JANUARY 14–22, 2023 JANET QUINNEY LAWSON CAPITOL THEATRE
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STEVEN BROSVIK President & CEO
It is our pleasure to welcome you to the Janet Quinney Lawson Capitol Theatre and this performance of a new production of Donizetti’s The Daughter of the Regiment There are several reasons why we are especially proud to present this work: new costumes have been created by Utah Opera’s skilled in-house costume artisans; it is a Utah Opera premiere featuring several artists with Utah connections; and the presentation of this charming comedy supports our goal to attract families and new, younger members of the audience to the magic of opera.
CHRISTOPHER MCBETH Artistic Director
Utah Symphony | Utah Opera is passionate about its extensive offerings for the benefit of students and young audiences. Did you know that in addition to the more than 100 subscription concerts and operas presented in our home venues, USUO performs more than 200 education concerts statewide every year? And that nearly one-third of our total audience is comprised of students? For example, the Utah Opera Resident Artists who are featured in today’s opera also travel the state performing a variety of ageappropriate programs in Utah’s schools and the final dress rehearsal for each Utah Opera production is attended by secondary school students. These events are just two of the many programs we offer free of charge to supplement the core music curriculum for Utah students. Our ability to reach so many students is due, in significant part, to the Utah State Legislature, which provides over one-third of the support towards their cost. The remainder of that credit goes to our many donors who cumulatively match the state’s support. Thank you for your support and advocacy of Utah Symphony | Utah Opera, and please thank your legislators for their support. It is through your involvement that we are able to connect the community through great live music!
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OH,
By Michael Clive
MARIE!
Girls who grow up to find love and success in a man’s world are no strangers to American audiences. In Irving Berlin’s Annie Get Your Gun, for example, Annie Oakley informs rival sharpshooter Frank Butler that “anything you can do, I can do better.” Not unlike Elly May Clampett, who could outrassle her strapping cousin Jethro Bodine on television’s classic The Beverly Hillbillies. But while the captivating heroine of The Daughter of the Regiment fits this mold, she and her aristocratic relations are very French—and not the folks we thought we knew.
For Gaetano Donizetti, who composed this tuneful romp, Marie’s French-ness was a high-stakes challenge. Though he had already composed sensationally popular comic operas, La fille du régiment was his first composed expressly in the French style for French audiences. They were already familiar with his Italian-language comedies,
but expected something different this time. And some disgruntled French opera composers were openly hoping for its failure.
Born in the mountain town of Bergamo in 1797, Gaetano Donizetti made his mark in Italian opera at a time when the rules of the game were strict for both composers and librettists. Solo arias and ensembles, which required beautiful melodies and opportunities for vocal display, had to be arrayed in the approved structure. In comic operas, the characters were variations on archetypes handed down through generations of commedia dell’arte tradition. More serious operas required a high moral purpose and characters of noble birth or character.
Though he composed by these rules (and at amazing speed), Donizetti imbued them with a freshness and sensitivity to character
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that astonished librettists and audiences alike. Even so, Marie, the heroine of The Daughter of the Regiment, is not someone whom Italian operagoers of the day would have recognized. By 1838 success had brought Donizetti to Paris, Europe’s undisputed cultural capital at that time, to revise his opera Poliuto as Les martyrs for the Paris Opéra. A delay in the production gave Donizetti a chance to squeeze in something new—something that became his first comic opera in the French style, La fille du régiment. His Italian-style comedy The Elixir of Love had aroused an adoring public at the Parisian Théâtre-Italien, but nothing suggests that Donizetti harbored similar ambitions for his “Daughter,” who seemed rather more casually conceived and experimental. “I have written, orchestrated, and delivered a little opera
for the Opéra-Comique which will be given in a month or 40 days,” he wrote of it to a friend, seemingly with no expectation that it would conquer the world’s opera houses so quickly.
Then again, Donizetti’s description may have concealed a bit of coyness. He knew that the speed and skill with which he composed, often rewriting his libretto in the process, could be a sore point with colleagues—and that the tidal wave of his success in Paris was greeted with defensiveness in some quarters of the French musical establishment. Eminences including Hector Berlioz, whose writing as a music critic was often reserved and statesmanlike, were provoked. “Two major scores for the [Paris] Opéra…two others at the Renaissance…two at the
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Opéra-Comique, Le Fille du régiment and another whose title is still unknown, and yet another for the Théâtre-Italien, will have been written or transcribed in one year by the same composer,” Berlioz wrote in the Journal des débats. “M. Donizetti seems to treat us like a conquered country; it is a veritable invasion. One can no longer speak of the opera houses of Paris, but only the opera houses of M. Donizetti.”
