Friday, January 30, 2015

Behind the Scenes: Amy Kyzer

OHA’s Artistic and Development Associate Amy Kyzer is celebrating her second winter on Deer Isle and is thrilled that the island decided to throw these snow parties in her honor. Here’s your chance to get to know her better while you’re huddled around the wood stove:
Amy_Interview
Amy as Maria (The Sound of Music) in Vienna.

Where did you grow up?
Hawley, Pennsylvania. In the heart of the Poconos. It was a small area, much like Deer Isle, centered around the largest man-made lake in the northeast. I had an early understanding of welcoming people from away each summer.
How would your elementary school classmates remember you?
Funny and crazy. I loved pulling pranks. I told my best friend (who is still my  best friend) that “puberty” is when you buy a new dog and then convinced him to ask our history teacher in front of the whole class. He also had a great sense of humor, which is probably why we’re still friends.
Name four fictional character with whom you’d be okay being stuck in an elevator. Why?
Rhett Butler (from Gone with the Wind) – I saw the movie for the first time when I was eight and fell in love for the first time. I’m still not over it. When the movie was done, I ran around the house, crying and saying that I hated the Yankees. It was a while before my mother had the heart to tell me I was one of them.
Rose Campbell (from Eight Cousins and Rose In Bloom) – Louisa May Alcott books were my favorite when I was a kid. Rose was a wonderful and warm and generous character.
Flora, Fauna and Merryweather (from Sleeping Beauty) – I’m counting them as one. They were a group of crusty old broads who knew how to raise a kid right. They could do magical spells and make dresses and cake.
MacGyver (from MacGyver) – Richard Dean Anderson was not only easy on the eyes, he was a lot like my dad – able to fix anything with absolutely nothing.
If you were a cartoon character, what cartoon character would you be?
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Betty Boop. She was sweet and smart and sexy. And she had her own song.
When did you first fall in love with theater?
That’s a hard one. My amazing mother wanted us all to be well rounded and had us take a year of piano, try a sport or group activity and so on. At the tender age of eight, she strongly suggested that I take part in the community theater’s production of Carousel. Though terrifying, as I was, believe it or not, a very shy child, I made many new friends who I still know and work with. And I found a great new outlet for all my creativity and insanity.
Want the chance to work with Amy? Sign up for OHA’s new musical theater workshop, “Sing Me A Story!,” starting  Thursday, February 12. 

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Throwback Thursday

singing bridge copyIn 2002, Opera House Arts produced its first commissioned original work, The Singing Bridge: A Downeast Chamber Opera. Original music by Anna Dembska, book by Beatrix Gates and funded in part by the New Music USA Fund.
Interested in musical theater? Come join Amy and Beth Kyzer as they explore both classic and contemporary techniques for all ages and experience levels in OHA’s new workshop, “Sing Me a Story.” Classes start in two weeks on Thursday, February 12!

Friday, January 23, 2015

Behind the Scenes: Kelly Johnson

Opera House Arts is happy to welcome island newcomer Kelly Johnson to the team! Kelly will be working as OHA’s Development and Communications Director. We’ve asked her a few questions so you can get to know her better.
photo
Where did you grow up?
Long Island, New York. I spent the first eighteen years of my life in the same house, living there with my parents, siblings and a rotating menagerie of pets. We were about a ten minute drive from the water. After my family, the water was what I missed most during the years I spent in Washington, DC and something I’m very excited about being close to again here in Stonington.
How would your elementary school classmates remember you?
There was a “Can You Imagine…” section in my 8th grade yearbook. Mine ended with “Kelly without a book in her hand?” and for good reason. More than one teacher had to ask me to stop hiding a book under my desk top while they were teaching. Also, my school had an annual roller skating party. One year, I wanted to stay home and read rather than go, but my parents insisted. I compromised. I hid a book in my coat, found an empty table at the roller rink and had a great night with K.A. Applegate’s Animorphs. A lot of people remembered that. I regret nothing.
Name four fictional character with whom you’d be okay being stuck in an elevator. Why?
Remus Lupin (from Harry Potter) – A gentleman with a habit of keeping his cool in stressful situations and always has chocolate on him? No brainer. And his magic will probably get us moving again pretty quickly.
Elizabeth Bennet (from Pride & Prejudice) – She strikes me as someone with whom I could exchange sarcastic comments, which is a must in such situations. Plus, I think she’d handle the presence of magic better than most nineteenth (or twenty-first) century folks.
Kaylee Frye (from Firefly) – If the situation at any point starts to look dire, I’m going to need a good infusion of positivity. No one does upbeat like Kaylee Frye. Plus (probably more importantly in this situation) she’s a mechanical whiz. So if the breakdown happens during a full moon and Lupin starts to wolf out, the rest of us will knock him out, and she’ll have that elevator up and running in no time even without magic.
Ned (from Pushing Daisies) – A mystery solver with an acceptance of the unexplainable things in life. Far more importantly, however, he is a pie maker and likely was in the elevator in the first place because he was delivering his wares. Which means there’s pie in the elevator. Everything’s better with pie.
If you were a cartoon character, what cartoon character would you be?
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Daria Morgendorffer. Hands down.
When did you first fall in love with theater?
I, of course, used to make my parents sit through truly horrible original works starring me, my sister and our friends. But, when I was in fifth grade, I saw some of my friends in a more structured (read: real) YMCA production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. By the time the curtain fell, I knew that it was something I wanted to explore. My parents immediately signed me up for the next acting program offered. The whole process stole my heart and I’m thrilled to have the chance to work with a theater as fantastic as the Stonington Opera House.
Want to know more? Come on down to the Stonington Opera House and say hi!

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Throwback Thursday

kidvolunteersManning the concessions stand in 2001, co-founders Carol Estey and Linda Nelson, along with the first class of Wicked Good Student Film Series students (from left): Emi Hill, Galen Koch and Ani St. Amand.
This summer, visit the Opera House to see the grand opening of our brand new lobby and concessions area!

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Making the New from History and the Dead

NYC-based actor Jason Martin has a
four octave vocal range. As the star of
The Last Ferryman, Jason has inspired
composer Paul Sullivan to write music
specifically for his voice.
Why does a tiny little theater (say, for instance, Opera House Arts at the Stonington Opera House) on the tip of an island off the coast of Down East Maine commission and create new theatrical and musical works?

Because there are so many important stories to be told, and told well.

Stories to be shared with our community, stories that reflect our rich and unique cultural heritage or a shared humanity in ways that strengthen the ways we understand and act in the world, whether as individuals or together.

And so it is that in the 15th anniversary summer season of Opera House Arts we bring you TWO world premiere productions of work we have originally developed.

The first, R&J&Z by Melody Bates (July 10-20), is an extension of our Shakespeare in Stonington program and will run in repertory with Romeo and Juliet. Once again, you will have the opportunity to be amazed by actors appearing in multiple roles in both shows. And yes, that IS Shakespeare + Zombies--as the title of Melody's play stands for Romeo&Juliet&Zombies.

Per Jansen and Caitlin Johnston
star in this summer's Shakespeare in
Stonington dual productions of
Romeo and Juliet and the new
R&J&Z, by Melody Bates.
But no, this is not just some cheap play on pop culture. Melody has conducted four residencies in our schools over the past two years, teaching Shakespeare and Suzuki acting tools for focus and performance in the classroom as well as on the stage. In her new play, carefully crafted, like the Bard's, in iambic pentameter verse and taking off from Act V of Romeo and Juliet, Melody seeks to deepen our understanding of a culture in transformation: between generations and seeking redemption through the everlasting power of love.

