Saw Bellini's Norma last night at the San Francisco Opera. It was the final dress rehearsal before opening this week-end. Norma is the exact opposite to Dr. Atomic. It's very Italian, very traditional, and it's all about the singing, whereas Dr. Atomic is about the spectacle which includes singing. Norma is one of the operas people like to make fun of. One comedian summarized it as two fat women on stage for three hours screaming at each other. That is so unkind. They weren't fat. In fact, they were gorgeous, these two women who were screaming at each other for three hours. Joking aside, most of the first act is the two sopranos singing some beautiful music together. I'm fond of Norma (the opera) for two reasons. My first recording of it was with Maria Callas singing the role of Norma. Unfuckingbelieveable. It was also the first live performances of an opera I ever saw. Renata Scotto sang Norma. That was sometime in the last century. It must have been sometime in the 70s, I just can't remember for sure. I was living pretty fast in those days.
I run in circles that require you to explain exactly what you mean or feel. And because I come from such a country background, I'm easily embarrassed by what I don't know about so many things. It's a good thing I'm cute and funny, because if I weren't, I'd be called a lot of less flattering names. I do overly qualify any remarks I make about well, just about everything. Some of that is cultural as well. Southerners just hate to say nasty things about people we don't know all that well. No, that's not entirely true. We just hate going on record and being held accountable, so we just add a "Bless your heart," when we do. Now, about tonight's opera. Bless their hearts. I thought the singing spectacular. Now I qualify it. I can't tell when they're on key, on time, or what. If I'm into it, I just soak it all in. How good or bad something is depends totally on whether or not I'm entertained.
Tonight I was entertained. I loved part of it and hated parts of it. I thought the set was unimaginative, tacky and inappropriate. Nor did I care much for the orchestra, but I had just seen Dr. Atomic and that's mostly about the orchestra. I thought this one sounded like a village um-pah band when they started. I have no idea who the principle singers were, but they were good. The San Francisco Opera Chorus is usually better known than most of the principals. They were great tonight.
I especially liked the scene tonight where the Druid warriors wearing thongs painted themselves blue in preparation for going to war against the Romans. They were wearing thongs, and I'm not talking about shoes. The high school students around me were absolutely titillated. So much so that I was self-conscious when I took my opera glasses out of my pocket to facilitate getting a better look.
Did I not mention that it was high school night at the opera? This is not my favorite age group. I accompanied a bunch of kids from S.F. Art and Film. Can you believe that at one time in my life I imagined myself teaching this particular age group about the wonderful and rich story that is American history? That was before I found out that I don't like high school students. I warmed to them quite a bit when they laughed at an inappropriate moment in the first act. We lost quite a few after intermission, but the ones that stayed totally got into it during the second act. It was cute to watch their transformation as they got "hooked" by the drama.
Despite my enthusiasm for opera, I'm not really one of those big-city opera queens. Believe me, I know opera queens, and I'm not one--not that there's anything wrong with it. A real opera queen lives for opera. They're in the chorus. They work as supers. They volunteer to usher. They follow the careers of favorite singers. (Uh oh. That symptom feels familiar.) My best buddy, Lisa, was a supernumerator (or whateverthefuck that word is) at the San Francisco Opera. Supernumerary? We just call them supers. Supers are the ultimate opera groupies. Lisa has been in so many productions of Madame Butterfly that sometimes she awakes wondering if she's dreamed about being in Madame Butterfly, or whether she's in Madame Butterfly dreaming about being Lisa. I think her last count was that she had been in 45 performances. That's dedication.
I was out surfing in the blogosphere last night after the performance when I stumbled onto a blog by one of the supers in tonight's performance. He writes Civic Center as SFMike. I can't wait to go back and read more stuff. Having seen three performances there this season already, I have a point of reference. SF Mike is a good story teller with a good eye for rich detail. It was too much fun reading the behind the scenes story. Say hi if you stop by.
That's four operas in the past month for me. I'm sure that's a record. And I've got one more to go: Beethoven's Fidelio. And I didn't even buy season tickets. I've always fancied myself more of a symphony kind of guy. Afterall, I'm a first line groupie for Michael Tilson Thomas, but he now has competition for my culturally romantic fantasies. I've been listening to a lot of William Burden's singing this past week or two. I interspersed Bill's songs with Michael Feinstein singing Cole Porter's "I can dream, can't I?"
You bet the fuck I can. I can and I do.
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