Monthly blog archive

About PDX OPERAbeat

Name

Jess Crawford

Bio

PDX OPERAbeat | A Company Blog is the blog for all things Portland Opera, featuring a variety of guest contributors who will provide insider's tidbits on all we do to celebrate the beauty and breadth of opera. Jess Crawford is our primary blogger. Jess spends much of her time eating enormous amounts of cake, making long lists of books she'll probably never read, and challenging people to arm-wrestling contests. During the day (and sometimes at night) she is Portland Opera's music librarian. She writes more about her escapades at her personal blog: http://bravissimi.blogspot.com
Syndicate content

PDX OPERAbeat's Blog

Bidding Farewell to Figaro

So, Figaro has closed. We had an amazingly successful run, with a totally sold out opening night, and a record number of folks at the matinee. Audiences seemed to just love it -- it was great to stand backstage and hear so much laughter. Comic opera is fun!

We got some great reviews:

James Bash's review in Oregon Music News

Brett Campbell's review in Willamette Week

Ryan Prado's review for Just Out

Ned Lannamann's review in Portland Mercury

And don't forget that you can write your own review right here on our webpage.  We truly love to hear what you liked and didn't like.

This week, I thought I'd share with you a little of what happens once we've closed a show. Most people probably don't think much of it, but all the things associated with the show -- sets, costumes, props, etc -- have to be dismantled and, in most cases, sent away. (The exception to this is when we mount our own productions; then most often the sets return to our warehouse in NW Portland). The official load-out day is the day immediately following closing night, but there's a ton more that goes into sending these productions "home" (or to their next performance venue) than just one day of taking apart the set. Our Technical Director, Scot Burckhardt, very kindly gave me a great summary of the process. In his own words:

Load out:

Meet Studio Artist André Chiang

Bumps, thunks and clunks: offstage with Figaro

Figaro marks the first time in a year I will not be running supertext for one of our shows. I'm actually only the backup supertext operator; our principal accompanist, Tom Webb, is the primary operator. So, unless he is playing in the pit for a show, he runs titles. By some funny circumstance, in the past few years we've had keyboard on almost every show. So Hansel & Gretel was the only show I saw from the house last year; before that, it was 2009's La Boheme. Gone are the days when I used to be able to sit in the house like a regular opera fan!

Anyway, despite being released from title duty, I won't get to watch this one either. For Figaro I will be backstage making noises. On purpose.

Offstage noises -- knocks, crashes, chimes, dings, whistles, wind, etc -- are sometimes made by stage management, sometimes by stagehands, sometimes by orchestra musicians, and sometimes by the singers themselves.
Singers will knock on doors. Percussionists have been known to play wind machines backstage (most recently, in The Flying Dutchman). Stage managers or props crews drop crash boxes.

What's a crash box? A crash box is, well, a box, usually a large wooden or metal crate, that holds an assortment of items and is dropped from backstage to simulate, well, a crash. Typical things inside crash boxes include cutlery, glassware, china, and wooden blocks. This website has an absolutely terrific description of how to create a radio crash box (which is smaller than a theater crash box, since they don't need the sound to resonate over a large space). I love his crash box recipe: