| Celebrate
"La Vie Bohème" with the
famous Cafe Momus scene from "La Bohème"
(sung in English) and a concert medley from
"Rent, the Musical" by Jonathan
Larson, arranged by Mac Huff. Featuring
UTD voice students and the UTD Chamber Singers.
Directed by Kathryn Evans, with stage direction
by Mary Medrick.
Featuring:
Mimi - Evana Chen
Rodolfo - Mariusz Galczynski
Schaunard - Dane Acree
Colline - Nimesh Parikh
Marcello - Casey Bennett
Alcindoro - M. Blue Livesay
Musetta will be performed by special guest
artist Jacquelyn Lengfelder.
Director’s notes….
After his very successful opera Manon Lescaut
in 1893, Puccini sat down to write his next
work and was immediately drawn to a play
by Henri Munger, Scènes de la vie
de Bohème (also known as Bohemians
of the Latin Quarter). The word “bohemian”
was used in 19th century France to describe
artists, writers, and disenchanted people
of all sorts who wished to live non-traditional
lifestyles. Puccini was drawn to this story
of four young bohemians, Rudolfo the poet,
Marcello the artist, Schaunard the musician,
and Colline the philosopher, as the perfect
depiction of this lifestyle, and the two
women in their lives, Mimi and Musetta.
As the curtain rises on Act I, we see them
burning their furniture, even Rudolfo’s
manuscript, in an attempt to keep warm.
Presently we meet Mimi, the delicate young
seamstress who lives upstairs. After a touching
meeting and the kindling of a love affair,
we move on to Act II, in the Latin Quarter
of 1820s’s Paris and the neighborhood
of the Café Momus. (It is this scene
we will present this evening.) After our
bohemians sit down to a light supper, we
meet the flirtatious Musetta (former lover
of Marcello) and her bumbling admirer, Alcindoro.
After an elaborate ruse, Musetta and Marcello
are reunited and the bohemians leave together
– making sure to stick Alcindoro with
the bill!
La Bohème was immediately
successful when it was produced in Turin,
Italy in 1896. Later that year Puccini triumphed
with new productions in Palermo and Buenos
Aires. Within two years La Bohème
was acclaimed in Alexandria, Moscow, Lisbon,
Manchester (in English), Berlin (in German),
Rio de Janeiro, at Covent Garden in London
(in English), Vienna (in German), Los Angeles
and The Hague - all in 1897, and in Prague,
Barcelona, Athens, New York and Paris as
well as many other cities the following
year. As one of the “top ten”
opera hits and a sure-fire audience favorite,
La Bohème is hardly ever
absent from most opera houses' repertory
for more than a season. Tonight’s
performance of Act II features a new English
translation by Kathryn Evans.
Fast forward to 1993 and New York City.
A young composer, Jonathan Larson, is looking
for material for a new musical. (It is interesting
to note that an earlier work Tick, Tick...
BOOM! concerned a starving artist, Jon,
in New York City, who is worried he has
made the wrong career choice to be part
of the performing arts. Larson’s father
later stated that this work was indeed autobiographical.)
In the great tradition of “West Side
Story” by Leonard Bernstein (which
is based on Romeo and Juliet), Larson decides
to draw on a well-known work: La Bohème.
Updating the story to New York City, the
musical features a group of impoverished
young artists and musicians struggling to
survive under the shadow of AIDS. (In the
opera, the disease was tuberculosis). Rent
started as a staged reading in 1993 at the
New York Theatre Workshop, followed by a
studio production that played a three-week
run a year later. The version now known
worldwide opened Off-Broadway at the New
York Theatre Workshop on January 26, 1996
and opened on Broadway at the Nederlander
Theatre on April 29, 1996. Mr. Larson died
unexpectedly of an undiagnosed aortic aneurysmon
January 25th, 1996, just ten days before
his 36th birthday, and only hours before
Rent premiered Off-Broadway. Such
is the stuff legends are made of.
Rent the Musical went on to win
the 1996 Pulitzer Prize for Drama; four
1996 Tony Awards (including Best Musical
and two to Mr. Larson-Best Book of a Musical
and Best Score of a Musical); six Drama
Desk Awards (including Best Musical, Best
Book of a Musical, Best Music and Best Lyrics);
Best Musical Awards from the New York Drama
Critics Circle and the Outer Critics Circle
(Off-Broadway); and three Obie Awards (including
Outstanding Book, Music and Lyrics). Soon
the subject of a bitter legal case brought
by Lynn Thompson, a dramaturg hired to work
on the musical while it was in production
at the New York Theatre Workshop, Rent
the Musical stayed out of the mainstream
until the settlement with the Larson Estate
in 1998. Tonight’s concert performance
features some of the best-loved and well-known
songs from the show.
At the time, Rent was rare among
Broadway musicals in that it featured some
of the first clearly gay, bisexual, lesbian
and transgender characters on stage. Its
success opened the door on Broadway to deal
with such issues as multiculturalism, addiction,
sexual orientation and HIV. Rent
also encouraged future adaptions of well-known
operas to musical theatre (such Verdi’s
Aida, adapted by Elton John and
Tim Rice in 2000). Like George Gershwin
(who also died young, at the age of 38,
two years after writing another landmark
work, Porgy and Bess), we will
never know how Jonathan Larson may have
influenced American music and theatre had
he lived to create other works. Soon to
open as a major motion picture with the
original Broadway cast, Rent holds
a singular place in the history of American
musical theatre.
About the performers….
Kathryn Evans joined
the faculty of the University of Texas at
Dallas in 1994. She was Arts Coordinator
for the School of Arts and Humanities from
1995 to 1998, and Assistant Dean from 1998
to 1999. Currently, she serves as the Associate
Dean for the Arts in the School of Arts
and Humanities, teaches vocal and choral
music, and directs the UTD Chamber Singers.
She is an accomplished recitalist and chamber
musician; performing in the Dallas-Ft. Worth
area and in Europe. Before coming to UTD,
she was the Director of the Bach Society
Chamber Orchestra and Chorus in La Jolla,
California and the Musical Director of the
Orpheus Ensemble. She founded and directed
the Washington Pro Musica and the Early
Music Ensemble of San Diego. She has directed
European concert tours of Switzerland, Germany,
France and Italy. Ms. Evans holds Master
of Arts degrees in Music and in Mathematics
from the University of California at San
Diego. Ms. Evans has completed tours of
music for voice and guitar with fellow faculty
member Dr. Enric Madriguera in Austria,
Switzerland, the Czech Republic and Mexico.
Ms. Evans released the CD "Voz y Guitarra"
with Dr. Madriguera in October of 2003.
In April, the pair returned to Austria to
judge the Rust International Guitar Competition
and perform selections from their CD.
Mary Medrick is a writer/arranger
who is active as a musical director, keyboardist
and vocal coach. Along with graduate study
in music at UNT, Medrick holds an M.A. in
Arts & Humanities from UTD. As a keyboardist,
she has toured 17 countries and has performed
under the direction of such conductors as
Johnny Green, Christopher Wilkins (San Antonio
Symphony), David Stahl (Charleston Symphony)
and Graeme Jenkins (Dallas Opera). Along
with studio recording, Medrick arranges
commercial music, including jazz vocal arrangements,
which have been performed by the UTD Chamber
Singers. She directed UTD’s 2002 production
of the musical Personals. Her original libretto
for the opera The Old Majestic, a collaboration
with UTD faculty composer Dr. Robert Xavier
Rodriguez, was showcased in 2003 by the
New York City Opera and will be performed
in April 2004 by the opera department of
UT Austin. As a composer, Medrick has written
two Broadway-style shows based on the Frankenstein
legend and, in 2003, was commissioned to
write High Popalorum, a musical about Louisiana
politicians. Ms. Medrick is Undergraduate
Advisor for Arts & Humanities and teaches
piano and art courses at UTD.
Jacquelyn Lengfelder,
soprano, has appeared with the Fort Worth
Opera Studio as Pamina in The Magic Flute
and Gretel in Hansel and Gretel. Her leading
roles with the Ohio Light Opera as Risa
in Autumn Maneuvers and Juliska in Sari
by Kalman, can be heard on CDs produced
by Albany Records. The live recordings of
these operettas are frequently broadcast
on WKSU FM throughout Northeastern Ohio.
She has performed with the Graz Festival
Orchestra singing highlights from Les Contes
d’Hoffman. Her performance with the
Plano Symphony Orchestra, which “illuminated
the stage”, was broadcast on WRR FM
in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex on Christmas
Day, 2002. Jacquelyn recently spent six
weeks in Europe where she coached with Italian
countertenor Angelo Smimmo, and surveyed
the life of librettist Rudolph Bernauer
of the operetta The Chocolate Soldier, through
interviews with his grandson now living
in Dublin. A compelling and striking actress,
she has often performed with orchestras
and in musical theatre with the Dallas Theatre
League honoring her with the nomination
for Best Actress in a Musical Theatre Production.
Jacquelyn’s roles include Sarah (Guys
and Dolls), Fiona (Brigadoon), Mrs. Nordstram
(A Little Night Music), and Marian (Music
Man). Special distinctions include being
named a semi-finalist in the Austrian Meistersinger
competition in 2000, and winner of the concerto
competition at Northern Illinois University.
Jacquelyn and her husband Bill have co-written
a musical play about the life of composer
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel which will have
its first reading at Echo Theatre in Dallas
in March 2006. Jacquelyn is also premiering
in the first concert given by Classical
Singers Collective in Dallas this fall at
City Hall. Following a Bachelor of Music
cum laude from Lindenwood University in
Missouri, Jacquelyn is slated to receive
her Masters of Music in Vocal Performance
in December 2006 from Northern Illinois
University. Jacquelyn has recently come
under the guidance and assistance of Mary
Ella Collins and Associates Artist Management
as Roster Affiliate.
About the UTD Chamber Singers…
The UTD Chamber Singers was formed in 1994
as a performing ensemble of 20-24 singers.
The repertoire for the ensemble is selected
from a broad range of chamber vocal literature,
including both sacred and secular music
spanning the Renaissance to the contemporary
periods of music history and modern jazz
arrangements. The ensemble performs regularly
on campus, including performances at the
Renaissance Faire, the Annual Holiday Sing
during the Fall Semester, and in concert
as a Jazz Singers Ensemble in the Spring
Semester. The UTD Chamber Singers collaborates
with many other ensembles on campus, including
the Jazz Ensemble, Guitar Ensemble and Dance
Ensemble. They also perform on the Winter
and Spring Arts Festivals every semester.
In the Spring, the Chamber Singers join
the UTD Chorale for a choral concert of
large works with orchestra.
Past concerts have included “A Tribute
to the Manhattan Transfer,” “All
Mozart Concert,” “Swing Thing,”
“Birds, Beasts and Bugs,” “A
Victorian Christmas” and “A
Celebration of Monteverdi.”
Students must audition and be accepted in
order to enroll in Chamber Singers. Auditions
are arranged in the Spring for new students
and before every long semester during the
registration periods.
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