This is a play rich in the lore of Haitian voodoo, in which myths plantation owners sought to create armies of slaves through botanical poisons and drugs, and the mysteries of the Apothecary--the very same mysteries which so fascinated Shakespeare, and caused him to write Juliet into a death-like sleep as part of his most famous tragedy.

And as Melody has written:
"This thing is not unknown in history--
That by some magic, devilish or good,
The flesh reanimates, and walks the earth."

Connie Wiberg, "the last ferryman"
Charlie Scott's granddaugther
and a member of the Deer Isle-
Stonington Historical Society,
speaks to third graders on the
history of the bridge as part of
The Bridge Project, the
educational component of
OHA's commission of
The Last Ferryman.
The second of OHA's new works in development is The Last Ferryman (August 14-24), commissioned by OHA from Grammy Award-winning composer and pianist Paul Sullivan and Maine librettist Linda Britt (Mrs. Smith Goes to Washington). The Last Ferryman re-awakens historical figures and history itself in a celebration of the 75th anniversary of the Deer Isle-Sedgwick Bridge. Like R&J&Z, The Last Ferryman explores a great moment of cultural change--when our beautiful island became, in fact, "an island no more."

OHA and its collaborating artists decided that the best way to truly understand the changes that the bridge brought was to portray life before the bridge,  in addition to the fascinating story of how the bridge came to be. And so The Last Ferryman is told from the perspective of Charlie Scott, the real "last ferryman," who died (some say of heartbreak) two weeks after the bridge opened in June of 1939...

Featuring portrayals of historic island community members, including Frank and Annie McGuire, Raymond Small, Charlie Scott and more, this musical's memorable new score and island flavors are reminiscent of OHA's 2010-2012 hit, Burt Dow, Deep Water Man. Yet the stories told--only 75 years past--speak deeply to the heart of our community's past. And its future.

Subscribe to the 2014 Chamber Music Series at the Burnt Cove Church

This summer, Opera House Arts' enhanced Chamber Music Series of SEVEN concerts, from June through September, at the Burnt Cove Church offers a widely diverse experience for music lovers: from innovative jazz-classical fusion to a solo cello salon and an evening of music on period instruments. Be the FIRST to preview the schedule below. Full program information, including composers and titles, will be available next month.
Don't miss a note--and help to support the ongoing existence of this series--by becoming a subscriber by May 15, and save 20% off individual ticket prices! Subscribing makes it easy: make your purchase once and arrive at the door for each show knowing your tickets are there. And as with our winter Alt-Movie Series, programming of this high quality in our location can only be sustained through the support of passionate music lovers and loyal subscribers: single ticket sales aren't enough.
This special subscription offer is not yet available online, but you can sign up by calling our box office at 207-367-2788, or emailing info@operahousearts.org. This is a $155 package available to you as a subscriber for only $125. 

Opera House Arts' 2014 Chamber Music Series at the Burnt Cove Church
June 10 Violinist Richard Hsu and pianist Anastasia Antonacos, Solos & Sonatas
June 24 The DaPonte String Quartet, Made in America
The internationally acclaimed DaPonte String Quartet returns to the Burnt Cove Church with a special “Made in America” concert to precede July 4th festivities. The program will be comprised of American chamber compositions, several of which are rarely heard in concert including Randall Thompson, Alleluia; George Gershwin, Lullaby; Samuel Barber, Adagio; Earl Stewart, Blues Fugues; and George Crumb, Black Angels.
July 15 Yosvany Terry's Bohemian Trio
In case you missed the fabulous Cuban musician Terry in his two appearances last year as part of our Deer Isle Jazz Festival, you now have a chance to catch his amazing musicianship. His genre-defying Bohemian Trio is a contemporary music ensemble based in New York City. Its founding members are Terry on saxophone & chékere, Yves Dharamraj, cello, and Orlando Alonso, piano.
July 24 Kneisel Hall Young Artists Program
July 29 - Vasily Popov, Levine Music, Solo Cello Salon
This unique and special evening, characteristic of Levine Music in Washington, D.C., where Popov is an instructor, will include one of the Bach cello suites, a stunning 20th century masterpiece by Dutilleux, a Popov cello suite, two virtuoso solo works by Popper and Franchomme--all wrapped up with improvisations on themes given by the audience, and conversation between the musician and audience members.
Aug 12 Trio Nuevo featuring Leah Zelnick. Traditional string trio, in a concert of duos and trios.
Aug 26 BOOM - The Baroque Orchestra of Maine returns with an unusual evening blending violin with harp, cello, and...dance!
Sept 23 Anastasia Antonacos Piano Trio
This special subscription offer is not yet available online, but you can sign up by calling our box office at 207-367-2788, or emailing info@operahousearts.org. This is a $155 package available to you as a subscriber for only $125. 