Donizetti’s productivity might not have been so remarkable, and so enviable, if it had not come wrapped in a seemingly effortless gift for operatic characterization. His Daughter of the Regiment is unmistakably Italian in its melodic abundance, yet it captures the layered nuances and charm of its Gallic source. It’s almost irresistibly tempting to find a kinship between Donizetti and Marie based on their respective army experiences. Donizetti’s could probably have happened nowhere but Italy. Though
he had demonstrated remarkable promise in early studies with several prominent music teachers, he enlisted in the army rather than support himself as a music teacher, as his father, Andrea, insisted he do; while the life of a composer seemed just too risky to satisfy Andrea’s concerns for his son’s future, Gaetano shuddered at the prospect of a career giving music lessons.
In the army Donizetti found time to compose opera on the side while serving honorably in a military regiment. Not only did his first opera, Enrico, Conte di Borgogna, mark its successful premiere during his army service; his second, Zoraide de Granata, received such favorable notice that he was discharged from the army without further military obligation. He was 25, and earned his chops as a working composer by producing a succession of successful comic operas in the style of Rossini during the next six years. (Rossini
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OH, MARIE!
on page 10…
was five years his senior.) But the first major demonstration of his artistic maturity was the opera Anna Bolena, a romanticized treatment of the tale of Anne Boleyn that showed Donizetti’s flair for applying the rich sensuality of Italian compositional style to a story set far from Italian shores. Donizetti’s best-known work, Lucia di Lammermoor, would accomplish the same artistic union with a gothic romance drawn from a Waverly novel by Sir Walter Scott— an opera full of dark Scottish atmosphere and glorious Italian music.
As for Marie’s army experiences, they arise from the French tradition of the vivandières, typically young women attached to a military regiment who worked as canteen keepers. In keeping with their historic function of selling wine to the troops, they become known as cantinières in France, but in other countries in Europe and the Americas, the term vivandière was retained
and the practice behind it was copied. In the U.S., the dramatic possibilities of a woman in the military milieu cropped up in ballads like “Jackaroe,” in movies like Shirley Temple’s The Little Colonel, and in our national fascination with true stories like that of Jennie Hodgers, who marched thousands of miles and fought dozens of battles for the Union disguised as a male soldier during the Civil War. But in the French tradition of The Daughter of the Regiment we see something subtler: an understanding of the complexity beneath the surface of masculine and feminine archetypes. Though Marie is plucky and tomboyish, and is fully at home as one of the boys, she is never less than fully a girl. As a womanly presence in the regiment, she creates comic complications while also giving rise to a certain sexual tension that becomes part of the daily reality of soldierly life: not a matter of resisting the impulse to flirt, but a continual reminder of home and family…of the half of the world
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OH,
Continued on page 15…
MARIE!
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left behind, comprised of sweethearts, wives, mothers and daughters. Perhaps the most famous example of this tension is the stunning moment in Jean Renoir’s great 1937 film La Grande Illusion when prisoners of war watch fellow-soldiers performing in drag in an amateur vaudeville show: Their raucous laughter turns to stunned silence and remembrance.
It is unknown whether the libretto for The Daughter of the Regiment, by Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges and Jean-FrançoisAlfred Bayard, was built around an original story line or drawn from an outside literary source. But no matter. In either case, the resulting opera masterfully layers the blunt comedy of Marie’s battlefield predicament with more nuanced comic elements. For example, it affords a natural comparison between the loneliness of military life and the loneliness of Marie’s mother, the Marquise of Birkenfeld, whose once-great love is a distant memory. And Donizetti took to this deeply French libretto with utter aplomb. After a shaky premiere The Daughter of the Regiment became wildly successful in Italy as well as in France, where Marie’s “Salut à la France” was adopted as a patriotic anthem during the Second Empire.
In America, The Daughter of the Regiment’s fascinating performance history began in New Orleans in 1843. There, as elsewhere, it was a showcase for sopranos who possessed both the vocal resources and the personal charm to interpret the demanding title role. It entered the repertory of the Metropolitan Opera in 1901 with the great Marcella Sembrich as Marie, and though it was initially paired either with
Cavalleria Rusticana or Pagliacci, by 1917 it stood on its own with a cast headed by Frieda Hempel, the versatile German soprano who introduced New Yorkers to Strauss’s Marschallin. With World War I still raging, Mme. Hempel interpolated Ivor Novello’s popular war song “Keep the Home Fires Burning (‘Till the Boys Come Home)” as part of Marie’s voice lesson. When Daughter was revived at the Met with the French coloratura Lili Pons as Marie during the Nazi occupation of Paris, the entire cast joined in the Marseillaise as Pons triumphantly displayed the tricolore at the opera’s finale.
More recently, The Daughter of the Regiment rejoined the repertory of the world’s major opera houses as part of the bel canto revival that began with Dame Joan Sutherland’s historic performances of another Donizetti masterpiece, Lucia di Lammermoor, beginning at Covent Garden in 1959. Though most audiences were not particularly interested in Dame Joan’s acting, in her Marie they discovered a gifted comedienne who was a good sport about self-parody in a role that played up her big, robust physique. What’s more, Dame Joan liked to surround herself with new artists she considered her equals, and in February 1972 in the Met’s new production of Daughter she introduced one of her discoveries to New York audiences: an unknown tenor named Luciano Pavarotti, whose galvanic performances restored the importance of Tonio’s role in the opera and earned Pavarotti the epithet “King of the High Cs.” Today, in Utah and around the world, we can expect The Daughter of the Regiment to amuse and to dazzle us thanks to their legacy.
UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE 15
OH, MARIE!
It’s likely you already know something about The Daughter of the Regiment—even if you’ve never seen it.
Luciano Pavarotti rose to prominence singing the famously difficult role of Tonio. At a 1972 performance at the Met, he hit the nine consecutive high C’s in the aria, “Ah, Mes Amis,” earning 17 curtain calls and the moniker “King of the High C’s.”
If you notice similarities between the Disney princess, Mulan, and Marie, you’re not alone.
The opera is Donizetti’s unabashed love letter to France. The country reciprocated the love. For years, The Daughter of the Regiment was performed every year on Bastille Day.
When Beverly Sills played Marie—on stage and in a 1974 TV special—she referred to the comic role as “Lucille Ball with high notes.”
Opera buff and Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg made a cameo appearance as Duchess of Krakenthorp in The Daughter of the Regiment with the Washington National Opera in 2016.
16 UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE
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BEFORE THE PX…
Before the PX…there were cantinières— canteen girls like Marie, who survived the privations of war by meeting soldiers’ needs for merchandise and services they could get no other way. Camp-followers of this kind are probably as old as war itself; Bertolt Brecht’s “Mother Courage” is a character based on a historical camp-follower from about 1670. The value of this kind of civilian entrepreneurship to the to the military was officially recognized In France in the 18th Century. The official term vivandière was replaced by cantinière in 1793, giving rise to the Anglicized term “canteen girl”. Such terms were used interchangeably in France as well as in Spain, Italy and the U.S. through the 19th Century.
Photos of French cantinières in the Crimean War from the 1850s show
attractive young women in chic-looking uniforms with fitted bodices and rows of bright buttons. Marie’s English cousin aboard the HMS Pinafore is “Little Buttercup,” usually costumed in a fullskirted dress and apron (and described by her love-interest, Captain Corcoran, as “pleasantly plump”). Despite the innocent winsomeness of both characters, the question of “fraternization” with the soldiers shadowed cantinières, as we see in the final moments of The Daughter of the Regiment—when Marie’s past as a cantinière proves shocking to the guests assembled for her wedding. In the end, love triumphs over snobbishness, in part because the Marquise herself has a past… leaving us to wonder whether she will belatedly find happiness with Marie’s father figure, Sergeant Sulpice!
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DAUGHTER OF THE REGIMENT
Supertitles
ARTISTIC TEAM Conductor ...........................................Stephanie Rhodes Russell Director Michael Shell Guest Chorus Master Sharon Bjorndal Lavery Set Design ................................................... James Schuette Lighting Design................................................... Driscoll Otto Costume Design Linda Pisano Wig & Makeup Design Samantha Wootten Assistant Director ................................................. Rory Willats Stage Manager .................................................... Gina Hays Assistant Stage Managers Megan Coutts & Brooke Redler Guest Coach Taylor Burkhardt** Supertitle translation by Kelley Rourke Supertitle Musician ............................................. Mitchell
COMPANY Marie
Tonio
Sergeant Sulpice Matthew Burns The Marquise of Berkenfield ...................................... Elise
Hortensius ....................................................Kevin
A corporal
A peasant
The Dutchess of Krackenthorp.............................. Anne
Decker Notary ........................................................... Will Turner Set rented from Pittsburgh Opera Production is 2:30 hours with 1 intermission Projected English titles for this production provided by Washington National Opera *Utah Opera Resident Artist **Former Utah Opera Resident Artist UTAH OPERA DONIZETTI’S
THE
JANUARY 2023 JANET QUINNEY LAWSON CAPITOL THEATRE Composed by Gaetano Donizetti Libretto by Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges & Jean-François Bayard Premiere in 1840 at Paris Opéra-Comique Utah Opera Premiere Sung in French with English dialogue
in English
Atencio
Madison Leonard
Jack Swanson
Quagliata
Nakatani
Tshilidzi Ndou*
Jehú Otero*
Cullimore
Madison Leonard (Idaho) Marie
Most recently at Utah Opera, The Pirates of Penzance Recently: Rigoletto, The Dallas Opera, Seattle Opera, Austin Opera; Der Rosenkavalier, Garsington Opera Upcoming: Les pêcheurs de perles, Austin Opera; Roméo et Juliette, Central City Opera
Jack Swanson (Minnesota) Tonio Utah Opera Debut Recently: Il barbiere di Siviglia, The Santa Fe Opera, Austin Opera; Edward Tulane, Minnesota Opera Upcoming: Solo Recital, Matinee Musicale, Duluth; Candide, The Atlanta Opera
Matt Burns (Virginia) Sergeant Sulpice Most Recently at Utah Opera, Il barbiere di Siviglia Recently: The Hours, The Metropolitan Opera; Don Pasquale, Inland Northwest Opera; Das Rheingold, Nashville Opera Upcoming: The Pirates of Penzance, Nashville Opera
Elise Quagliata (Florida) The Marquise of Berkenfield Most Recently at Utah Opera: Flight Recently: Edward Tulane, Minnesota Opera; A Thousand Acres, Des Moines Metro Opera Upcoming: Guys and Dolls, Charlottesville Opera
24 UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE COMPANY
Kevin Nakatni (Utah)
Hortensius
Most Recently at Utah Opera, The Pirates of Penzance Recently: Silent Night, Utah Opera; Le nozze di Figaro, Utah Festival Opera
Tshilidzi Ndou (South Africa) Corporal
Most Recently at Utah Opera, Handel’s Messiah Recently: Current Utah Opera Resident Artist; The Elixir of Love, The Dallas Opera; The Crucible, Così fan tutte, Southern Methodist University Upcoming: La tragédie de Carmen, Intimate Apparel, Chautauqua Opera; Rigoletto, Utah Opera
Jehú Otero (Texas)
The Peasant
Most Recently at Utah Opera, Handel’s Messiah Recently: Current Utah Opera Resident Artist Tenor Soloist Mozart’s Great Mas in C minor, Orquesta Sinfónica de Puerto Rico; Silvain, Lafayette Opera Upcoming: Rigoletto, Utah Opera; L’Orfeo, The Santa Fe Opera
Anne Cullimore Decker (Utah)
The Dutchess of Krackenthorp Most Recently at Utah Opera, A Little Night Music Recently: Master Class, Salt Lake Acting Company Winter, Salt Lake Acting Company Upcoming: Yellowstone with Kevin Costner; Sweepstakes by Stephen Williams
UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE 25 COMPANY
ARTISTIC TEAM
Stephanie Rhodes Russell (Utah) Conductor
Utah Opera Debut Recently: The Barber of Seville, Austin Opera; Susannah, Wolf Trap Opera; La traviata, Opera Orlando Upcoming: Le nozze di Figaro, Madison Opera; The Knock, Cincinnati Opera; Don Giovanni, Wolf Trap Operal
Michael Shell (Indiana) Director
Most Recently at Utah Opera, The Barber of Seville Recently: Il barbiere di Siviglia, The Atlanta Opera; Don Giovanni, Indiana University Opera Theater Upcoming: Candide, La finta giardiniera, IUOT
Sharon Bjorndal Lavery (Texas) Guest Chorus Master
Utah Opera Debut Recently: New York City Opera; San Diego Opera; Opera Company of Philadelphia; Kentucky Opera; Wolf Trap Opera Center
James Schuette (Texas) Set Designer
Utah Opera Debut Recently: Madame Butterfly, The Santa Fe Opera; The Pirates of Penzance, Cincinnati Opera Upcoming: Rigoletto, Utah Opera
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WITNESS CARMINA BURANA AND STRAVINSKY’S FIREBIRD JANUARY 27 & 28 MAURICE ABRAVANEL HALL
ARTISTIC TEAM
Driscoll Otto (Texas)
Lighting Design
Most Recently at Utah Opera, The Pirates of Penzance Recently: Turandot, Oper im Steinbruch; Hansel & Gretel, New Orleans Opera Upcoming: The Factotum, Houston Grand Opera; Der Fliegende Holländer, Teatro Comunale
Linda Pisano (Indiana)
Costume Design
Utah Opera Debut Recently: Christmas Carol, IRT; Candide, Des Moines Metro Opera; Nutcracker, Indiana University Jacobs School of Music Upcoming: Anne Frank (opera), Indiana University Jacobs School of Music;
Samantha M. Wootten (Utah)
Wig and Makeup Design
Utah Opera Debut Recently: Wig and Makeup Designer, The Santa Fe Opera; Wig and Makeup Designer, Washington National Opera Upcoming: Wig and Makeup Designer, Pioneer Theatre Company 22–23 season
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CHORUS / SUPERNUMERARIES
SOPRANO
Kahli Dalbow
Lauren Cartwright
Bohannan
Julie McBeth
Heather Hillstead
Carolyn TalboysKlassen
Genevieve Gannon
Anadine Burrell
Kathryn Thompson
ALTO
Paula Fowler
Kyra Furman
Melissa James
ShaRee Larsen
Deborah Johnson
Sammie Tollestrup
Will Turner
Dawn Veree
Keanu Aiono-Netzler
Ryan Francis
Brynnen Green
Lehi Moran
Marcus Lee
Benjamin Jacobs
BASS
Buddy Eyre
Dyson Ford
TENOR
Tom Klassen
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Nelson LeDuc Zachary Smith
Sam Stuart Harold Moreno
CHORUS SUPERNUMERARIES
STORY OF THE OPERA
ACT I
As The Daughter of the Regiment opens, we see the Tyrol region’s Francophone citizens rebelling against centuries of AustroHungarian domination. The time is early in the 19th century, and the military skirmishes are localized, day-to-day, back-and-forth; Napoleon of France was keeping an eye on the conflict, mulling his options, while the local citizens were caught in the crossfire, fretting for their safety—like the Marquise of Berkenfield, whom we find traveling in the area and alarmed to the point of needing smelling salts to be administered by her faithful steward, Hortensius.
With the French moving away, the populace express feelings of relief until the French regiment’s Sergeant Sulpice arrives, provoking new fears; but he assures everyone that the regiment will restore order. Then, with the entrance of Marie, the regiment’s popular vivandière (canteen girl), everyone cheers up again. Sergeant Sulpice questions her with fatherly concern about a certain young man seen with her recently. Just as she identifies him as Tonio, he is brought in as a prisoner, taken into custody while prowling around the camp. The soldiers demand his execution, but Marie saves him by explaining that he
saved her life when she nearly fell while mountain-climbing. All toast Tonio, who pledges allegiance to France, and Marie is encouraged to sing the regimental song.
Sulpice leads the soldiers off, taking Tonio with them, but he runs back to join her. She quickly tells him that he must gain the approval of her “fathers”—the soldiers of the Regiment, who found her as an infant and adopted her. They declare their mutual love.
Sulpice returns, surprising the young couple, who leave; the Marquise arrives with Hortensius, who is initially afraid of the soldier, then calmed by him. The Marquise explains that they are trying to return to her castle and asks for an escort. Upon hearing the name Berkenfield, Sulpice remembers it from a letter found with Marie as an infant— leading to the discovery that Marie is the Marquise’s long-lost niece. Marie returns and is surprised to be introduced to her aunt. The Marquise commands that Marie accompany her to live and learn the social graces befitting her new station in life. Marie bids farewell to her beloved regiment just as Tonio enters and dramatically announces that he has enlisted in their ranks. When he proclaims his love for Marie, the soldiers are resistant, and though
32 UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE
STORY OF THE OPERA
his pleading eventually wins them over, they must tell him that Marie’s aunt is taking her from the regiment. The act ends with a choral finale as Marie tearfully leaves with the Marquise, leaving Tonio enraged.
ACT II
For months, Marie has been unhappily confined in the Marquise’s castle, taking lessons in the refinements required of a young lady of the nobility. The Marquise’s mission is to obliterate all vestiges of regimental life and transform Marie into a suitable match for her nephew, the Duke of Krakenthorp. Marie has reluctantly agreed, and Sulpice is asked to encourage her; when Marie enters and is asked to play the piano, her musical demonstration veers off into the regimental song, which she and Sulpice sing with gusto despite the Marquise’s attempts to discipline her.
Left alone, the despondent Marie ponders her fate. But then, hearing martial music, she is overjoyed to greet the regiment. The soldiers, too, express their joy at seeing Marie, and Marie, Tonio and Sulpice are happily reunited. Amid the excitement, Tonio mentions he has just learned a secret, via his uncle the burgermeister, that he cannot reveal.
The Marquise enters, horrified to see soldiers. Tonio asks for Marie’s hand, explaining that he risked his life for her, but the Marquise scornfully dismisses him. Tonio reveals that he knows that the Marquise never had a niece. Agitated, she orders him to leave and Marie to return to her chambers; after they leave, the Marquise confesses the truth to Sulpice: Marie is her own illegitimate daughter. In view of these circumstances, Sulpice promises that Marie will agree to her mother’s wishes.
The Duchess of Krakenthorp, her son the groom-to-be, and the wedding entourage arrive at the Marquise’s castle. Marie enters with Sulpice, who has given her the news that the Marquise is her mother. Marie embraces her and decides she must obey. But at the crucial moment, the soldiers of the regiment storm in and reveal that Marie was a canteen girl. Initially, this revelation shocks the wedding guests. But when Marie sings of her debt to the soldiers, the guests are deeply moved—as is the Marquise, who openly admits she is Marie’s mother. She gives her consent to Marie and Tonio’s marriage amid universal rejoicing.
UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE 33
COMPOSER & LIBRETTISTS
Gaetano Donizetti was an Italian composer of the bel canto style. During the span of his life he wrote about 70 operas. His two most popular operas today are L’elisir d’amore and Lucia di Lammermoor.
Donizetti didn’t come from a musical family, but started taking music lessons at an early age. In 1822, after his ninth opera, the impresario of Teatro di San Carlo in Naples offered him a residency. For the next 22 years he wrote 51 operas that were performed at the theatre.
Donizetti married Virginia Vasselli in 1828. She gave birth to three children but none of them survived. In 1837 Virgina died, and within a year of her death, both of Donizetti’s parents also died. He never completely recovered from his grief. At the end of his life he lived at an institution for the mentally ill and just before his death he was moved back to Bergamo where he was born.
Although mainly an opera composer, Donizetti also wrote symphonies, songs, sacred music, string quartets and other chamber music. Together with Rossini and Bellini he shaped the bel canto style during the first part of the 19th century. After Bellini’s death, Donizetti was the major Italian composer until Verdi.
