Blogs

The best of all possible worlds?

"Candide ... said to himself, 'If this is the best of all possible worlds, what are the others?'"

Monday night was the first time I got to see our production of Candide. I spent the weekend working in the supertext booth, where, because there are four follow-spot operators for the show, I'm relegated to a seat with a window measuring roughly 5" x 5". Since I don't really need to see in order to run the supertext, I didn't bother to adjust my chair to window height (tall), and spent three nights just listening to the show, which I found increasingly hilarious.

I've never seen Candide before, although I played the concert version of the overture at least twice in college. (And what a piece of music! Talk about an overture that demands a listener's attention). Nevertheless, Candide is a piece that feels naturally familiar -- one of those that you know even without knowing it. It's so very Bernstein, and so very American. It's beautiful, and charming, and fun. And what a refreshing change of pace from Very Serious Opera!

© Jason Potter

Anyway: back to Monday night. As we have done in the past (Barber of Seville, Rigoletto), we invited several local comic artists to Monday night's dress rehearsal, where they got a backstage tour and then were encouraged to draw whatever inspired them from their seats in the first few rows of the orchestra section. This year, for the first time, we also invited several prolific local Twitter users to come and live-tweet the opera. What a hoot! I also use Twitter, so I took the opportunity to join in on the fun; it was so interesting and hilarious to read other peoples' reactions to the show in real time. (And also strange and a little thrilling to be allowed/encouraged to use our phones during the show.)

Candide!

Welcome back, blog readers! The blog has taken a brief hiatus so that I could catch my breath after Galileo Galilei Because PHEW, people.

We are in the middle of our second week of rehearsals for Bernstein's Candide! The artists arrived early last week and have been locked in the rehearsal room ever since. (We do occasionally let them out for snacks). The chorus is having a fabulous time -- they have a huge and absolutely hilarious role in this show -- and the rest of us can't wait to see it! We head into the Keller on Thursday to begin rehearsing there.

Excerpts from the Candide rehearsal notes
- We are using the silver paper nose for Pangloss, not the laminated one.

- Please put a larger wrist loop on the billy club.

- Please bring the gym mats to Keller - for catching sheep as they are thrown offstage.

- A total of 2 death warrants per show are used.

- The sparkle necklace takes a small amount of light onstage abuse - pulled off, etc.

- Please ADD pom pom hats and pink armbands for Jan and Matt. A total of 6 people wear pink armbands and pom pom hats.

 

Meet the POSA: Caitlin Mathes

Our final POSA recital of the year, featuring mezzo-soprano Caitlin Mathes, takes place tomorrow, April 10, at 7 PM in Portland Art Museum's Whitsell Auditorium. Admission is free, with a suggested donation of $10. You can reserve your ticket here.

Caitlin


Caitlin's recital is a program of "degenerate" music (German: entartete musik); that is, music that was condemned, and eventually banned, by the Nazis as being harmful to the regime. Music could be considered degenerate if it opposed the Nazi regime in its content, or if the composer's political views were themselves considered degenerate. Any work by Jewish or Jewish-origin composers, any work featuring Jewish or African characters, any work by a Marxist -- all were considered degenerate. Any artist who had shown sympathy for Nazi opposition was condemned. Modernist music was judged inferior to classical music, as was jazz, and so both forms also were classified as degenerate.


Once the Nazi regime came into power, composers of this music found it increasingly difficult, or impossible, to get their works performed, and many retreated into exile (or were interred in concentration camps). Degenerate composers included Mendelssohn, Schoenberg, Webern, Hindemith, Mahler, Weill, Korngold, Stravinsky, and Hanns Eisler.
 



Below, Caitlin answers the Proust questionnaire. I have seen her squirrel paws.

 

What is your current state of mind?
Doodle doodle doodle ta ta taaa tuh ta ta taa… Kukuk, Nachtigall, Mond… clean bathroom for parents… taxes? Um, busy.

 

What is your chief characteristic?
I make squirrel paws with my hands a lot.

 

What do you appreciate the most in your friends?
Easy conversation.

 

What do you consider the most overrated virtue?
Temperance. How can I be a singer and not devalue temperance. Where would the great opera characters be if they had any temperance? Boring.

 

What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?
I am a worry wart. Worry wort? Now I’m worried.

 

What is your idea of perfect happiness?
5 o’clock, July, seated in the shade, some sort of Aperol/grapefruit drink, with my loved ones, and Django Reinhardt is playing in the background.

 

Where would you like to live?
I would love to live half the year in some small Tuscan stone cottage with an old iron fence and beautiful grass. And the other half? Doesn’t matter much.

 

Who are your favorite heroes in fiction?
Walter Burns (Cary Grant’s character from His Girl Friday)

 

Who are your favorite heroines in fiction?
The little red hen (of the Little Red Hen Saga)

 

What is the quality you most like in a woman? A man?
Self love, and self belief.

 

If you were to die and come back as a person or thing, what do you think it would be?
I think I might come back as a boatman, I feel I have some lessons that need to be learned on the open water.

 

If you could choose what to come back as, what would it be?
An alpine mountain goat would be fun. Named SureFoos.

 

If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?
I would like to make my freckles more pronounced.

 

What is your most treasured possession?
I have some crochet/filet of my grandmother’s that I think is absolutely beautiful. No matter where I am, if I bring one of these, it can feel a little like family and home.

 

What are your favorite names?
The name Guy has always been a favorite.

 

What do you hate most of all?
Haters, or “Hatahs”

 

What natural talent would you most like to have?
I have, in general, a horrible mind for information in the short term. I would love to be able to remember an address, or what time I work without having to check and recheck and write it down before I show up half an hour early.

 

How do you wish to die?
How do YOU wish to DIE!? fa

 

What is your favorite motto?
This is a sort of motto, and it is by far my most favorite quote. Buckminster Fuller “…I am not a thing — a noun. I seem to be a verb, an evolutionary process…”

 

Lindsay & Caitlin
[Lindsay Ohse & Caitlin Mathes, broken doll arm pose]