Thursday, December 12, 2013

12 Years a Slave


Thoughts from our artistic director Judith Jerome on 12 Years a Slave

Back on the sweet Piedmont in Oakland last night; my daughter, Effie, her sweetheart, Art, and I went to see 12 Years a Slave in the little Piedmont art house cinema where a callow youth gave a charming intro and preview of what’s to come, just like at the OH, and at the end an even more callow phalanx of youths came in with brooms and dustpans to clean up just like Annie Baker’s The Flick!

We sat not only through the credits after, but for maybe another five minutes still while first I and then Effie stopped sobbing. It is as hard a movie as I have ever seen. We talk after about how much better and more truthful we become about portraying violence in film—at the same time, Art points out, that another kind of gratuitous violence becomes the norm in many mainstream films.

Because of choreographer and dance therapist David Harris, I am thinking a lot, again, about muscular empathy, which has obsessed me for decades in live performance. Those live neurons firing muscle, even when an actor is not moving, kick off similar neurons in an attentive audience, and are what make really good theater really good theater. It’s different in film, without the presence of the live. Film depends on the visual, and on sound—which is maybe why it has to be so much more egregious, or extreme and detailed. It still affects the viewer’s body, but not in the same way, I think. What is the difference? It all comes through the eyes and ears?

Much of the violence in mainstream films is like a thrill ride, with films like The Lone Ranger, and James Bond at one extreme and both hilarious and terrifying end, and whatever the other end is I know only remotely because I don’t see those films and can’t even think of a title at the moment.

Then there are films like 12 Years and Saving Private Ryan and I am trying to remember the film set in Afghanistan with Rachel Weisz, or The Hurt Locker, films that try to tell the truth, with the visceral portrayal of violence and cruelty a principle tool of that truth telling. I was thinking last night about films from my childhood, Gone With the Wind, about the Civil War; Stars in My Crown, about the Ku Klux Klan; that famous movie—ah the painfully slow retrieval of proper nouns!—with Jimmy Stewart about World War I. These were films that dealt with our collective trauma, and were very affecting at the time. When Ashley went off to fight in GWTW my little child body rose up out of her seat and waved good bye with tears streaming down my face; and I was terrified for years of the night riders in their white hoods in SIMC. But they were a pale imitation of the terror and violence we are now able to portray, both technically and—this is the crux of what I am trying to get at—humanistically or psychologically or culturally.

It is like those early portrayals were all euphemisms for violence and inhumanity, and we are getting closer to the real thing, at being able to handle really looking at the real thing. Or is this just my idealism, my what do you call it, eschatological tendency to think in terms of final happy ends? A progressive development?

The Deer Hunterwas the first such film that I recall. And it paralleled a growing awareness of war that, as I perceive it, began with the Vietnam War, and that we are still in the midst of. (Our friend and war historian and ptsd expert, Tom Ricks, might argue with this timeline.) I was citing last night the terrible statistic that the number of military suicides now exceeds the number of combat deaths. We are no longer able, culturally, to compartmentalize war, to justify or glorify it. Surely this is a good thing. A kind of coming to consciousness.

