to take the general directorship of Lyric Opera of Chicago, he was succeeded by joint leaders Patrick Summers, who had been music director at HGO since 1998, and Perryn Leech, who joined the company in 2006 and became chief operating officer in 2010. Summers serves as artistic and music director and Leech serves as managing director. Oversight of the HGO Association is provided by a board of directors; a body of trustees also supports the organization.
The company presents six to eight productions per season and has a current operating budget of $27 million. Houston Grand Opera performances are held in the Wortham Theater Center, a venue with two performance spaces: the Alice and George Brown Theater and the smaller Roy and Lillie Cullen Theater. Their combined capacity is more than 3,300. However, HGO performed all of its 2017–18 season at the “HGO Resilience Theater,” a temporary space the company created in an exhibit hall at Houston’s George R. Brown Convention Center, after the Wortham Theater Center was closed due to flooding from Hurricane Harvey in August 2017.[2] The Wortham Theater Center is scheduled to reopen in September 2018.
In 1973–74, Houston Grand Opera began regularly commissioning and producing new works—almost exclusively from American composers—and the company continues to do so. HGO has also staged seven American premieres.
The Houston Grand Opera Studio, founded in 1977, was one of the earliest comprehensive young artist training programs in the United States.[3] It provides advanced training and professional opportunities to outstanding young artists, many of whom have gone on to establish international careers.
Through its HGOco initiative, HGO partners with educational and community organizations to provide a variety of artistic experiences to the greater Houston area and the Gulf Coast region.
Houston Grand Opera is supported by an active auxiliary organization, the Houston Grand Opera Guild, established in October 1955.[4]
The company has received a Tony Award, two Grammy Awards, and three Emmy Awards, and is the only opera company in the world to win all three honors.
Musical Forces
The Houston Grand Opera Orchestra, with more than 45 core members, plays all Houston Grand Opera performances. Patrick Summers (artistic and music director since 2011) has been the music director since 1998. No music director was appointed during the Walter Herbert years (1955–72) until 1971, when longtime assistant conductor and chorus master Charles Rosekrans was named. Later music directors/principal conductors include Chris Nance (1974–77), John DeMain (1977–94), and Vjekoslav Šutej (1994–97). In the 2019–20 season, Eun Sun Kim will become the company’s first principal guest conductor since 1993, when Šutej completed two seasons in that role.
The Houston Grand Opera Chorus has been led since 1988 by Chorus Master Richard Bado, an alumnus of HGO’s young artist training program, the Houston Grand Opera Studio.
Young Artist Training
Houston Grand Opera Studio
Houston Grand Opera’s young artist development program, the Houston Grand Opera Studio, was founded in 1977 to help young artists make the transition between their academic training and professional careers. The HGO Studio primarily trains young singers and pianist/coaches but has also trained aspiring conductors in a residency program of up to three years. An annual competition, now called the Eleanor McCollum Competition for Young Singers, was inaugurated in 1989 to help identify a pool of potential international artists for the Studio, which is currently directed by Brian Speck. Studio alumni include sopranos Ana María Martínez, Erie Mills, Albina Shagimuratova, Heidi Stober, Rachel Willis-Sørensen, and Tamara Wilson; mezzo-sopranos Jamie Barton, Joyce DiDonato, Denyce Graves, Susanne Mentzer, and Marietta Simpson; tenors Bruce Ford, and Norman Reinhardt; baritones Richard Paul Fink, and Scott Hendricks; bass-baritones Greer Grimsley, Ryan McKinny, and Eric Owens; and bass Eric Halfvarson. Other alumni include HGO Chorus Master Richard Bado, composer/conductor David Hanlon, former Lyric Opera of Kansas City Artistic Director Ward Holmquist, conductor/arranger/composer James Lowe, conductor/pianist Eric Melear, conductor Evan Rogister, and conductor/pianist Craig Terry.
Young Artists Vocal Academy
The HGO Young Artists Vocal Academy, established in 2011 and administered by the HGO Studio, is a one-week intensive program for undergraduate vocal music students. Participants selected for the program receive training that includes daily voice lessons and coachings as well as classes in characterization, movement, diction, and score preparation.
HGOco (see below) offers training to high school juniors and seniors.