The libretto was written by Jules-Henri Vernoy de SaintGeorges and Jean-François Bayard.
Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges was a French playwright who was born and died in Paris. He was one of the most prolific librettists of the 19th century, often working in collaboration with others.
Jean-François Alfred Bayard was a French playwright and librettist. He was the nephew of fellow playwright Eugène Scribe.
34 UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE
Gaetano Donizetti Composer
Librettists
UTAH SYMPHONY
Thierry Fischer, Music Director
The Maurice Abravanel Chair, endowed by the George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Foundation
Benjamin Manis Associate Conductor
Barlow Bradford Symphony Chorus Director
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Madeline Adkins Concertmaster
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Claude Halter Principal Second
Wen Yuan Gu# Associate Principal Second
Evgenia Zharzhavskaya Assistant Principal Second
Karen Wyatt•• Sara Bauman~ Erin David Joseph Evans Lun Jiang
Rebekah Johnson••v Tina Johnson~ Amanda Kofoed~ Jennifer Kozbial Posadas~ Veronica Kulig David Langr Shengnan Li Hannah Linz•• Yuki MacQueen Alexander Martin Rebecca Moench
Hugh Palmer• David Porter
Lynn Maxine Rosen
Barbara Ann Scowcroft** Ju Hyung Shin• Bonnie Terry Julie Wunderle
VIOLA*
Brant Bayless Principal
The Sue & Walker Wallace Chair
Yuan Qi Associate Principal
Julie Edwards Joel Gibbs Carl Johansen Scott Lewis John Posadas Whittney Sjogren Leslie Richards~
CELLO* Matthew Johnson Acting Principal
The J. Ryan Selberg Memorial Chair
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Corbin Johnston Associate Principal
James Allyn Andrew Keller Edward Merritt Jens Tenbroek Thomas Zera
HARP Louise Vickerman Principal FLUTE Mercedes Smith Principal The Val A. Browning Chair
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Caitlyn Valovick Moore
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OBOE Zachary Hammond Principal
The Gerald B. & Barbara F. Stringfellow Chair
James Hall Associate Principal Lissa Stolz
ENGLISH HORN Lissa Stolz
CLARINET Tad Calcara Principal The Norman C. & Barbara Lindquist Tanner Chair, in memory of Jean Lindquist Pell
Erin Svoboda-Scott Associate Principal Lee Livengood
BASS CLARINET Lee Livengood
E-FLAT CLARINET Erin Svoboda-Scott
BASSOON Lori Wike Principal The Edward & Barbara Moreton Chair
Leon Chodos Associate Principal
Jennifer Rhodes
CONTRABASSOON Leon Chodos
HORN Jessica Danz Principal
Edmund Rollett Associate Principal
Nate Basinger~ Julia Pilant~ Stephen Proser
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Jeff Luke Associate Principal
Peter Margulies Paul Torrisi
TROMBONE Mark Davidson Principal Sam Elliot Associate Principal BASS TROMBONE Graeme Mutchler
TUBA Alexander Purdy Principal TIMPANI George Brown Principal Eric Hopkins Associate Principal
PERCUSSION Keith Carrick Principal Eric Hopkins Michael Pape KEYBOARD Jason Hardink Principal LIBRARIANS Clovis Lark Principal
Claudia Restrepo
ORCHESTRA PERSONNEL Walt Zeschin Director of Orchestra Personnel
Hannah Thomas-Hollands Orchestra Personnel Manager
36 UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE
•
••
First Violin
Second Violin * String Seating Rotates ** On Leave # Sabbatical ~ Substitute Member
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Utah Symphony | Utah Opera is grateful to our generous donors who, through annual cash gifts and multi-year commitments, help us bring great live music to our community.
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Anonymous [6]
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ENDOWMENT
DONORS TO UTAH SYMPHONY | UTAH OPERA ENDOWMENT
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Anonymous
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We thank our generous donors for their annual support of Utah Symphony | Utah Opera.