I and of course many others have long argued that in this country racism is our deep and abiding cultural wound. It is the split, the dissociation between the avowed idealism of Christianity which propelled Europeans out of the old world and into the new, which are our founding values, at the root of us--and the reality of how we performed that Christianity relative to the Others we encountered. Any psychologist treating an individual client presenting this split would diagnose trouble here.

Does the making and reception of a film like 12 Years a Slave say something about our cultural ability to align, to incorporate a dissociated part of ourselves, our deep racism, back into the fold, into consciousness? To really look at it in all of its manifestations? Not only at what graphically happened to black bodies and psyches, but at the true insanity of its white perpetrators at the one end; and the passive agony of those who erred on the side of non-action at the other.

One last thought, the story is told through a black man who was “civilized,” in a white, European manner. Who enjoyed the privileges that were already accruing on the backs of Africans and Native Americans. We see slavery through the eyes of a privileged black man, which is part of why it is so unrelentingly, as Effie pointed out, awful. That is, the filmmaker gives us a very particular point of view, which might allow white audiences a different kind of access, allow us more empathy. I haven’t got this quite, and am not done with this topic.

Today I am thinking, laterally about the brutality of the white overlords in 12 Years a Slave.

In David Harris’ work with child soldiers in Sierra Leone he created a safe space of movement and language in which, through very simple exercises that any of us in the expressive arts know, he and his team slowly established a muscular empathy among the participants—which led to a growing conscious and articulable empathy among them. In stages the boys were able, through dance, ritual, and role playing, to begin to identify in their bodies what had happened to them, the atrocities, as parents were murdered before them etc., and they were initiated into perpetrating violence themselves, often through required acts against their families. And then to begin to identify and feel empathy with the victims of the atrocities they themselves had committed.  And finally to genuinely ask for forgiveness from the community.

What I was particularly interested in in his account was the changes in the boys’ faces, the way the masks dropped away. And I am thinking about the masks of the faces of the plantation owners and overseers.

And I am thinking about Jeannette Wall’s work, The Glass Castle and Half Broke Horses, particularly the latter, which is a semi-fictional telling of her grandmother’s story. Very much a story of the rural west at the latter part of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, and brutal, too, in many ways, in its poverty, the realities of subsistence farming, what was required of a person in terms of bucking up, independence, handling extreme and often cruel circumstances. I am also rereading The Grapes of Wrath for a project that we are doing in the school in the spring. The characters Steinbeck draws are so gorgeous, and so brutalized by poverty, and of course by the weather and a system that is totally exacerbating the exigencies of the weather through breaking open the soil, mechanization, unfair usury practices. Steinbeck is so spot on—I say that with knowledge of my own Okie family, very much part of this lineage.

Or I could think about the first European settlers, the Mayflower and other stories, the terrible cold and hunger and lack of coping skills.

And I’m thinking of Peter Levine in Waking the Tiger and his argument that animals have a physical mechanism for kind of literally shaking off trauma—which we humans do not similarly possess

Poor people, my friend Debbie Little says. Marx and Engels via Art and wholly simplified by me: Bronze Age tools inaugurated a new order in which excess production, beyond what was immediately needed, carried with it the potential or impulse for using others. But I don’t believe that brutality is simply part of human make-up. I don’t believe that the plantation owners and overseers just made some kind of choice to see Africans as less than human, an error in judgment, or even that they were taken over by greed. The masks of their faces tell something different, tell of their own brutalization. Poor people. The first years of settling this country were HARD, and the events that sent Europeans here were hard, as were the millennia that preceded them. Ours is a brutal history.

Harris’ work tells us that if we are unable to deal with what happens to us the events are stored in our bodies. As long as they remain stored and unconscious they lead us to behave in horrific, unfeeling ways.

My eschatological impulses surfacing again—are we developing now the possibility for responding to the brutality of millennia of human existence in a different way? Is the emergence of a film like 12 Years a Slave another indication