HGOco
In 2007, HGO established HGOco, an initiative designed to create partnerships between the company and the community. HGOco’s first project, the ongoing Song of Houston initiative, creates new works focused on people and groups in Houston—the most culturally diverse city in the United States, according to a report of the Kinder Institute for Urban Research and the Hobby Center for the Study of Texas.[5]
For its first commissioned work in 2007, The Refuge, by Christopher Theofanidis and Leah Lax, HGOco identified seven statistically significant immigrant communities in Houston and the creators began interviewing residents of those communities. The libretto was created from the actual words of some of the residents, and the premiere included performances by members from these communities.[6]
In 2009, HGOco received the Leading Lights Diversity Award in Arts and Culture from the National MultiCultural Institute (NCMI) for Song of Houston.
As of May 2018, HGOco has premiered 22 new works, including eight short chamber operas focusing on various Asian communities in Houston, which were commissioned and premiered during a four-year series titled East + West. Recent HGOco premieres include Laura Kaminsky and Mark Campbell/Kimberly Reed’s Some Light Emerges, about Houston philanthropist and humanitarian Dominique de Menil and her quest to create the Rothko Chapel; Gregory Spears and Royce Vavrek’s O Columbia, realized through the collaboration of Houston-based NASA astronauts, scientists, and engineers; and David Hanlon and Stephanie Fleischmann’s After the Storm, about the impact that Hurricane Ike and the Great Storm of 1900 had upon Galveston and the Gulf Coast. Song cycles have also been created in cooperation with workers in the Houston Ship Channel, the veterans community, and the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.
HGOco also administers:
- Houston Grand Opera’s Bauer Family High School Voice Studio, a scholarship program for high school juniors and seniors preparing to study vocal music at the college/conservatory level
- Summer Opera Camps for students in Pre-K through grade 12.
- Opera to Go!, a touring company that focuses on short musical works for children and families.
Houston Grand Opera and New Works
HGO has been commissioning and premiering new works since 1974. These include full-length operas for the main stage and chamber works with a community focus or for children/families.
World Premieres
Full-length Operas
The relationship between HGO and composer Carlisle Floyd is the longest ongoing relationship of any composer with an organization: HGO has commissioned five works from Floyd, including Bilby’s Doll (1976), Willie Stark (1981), The Passion of Jonathan Wade (new version, 1991), Cold Sassy Tree (2000), and Prince of Players (2016). Floyd lived in Houston for some 20 years after relocating in 1976 from Tallahassee, Florida, to accept the M.D. Anderson Professorship at the University of Houston School of Music (now the Moores School of Music). In 1977, he cofounded the Houston Grand Opera Studio, HGO’s young artist training program, which was initially a joint program between HGO and the University of Houston, and was an active participant in training Studio artists.[7]
Chamber Operas
HGO has commissioned and premiered 15 chamber operas created for children/families. These chamber works are staged and are approximately 45 minutes long.
American Premieres
HGO has presented seven American premieres. Among them, the most significant are the first staged version of Handel’s Rinaldo in 1975 (a concert version had been given in 1972 by the Handel Society of New York), starring Marilyn Horne in the title role and Samuel Ramey as Argante; Rossini’s La donna del lago in a new critical edition in 1981, and more recently, Weinberg’s The Passenger, a long-suppressed Holocaust opera composed in 1968 and performed by HGO in 2014. Besides presenting the American premiere in Houston, HGO was also invited to bring the production to the Park Avenue Armory as part of the 2014 Lincoln Center Festival.
Non-traditional Opera
During the 2017–18 season, HGOco began a web-only series of 15-minute operas titled Star-Cross’d, based on true stories with a Romeo and Juliet theme. The series pilot, “Boundless,” by composer Avner Dorman and librettist Stephanie Fleischmann, was released online April 20, 2018. Two more episodes are scheduled for release during 2019.[8]
In 2010, HGO commissioned and premiered the world’s first “mariachi opera”[9], composed by the late José “Pepe” Martínez, the longtime music director of the ensemble Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán, with a libretto by Leonard Foglia. This work, titled Cruzar la Cara de la Luna/To Cross the Face of the Moon, has been performed at Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris and by a number of opera companies in the United States.
In addition to commissioning and premiering new works, HGO has played a role in bringing certain existing works to the attention of the opera world. HGO presented a “triumphant”[10] and “groundbreaking”[11] production of Porgy and Bess in 1976 that restored portions of the work that had been cut for previous productions (including some made by composer George Gershwin himself for the New York premiere in 1935), thus allowing the public to experience the original vision for the work and making it clear that it was indeed an opera. After the Houston premiere, the production, featuring Donnie Ray Albert as Porgy and Clamma Dale as Bess and conducted by John DeMain, toured to Broadway and won a 1977 Tony Award for Most Innovative Production of a Revival.[12] The complete recording won the 1977 Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording.[13]
Scott Joplin’s Treemonisha, which comprises a variety of musical styles even though it is often called a “ragtime opera,” received its first fully staged performances at Houston Grand Opera in 1976 with a score HGO commissioned from ragtime expert Gunther Schuller. Treemonisha also toured to Broadway and was recorded.