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David Green Senior Vice President & COO
Micah Luce Director of Human Resources & Organizational Culture
Julie McBeth Executive Assistant to the CEO
Marcus Lee Assistant to the COO & Office Manager
OPERA ARTISTIC
Christopher McBeth
Opera Artistic Director
Carol Anderson
Principal Coach
Michelle Peterson Director of Production
Ashley Tingey Production Coordinator
OPERA TECHNICAL
Sam Miller Technical Director
Kelly Nickle Properties Master
Dave G. Orr, Jr. Head Carpenter & Shop Foreman Dusty Terrell Scenic Charge Artist
COSTUMES
Cee-Cee Swalling
Costume Director
Verona Green Costume Rentals & Stock Manager
Milivoj Poletan Master Tailor
Tiffany Lent Cutter/Draper & Costume Shop Foreman
Amanda Meyer First Hand
Maxwell Paris Wardrobe Supervisor & Rentals
Assistant
Liz Wiand Rentals Assistant
Lauryn Nebeker Sophie Thoms Stitchers
SYMPHONY ARTISTIC
Thierry Fischer
Symphony Music Director
Anthony Tolokan Artistic Consultant
Barlow Bradford Symphony Chorus Director
Walt Zeschin
Director of Orchestra Personnel
Hannah Thomas-Hollands Orchestra Personnel Manager
Morgan Moulton Artistic Planning Manager Isabella Zini Artistic Planning Coordinator & Assistant to the Music Director
SYMPHONY OPERATIONS
Cassandra Dozet
Senior Director of Operations
Melissa Robison Program Publication & Front of House Director
Chip Dance Director of Production Jen Shark Operations Manager
DEVELOPMENT
Leslie Peterson
Vice President of Development
Jessica Proctor
Director of Institutional Giving
Stephanie Ogden Director of Individual Giving
Katie Swainston
Individual Giving Manager
Lisa Poppleton Grants Manager
Dallin Mills
Development Database Manager Ellesse Hargreaves
Stewardship & Event Coordinator
Erin Marr
Donor Engagement (DVMF) & Special Events Coordinator
MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Meredith Kimball Laing
Vice President of Marketing & Communications
Robert Bedont Marketing Manager
Megs Vincent
Communications Manager
Nina Starling
Website Content Coordinator
Ellen Lewis
Marketing & Communications Coordinator
PATRON SERVICES
Faith Myers
Director of Patron Engagement
Jaron Hatch
Patron Services Manager
Janae Graham
Patron Services Operations Assistant
Genevieve Gannon
Group Sales Associate
Amber Bartlett
Lorraine Fry
Jodie Gressman
Michael Gibson
Sean Leonard
Naomi Newton
Ian Painter
Toby Simmons Ananda Spike Val Tholen Josh West
Patron Services Associates
ACCOUNTING & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Steve Hogan
Vice President of Finance & CFO
Mike Lund
Director of Information Technologies Melanie Giles Controller
Jared Mollenkopf
Patron Information Systems Manager
Zac Cameron Payroll Clerk Bobby Alger Accounts Payable Specialist
EDUCATION
Paula Fowler
Director of Education & Community Outreach
Beth Foley
Opera Education Assistant
We would also like to recognize our interns and temporary and contracted staff for their work and dedication to the success of utah symphony | utah opera
UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE 51
ENJOY GREAT PERFORMANCES AT A LOW PRICE WITH YOUR FRIENDS AND CLASSMATES HIGH SCHOOL MUSIC CLUBS WITNESS FOUR UTAH SYMPHONY PERFORMANCES FOR JUST $20 AND UTAHOPERA FINAL DRESS REHEARSALS FOR FREE. VISIT USUO.ORG/HSCLUBS FOR MORE INFORMATION
CRESCENDO AND TANNER SOCIETIES
ARE THE MUSIC WHILE THE MUSIC LASTS.”
~T.S. Eliot
Utah Symphony | Utah Opera offers sincere thanks to our patrons who have included USUO in their financial and estate planning.
CRESCENDO SOCIETY OF UTAH OPERA
Anonymous
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Bailey
Judy Brady & Drew W. Browning
Dr. Robert H.† & Marianne
Harding Burgoyne Shelly Coburn
Dr. Richard J.† & Mrs. Barbara N.† Eliason Anne C. Ewers
Joseph & Pat Gartman
Paul (Hap) & Ann† Green
Annette W. & Joseph Q. Jarvis
Edward R. Ashwood & Candice A. Johnson Clark D. Jones
Turid V. Lipman
Herbert C. & Wilma Livsey Richard W. & Frances P. Muir
TANNER SOCIETY OF UTAH SYMPHONY
Beethoven Circle (gifts valued at more than $100,000)
Anonymous (3)
Doyle Arnold & Anne Glarner
Edward R. Ashwood & Candice
A. Johnson
Dr. J. Richard Baringer
Haven J. Barlow†
Dr. Melissa J. Bentley
Marcy & Mark Casp
Shelly Coburn
Raymond & Diana Compton
Mahler Circle
Anonymous (3)
Eva-Maria Adolphi
Dr. Robert H.† & Marianne
Harding Burgoyne
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Coombs
Paul (Hap) & Ann† Green
Robert & Carolee Harmon
Richard G. & Shauna† Horne
Virginia A. Hughes
Turid V. Lipman
Anne C. Ewers
Annette W. & Joseph Q. Jarvis Flemming & Lana Jensen James Read Lether
Daniel & Noemi P. Mattis
Anthony & Carol W. Middleton, Jr., M.D. Robert & Diane Miner Glenn Prestwich
Marilyn H. Neilson
Carol & Ted Newlin
Patricia A. Richards & William K. Nichols
Mr.† & Mrs. Alvin Richer
Jeffrey W. Shields
G.B. & B.F. Stringfellow
Dr. Ralph & Judith Vander Heide Edward J. & Marelynn† Zipser
Herbert C. & Wilma Livsey
Dianne May
Jerry & Marcia McClain
Jim & Andrea Naccarato
Stephen H. & Mary Nichols
Mr. & Mrs. Scott Parker
Mr. & Mrs.† Michael A. Pazzi
Richard Q. Perry
Chase† & Grethe Peterson Glenn H. & Karen F. Peterson
Kenneth A.† & Jeraldine S. Randall
Mr.† & Mrs. Alvin Richer
Patricia A. Richards & William K. Nichols
Sharon & David† Richards
Harris H. & Amanda P. Simmons
E. Jeffery & Joyce Smith
G.B. & B.F. Stringfellow
Mr.† & Mrs. M. Walker Wallace
Thomas A. & Sally† Quinn
Dan† & June Ragan
Mr. Grant Schettler
Glenda & Robert† Shrader
Mr. Robert C. Steiner & Dr. Jacquelyn Erbin†
JoLynda Stillman
Joann Svikhart
Edward J. & Marelynn† Zipser
Please contact Leslie Peterson at lpeterson@usuo.org or 801-869-9012 for more information, or visit our website at usuo.giftplans.org. †Deceased
UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE 53
“YOU
Leave a Legacy Ensure the Future
“We took stock of what gifts we have in our power to grant to future Utahns and concluded that great live classical music will be one of the legacies we will support. We are grateful to the many generous donors who through thoughtful estate planning over the years have made it possible for us to be blessed by performances of the Utah Symphony | Utah Opera today. We are planning to help make this beautiful music a part of Utah forever.”
