Tuesday, July 9, 2024

 LA FANCIULLA DEL WEST

(THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST)

CENTRAL CITY OPERA: July 7,10,12,14,19,21,23,27,31; August 3.

(playing in repertoire with Gilbert and Sullivan’s “Pirates of Penzance” and Kurt Weill’s “Street Scene.)

 

CENTRAL CITY OPERA’S PRODUCTION OF PUCCINI’S “GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST” ENTHRALLS!

 

     Composed by Giacomo Puccini with libretto by Guelfo Civinini and Carlo Zangarini, this opera is based upon a 1905 play by David Belasco. Puccini had based “Madama Butterfly” on another of Belasco’s plays. 

     Influenced by the work of Claude Debussy and Richard Strauss, Puccini infused this opera with folk music and a cinematic pulse to give it the flavor of the American West.

     Admired for its melodic orchestral score, Puccini believed his “American opera” to be “the greatest composition of his career.”

     “La Fanciulla del West” was the first world premier staged at the Met. It was conducted by Arturo Toscanini. 

     Puccini’s only “American” opera, it was a departure from the composer’s usual fare in that it had no stand-alone arias, and (spoiler alert) has a happy ending. 

     Director Fenlon Lamb’s casting is superb. This artist’s pacing of Puccini’s opera keeps the audience enthralled throughout!

     Kara Shay Thomson plays Minnie, the owner of the Polka Saloon. This character is a strong woman, who is a conniver and survivor. Shay has a soaring soprano that expresses the power of a pistol-packing frontier woman, who knows what she wants and how to get it. Minnie’s fierce fortitude differs from the women in Verdi’s previous operas, who were mostly victims.    

     Minnie is pursued throughout by sheriff Jack Rance (Grant Youngblood) and later becomes enamored of newcomer Dick Johnson, who is sung with great passion by tenor Jonathan Burton. 

    Grant Youngblood has given flawless performances at Central City Opera as John Proctor in “The Crucible,” “Germont in “La Traviata, Sharpless in “Madama Butterfly” and Horace Tabor in “The Ballad of Baby Doe.” 

     Here his acting as Jack Rance is darkly menacing, and his baritone commanding!

     In Act Two we learn that Johnson is the bandit Ramerrez, in disguise. A posse shoots him, and Minnie hides him upstairs at the saloon. When Rance discovers where he’s at, Minnie challenges him (Rance) to a game of poker. If she wins, he must let Johnson go free. If she loses, she must marry Rance. Minnie wins by cheating. In Act three, Rance tries to hang Johnson with the help of a posse, and Minnie convinces the miners to let him go.   

      Under the baton of conductor Andrew Bisantz, the Central City Opera orchestra gives a rousing performance of Verdi’s score.

      Choral Director, Brandon Eldredge makes the sound of Verdi’s male chorus ring through the opera house with ear-pleasing gusto.

     The set design by Papermoon Opera Productions is mostly excellent…except for the two blossoms? of one knows not what on either side of the lip of the stage.

     Originally set in an 1849 California mining camp during a gold rush, this production is set in Central City during the gold rush in an opera theatre built during the gold rush.   

      Not to be missed! Rush to get tickets!

 

303-292-6700 or boxoffice@centralcityopera.org

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