Houston Grand Opera and Innovation
Supertitles
In 1984, Houston Grand Opera began using supertitles on all non-English productions, becoming one of the first opera companies in the United States to do so.[14]
Descriptive Services
HGO was one of the first opera companies in the United States (and possibly the first) to offer descriptive services for patrons with vision loss. It has offered descriptive services since the 1987–88 season, the inaugural season in the Wortham Theater Center. The service is offered free of charge and by request for any performance with 48 hours notice.
The Genevieve P. Demme Archives and Resource Center
In 1989, HGO became the first performing arts organization in Houston and the second major U.S. opera company to establish its own archives and resources center. The archives/resource center is named for the late Genevieve P. Demme, a longtime trustee and historian of Houston Grand Opera Association.
Plazacasts
On November 10, 1995, Houston Grand Opera became the first performing arts company in the United States to simulcast a live performance to an audience in another location. (The Royal Opera, Covent Garden, was the only other company at the time to have staged a similar event.) The performance of Rossini’s La Cenerentola featuring mezzo-soprano Cecilia Bartoli that was taking place inside the Wortham Theater Center’s Brown Theater was projected in real time onto a large screen mounted on the outside of the theater building. The event was free to the public. The audience was seated on the Ray C. Fish Plaza outside the theater, which prompted HGO to call the event a Plazacast. HGO held free public Plazacasts each year through the 2004–05 season (HGO’s 50th season). In April 2005, the company simulcast both a performance of Gounod’s Romeo and Juliet and its 50th anniversary gala concert.
Multimedia Modular Stage
In May 1998, Houston Grand Opera unveiled its Multimedia Modular Stage, a large steel structure with moving lights, projection screens for live-feed video and still images, and a big sound system. It was designed for large outdoor venues but could be adapted for other locations. HGO used it several times for outdoor performances in Houston and on tour, and once for an indoor production of Stephen Sondheim’s A Little Night Music in 1999. Its last use in Houston was the night of June 8, 2001, in a production of Carmen at Houston’s Miller Outdoor Theatre. That night, Tropical Storm Allison struck Houston, where the storm’s worst flooding occurred. The two remaining performances in Houston were canceled, although the production went on tour as scheduled on June 15 and 16 to the Mann Center in Philadelphia. The effects of the storm, along with the impact of 9/11 and the collapse of Enron just months afterward, led to the retirement of the Multimedia Modular Stage, which was costly to assemble and disassemble.
OperaVision
In the fall of 2000, HGO devised and implemented a system of plasma and projection screens mounted in the Grand Tier and Balcony sections of the larger of the two halls in the Wortham Theater Center. This system—designed to provide close-up views of the action on stage and improve sightlines in the unusually steep Grand Tier and Balcony areas—was called OperaVision and received mixed appraisals from opera patrons. OperaVision was discontinued at the end of the 2004–05 season.
Awards
Emmy Awards
- HGO: The Ring Cycle, Sculpting With Time Productions (Alex Douglas and Whitney Douglas), 2017, regional Emmy Awards for directing and photography
- Hitting the High Cs, Marion Kessell and Rick Christie, 1998, regional Emmy for editing
- Nixon in China, John Adams and Alice Goodman, 1988, for Outstanding Musical Program
Grammy Awards
- Nixon in China, John Adams and Alice Goodman, 1988, Best Contemporary Composition
- Porgy and Bess, George Gershwin and DuBose Heyward, 1977, Best Opera Recording
Grand Prix du Disque
- Porgy and Bess, George Gershwin and DuBose Heyward, 1977
National MultiCultural Institute Award
- HGOco’s Song of Houston initiative, 2009, Leading Lights Diversity Award in Arts and Culture
Tony Award
- Porgy and Bess, George Gershwin and DuBose Heyward, 1977, Most Innovative Production of a Revival
Premieres, Recordings, and Television Appearances
World premieres through the 2018–19 Season
- The Phoenix, Tarik O’Regan and John Caird, April 2019
- Monkey & Francine in the City of Tigers, Kamala Sankaram and David Johnston, January 2018
- The House without a Christmas Tree, Ricky Ian Gordon and Royce Vavrek, November 2017
- Some Light Emerges, Laura Kaminsky and Mark Campbell/Kimberly Reed, March 2017
- It’s a Wonderful Life, Jake Heggie and Gene Scheer, December 2016
- After the Storm, David Hanlon and Stephanie Fleischmann, May 2016
- What Wings They Were: The Case of Emeline, John L. Cornelius II and Janine Joseph, April 2016
- Prince of Players, Carlisle Floyd, March 2016
- The Puffed-Up Prima Donna, Mark Buller and Charles Anthony Silvestri, January 2016
- O Columbia, Gregory Spears and Royce Vavrek, September 2015
- The Pastry Prince, Mark Buller and Charles Anthony Silvestri, 2015
- A Christmas Carol, Iain Bell and Simon Callow, 2014
- River of Light, Jack Perla and Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, 2014
- A Coffin in Egypt, Ricky Ian Gordon and Leonard Foglia, 2014
- Bound, Huang Ruo and Bao-Long Chu, 2014
- Rapunzel, Mary Carol Warwick and Alvaro Saar Rios, 2014
- The Memory Stone, Marty Regan and Kenny Fries, 2013
- Past the Checkpoints, David Hanlon and Joann Farías, 2013
- From My Mother’s Mother, Jeeyoung Kim and Janine Joseph, 2012
- New Arrivals, John Glover and Catherine Filloux, 2012
- The Bricklayer, Gregory Spears and Farnoosh Moshiri, 2012
- The Clever Wife—a Chinese Folktale, Mary Carol Warwick and Hugh Behm-Steinberg, 2012
- Pieces of 9/11, Jake Heggie and Gene Scheer, 2011
- Your Name Means the Sea, Franghiz Alizadeh, 2011
- Courtside, Jack Perla and Eugene Chan, 2011
- Cruzar la Cara de la Luna / To Cross the Face of the Moon, José “Pepe” Martínez and Leonard Foglia, 2010
- A Way Home, Ethan Frederick Greene and Irene Keliher, 2010
- Brief Encounter, André Previn and John Caird, 2009
- Sleeping Beauty, Edward Charles Winkler, 2008
- Three Decembers (premiered under the title Last Acts), Jake Heggie and Gene Scheer, 2008
- The Refuge, Christopher Theofanidis and Leah Lax, 2007
- Send (who are you? I love you), Michael John LaChiusa, 2006
- Strega Nona, Mary Carol Warwick and Mary Ann Pendino, 2006
- Lysistrata, or the Nude Goddess, Mark Adamo, 2005
- The Princess and the Pea, Mary Carol Warwick and Mary Ann Pendino, 2005
- Salsipuedes, a tale of Love, War and Anchovies, Daniel Catán and Eliseo Alberto / Francisco Hinojosa, 2004
- The End of the Affair, Jake Heggie and Heather McDonald, 2004
- The Velveteen Rabbit, Mary Carol Warwick and Kate Pogue, 2004
- The Little Prince, Rachel Portman and Nicholas Wright, 2003
- ''Sibanda!, Michael Remson, 2003
- The Emperor's New Clothes, Mary Carol Warwick and Kate Pogue, 2001
- Cold Sassy Tree, Carlisle Floyd, 2000
- Resurrection, Tod Machover and Laura Harrington with additional materials by Braham Murray, 1999
- Little Women, Mark Adamo, 1998
- Cinderella in Spain/Cinderella en España, Mary Carol Warwick and Kate Pogue, 1998
- Jackie O, Michael Daugherty and Wayne Koestenbaum, 1997
- Florencia en el Amazonas, Daniel Catán and Marcela Fuentes-Berain, 1996