54 UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE
MAKE A PLANNED GIFT TODAY
801-869-9012 | usuo.org/planned-giving
-Annette & Joe Jarvis Find out more:
Annette W. Jarvis Vice Chair and Secretary USUO Board of Trustees Shareholder, Greenberg Traurig, LLP
Joseph Q. Jarvis M.D., M.S.P.H
Utah Opera
DID YOU KNOW TICKET SALES ONLY SUPPORT 33% OF OUR ANNUAL OPERATING COSTS?
relies on donations from individuals like you to fulfill our mission to connect the community through great
music. Your contribution supports extensive education programs, artistic excellence, and accessible musical experiences for all. Thanks to a generous $500,000 matching grant from the
and
Doré Eccles Foundation, every gift from new donors and increased gifts from existing donors will be matched 1:1. MAKE A DONATION ONLINE AT USUO.ORG/DONATE OR BY CALLING 801-869-9001
Utah Symphony | Utah Opera
live
George S.
Dolores
PLEASE REMEMBER
ASSISTIVE LISTENING DEVICES
Assistive Listening Devices are available free of charge at each performance on a first-come, first-served basis at Janet Quinney Lawson Theatre. Ask at the Coat Check for details.
WHEELCHAIR SEATING
Ample wheelchair seating is available. Please inform our ticket office representative when making your reservation that you require wheelchair space. Arrive 30 minutes before curtain time to obtain curbside assistance from the House Manager.
LATECOMERS
In consideration of patrons already seated in the hall, reserved seating will be held until curtain, after which alternate seating
will be used. During some productions late seating may not occur until an intermission after which time you may be seated by an usher in an alternate section. When traveling to performances, please allow ample time for traffic delays, road construction, and parking.
COPYRIGHT ADHERENCE
In compliance with copyright laws, it is strictly prohibited to take any photographs or any audio or video recordings of the performance.
EMERGENCY INFORMATION
In the event of an emergency, please remain seated and wait for instructions. Emergency exits are located on both sides of the house. Please identify the exit closest to your location.
56 UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE
Photo Credit: Austen Diamond
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
UTAH SYMPHONY | UTAH OPERA
123 West South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84101 801-533-5626
EDITOR Megs Vincent HUDSON PRINTING COMPANY www.hudsonprinting.com 241 West 1700 South Salt Lake City, UT 84115 801-486-4611
AUDITING AND ACCOUNTING SERVICES PROVIDED BY Tanner, llc
LEGAL REPRESENTATION PROVIDED BY Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll, llp Holland & Hart, LLP Jones Waldo
ADVERTISING MEDIA & WEBSITE SERVICES PROVIDED BY Love Communications, Salt Lake City
ADVERTISING CREATIVE & BRANDING SERVICES PROVIDED BY Struck, Salt Lake City / Portland
The organization is committed to equal opportunity in employment practices and actions, i.e. recruitment, employment, compensation, training, development, transfer, reassignment, corrective action and promotion, without regard to one or more of the following protected class: race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, disability, family status, veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity and political affiliation or belief.
Abravanel Hall and The Janet Quinney Lawson Capitol Theatre are owned and operated by the Salt Lake County Center for the Arts.
By participating in or attending any activity in connection with Utah Symphony | Utah Opera, whether on or off the performance premises, you consent to the use of any print or digital photographs, pictures, film, or videotape taken of you for publicity, promotion, television, websites, or any other use, and expressly waive any right of privacy, compensation, copyright, or ownership right connected to same.
58 UTAHOPERA.ORG / (801) 533-NOTE
Photo Credit: Austen Diamond
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