3 minute read
INTO THE WORLD OF POWER AND FAIRYTALE
Did You Know?
BLO’s production of Bluebeard’s Castle|Four Songs creates a world that evokes the unsettling psychological situation of a woman recognizing that she may be in danger, and a man hiding truths about his past. To do this, the opera invites audiences into an unexpected setting: the Flynn Cruiseport Terminal overlooking Boston Harbor. In this installation style of theatrical presentation (also sometimes referred to as immersive theatre), the creative team not only stages the dramatic content of the opera itself, but also structures every detail of how the audience navigates and experiences the space.
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Anne Bogart first worked with BLO directing the 2019 production of the opera The Handmaid’s Tale, which was also an installation production in Harvard University’s basketball arena. In Atwood’s book, this very location was known as The Red Center.
The experience begins as soon as audiences arrive at the building. A sequence of designed spaces lets attendees discover characters and observe intriguing multi-sensory situations before the official performance begins. With no “fourth wall,” stage curtain, or proscenium arch separating the audience from the action, the design invites audiences to see themselves as participants in the world of the opera.
Stage director Anne Bogart’s work often features performer ensembles who inhabit spaces in intriguing, nonrealistic, and revelatory ways. Bogart, with collaborator Tina Landau, is widely known for codifying a movementbased technique called Viewpoints into a compositional methodology for directing and devising theater. Instead of dwelling on the characters’ internal emotional states,
Viewpoints invites performers to cultivate external awareness and create scenes on their feet, physically exploring compositional choices about Space (shape, gesture, architecture, spatial relationship, topography) and Time (tempo, duration, kinesthetic response, repetition).
Seduction and power are important themes in the show, and Intimacy Director Angie Jepson worked with the cast to craft moments that explore the carnal dimensions of Judith and Bluebeard’s relationship, as
Safety First!
The role of an Intimacy Director in opera, theater, and film is still relatively new, and becoming much more common as performers advocate for safe working conditions when intimate scenes are being portrayed. This role, similar to a Fight Choreographer, is trained to make these moments seem realistic, while also keeping the performers physically and emotionally safe in the process.
well as the violence their story suggests.
In addition to the two main characters, BLO’s production introduces an ensemble of non-singing performers. These women, who embody Bluebeard’s former wives—implied but not seen in the original opera—are visible to the audience throughout the show. Guided by Movement Director Victoria L. Awkward, their stylized physicality creates a haunting atmosphere, evoking both ghostly apparitions and the psychological dissonance of repressed truths.
Gender rules, norms, and behaviors strongly inform BLO’s design and interpretation. The choice to pair two pieces—one by a male composer, one by a female— creates a tension around perspective: Which character, the man or woman, holds the authority to speak and name what is really going on? This theme permeates the contrasting scenic designs in different spaces—there is a noticeable difference in atmosphere between the lobby “salon” space and inside the house where the stage is.
The creative team also drew inspiration from composer Alma Mahler’s personal history and her bon vivant lifestyle in Vienna, where she had very public relationships with prominent artists and writers. Dramaturgical research into her biography informed the artists’ interpretations of Judith, the protagonist in Bluebeard’s Castle. Mahler’s story also suggested novel approaches to the show’s finale. Is Judith doomed to accept her fate, or can she and the other women reclaim their voices?
General Questions To Guide Your Listening
• What instruments do you hear?
• How fast is the music? Are there sudden changes in speed? Is the rhythm steady or unsteady?
• Key/Mode: Is it major or minor? (Does it sound bright, happy, sad, urgent, dangerous?)
• Dynamics/Volume: Is the music loud or soft? Are there sudden changes in volume (either in the voice or orchestra)?
• What is the shape of the melodic line? Does the voice move smoothly or does it make frequent or erratic jumps? Do the vocal lines move noticeably downward or upward?
• Does the type of voice singing (baritone, soprano, tenor, mezzo, etc.) have an effect on you as a listener?
• Do the melodies end as you would expect or do they surprise you?
• How does the music make you feel? What effect do the above factors have on you as a listener?
• What is the orchestra doing in contrast to the voice? How do they interact?
• What kinds of images, settings, or emotions come to mind? Does it remind you of anything you have experienced in your own life?
• Do particularly emphatic notes (low, high, held, etc.) correspond to dramatic moments?
• What type of character fits this music? Romantic? Comic? Serious? Etc.