- The Tibetan Book of the Dead, a liberation through hearing, Ricky Ian Gordon and Jean-Claude van Itallie, 1996
- Puppy and the Big Guy, Sterling Tinsley and Kate Pogue, 1995
- Harvey Milk, Stewart Wallace and Michael Korie, 1995
- The Outcast (fully realized version), Noa Ain, 1994
- The Dracula Diary, Robert Moran and James Skofield, 1994
- TEXAS!, Mary Carol Warwick and Kate Pogue, 1993
- The Achilles Heel, Craig Bohmler and Mary Carol Warwick, 1993
- Desert of Roses, Robert Moran and Michael John LaChiusa, 1992
- ATLAS: an opera in three parts, Meredith Monk, 1991
- The Passion of Jonathan Wade (new version), Carlisle Floyd, 1991
- New Year, Sir Michael Tippett, 1989
- Where's Dick?, Stewart Wallace and Michael Korie, 1989
- The Making of the Representative for Planet 8, Philip Glass and Doris Lessing, 1988
- Nixon in China, John Adams and Alice Goodman, 1987
- A Quiet Place, Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Wadsworth, 1983
- Starbird, Henry Mollicone and Kate Pogue, 1980
- Willie Stark, Carlisle Floyd, 1981
- Bilby's Doll, Carlisle Floyd, 1976
- The Seagull, Thomas Pasatieri and Kenward Elmslie, 1974
American premieres
- The Passenger, Mieczyslaw Weinberg, 2014
- Akhnaten, Philip Glass, 1984
- La donna del lago (new critical edition), Gioacchino Rossini, 1981
- The Panther, Philip Glass, 1981
- Robinson Crusoé, Jacques Offenbach, 1977
- Rinaldo (stage premiere), George Frideric Handel, 1975
- Hugh the Drover, Ralph Vaughan Williams, 1973
Video recordings
- Little Women, Naxos, DVD, 2010
- La Cenerentola, London/Decca,VHS and DVD, 1996
- Treemonisha, Kultur Video, VHS, 1982
Nationally televised productions
- Little Women, PBS’s Great Performances, August 2001
- La Cenerentola, PBS’s Great Performances, April 1996
- Nixon in China, PBS’s Great Performances, April 1988
- Aida, PBS’s Great Performances, October 1987
- Treemonisha, PBS, February 1986
- Willie Stark, PBS’s Great Performances, October 1981
Audio Recordings
- It's a Wonderful Life, PENTATONE, 2017
- A Coffin in Egypt, Albany, 2014
- Dead Man Walking, Virgin Classics, 2012
- Brief Encounter, Deutsche Grammophon, 2011
- Cruzar la Cara de la Luna, Albany, 2011
- Three Decembers, Albany, 2008
- The Refuge, Albany, 2008
- Cold Sassy Tree, Albany, 2005
- Of Mice and Men, Albany, 2003
- Florencia en el Amazonas, Albany, 2002
- Resurrection, Albany, 2002
- Little Women, Ondine, 2001
- Jackie O, Argo/Decca, 1997
- The Song of Majnun, Delos, 1997
- The Dracula Diary, Catalyst/BMG, 1994
- ATLAS: an opera in three parts, ECM, 1992
- Nixon in China, Nonesuch, 1988
- Treemonisha, Deutsche Grammophon, 1982
- Porgy and Bess, RCA, 1977
External links
References
- ↑ Giesberg, Robert I., Carl Cunningham, and Alan Rich. Houston Grand Opera at 50. Houston: Herring Press, 2005, p. 83.
- ↑ Oestreich, James R (October 23, 2017). "Forced Out by Flooding, Houston's Opera Gets On with the Show". New York Times.
- ↑ Comparable season-long young artist training programs were established by the Metropolitan Opera in 1980, Lyric Opera of Chicago in 1974, and San Francisco Opera in 1977.
- ↑ Giesberg, et. al., p. 84
- ↑ Emerson, Michael O., Jenifer Bratter, Junia Howell, P. Wilner Jeanty, and Mike Cline. Houston Region Grows More Racially/Ethnically Diverse, With Small Declines in Segregation: A Joint Report Analyzing Census Data from 1990, 2000, and 2010. Kinder Institute for Urban Research and the Hobby Center for the Study of Texas.
- ↑ Blumenthal, Ralph (November 12, 2007). "Not From Here: An Opera for Houston's Immigrants". New York Times.
- ↑ Holliday, Thomas. Falling Up: The Days and Nights of Carlisle Floyd. Syracuse University Press, 2013, pp. 252–69.
- ↑ "Star-Cross'd: A Serial Web Opera".
- ↑ "World's First Mariachi Opera Premiere at HGO". September 20, 2010.
- ↑ "Porgy and Bess, the first great American opera, premieres on Broadway". History.com. 2009.
- ↑ Gay, Wayne Lee (December 13, 2013). "How the Broadway Porgy and Bess Mangles Gershwin's Grand Opera". D Magazine.
- ↑ "Past Tony Award Winners search".
- ↑ "Awards". Grammy.com.
- ↑ Giesberg, et. al., p. 137