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Boston Singers' Resource News Bulletin, August 24, 2006

The newly formed Boston Opera Collaborative opens with a production of the rarely performed masterwork "Iphigenie en Aulide" by Christoph Willibald Gluck. BSR investigates this new artist collective and their production below.

For its inaugural production, the Boston Opera Collaborative is offering the rarely performed masterwork "Iphigénie en Aulide" by Christoph Willibald Gluck, with libretto by Marie François Leblanc du Roullet. The show opened on August 18th at the Ruth Corkin Theater in Chestnut Hill, MA, and continues through the 27th. It is sung in French with English supertitles.

This opera, which is conducted by co-founder Markus Hauck* and stage directed by Andrew Ryker*, clearly illustrates Gluck’s transitional place in western music. Written in 1774, it retains much of the Baroque flavors of Handel but it also displays the light and charm that was coming to be associated with the operas of Mozart. The libretto is based on the play of the same title by the Greek dramatist, Euripides, and it has been somewhat reduced for modern consumption. Unlike the original Tragedie, in which the daughter of the king is sacrificed to the gods, all ends happily in the opera.

The production of "Iphigénie en Aulide" is the result of several months work by the aptly named Boston Opera Collaborative. The organization, which hopes to become non-profit shortly, differs from most start-up opera companies in the area. It was founded last October by conductor and Music Director Hauck, mezzo-soprano and President Brooke Larimer*, and soprano Katherine Drexel*, and was originally conceived as a small group that would provide emerging professionals with an outlet to perform full operatic roles.
But initial interest in the group was so strong, that the business model has quickly evolved. The founders believed that, more than just providing singing opportunities, the company could help singers to develop business skills by learning how to market a production, to raise funds, to balance a budget and to work as a team.

This is now BOC’s business model. Members can become part of one of the several Committees and Boards that see to the business of the organization: Executive, Auditions, Marketing, Public Relations, Membership or Fund-Raising.

The company has a current membership of over 35 and new members are welcome at any time. Many of them are BSR subscribers. Members are asked to contribute $100 per year. This money, plus some additional funding from friends and family, has served to underwrite the costs of the current production including a 10-piece orchestra and the use of the Ruth Corkin Theater for the four-night run.

The BOC was first heard in February with a program at the First Church of Boston in the Back Bay entitled "Steal Me, Sweet Thief: An Evening of Operatic Love Arias and Duets", presented by the membership.

The auditions for "Iphigénie en Aulide", however, were opened up to all interested singers. This, too, is part of the BOC business model and will be applied at auditions of future productions. The best voice available for the role is assigned the role. In the current show, in which the principal roles have been double cast, this flexibility has yielded some fine performances. The lead performers heard on the night of this interview included Leslie S. Kittel as Iphigénie, Joanna Gates* as Clytemnestre, Michael Rausch as Achille, and Brian Ballard* as Agamemnon.

Complete cast information is available at http://www.bostonoperacollaborative.org/browse/event/iphigenie.

Following the run of "Iphigénie en Aulide", the Executive Board will be meeting to plan events for the next 15 months. A membership meeting is scheduled for September 5th which is open for anyone to attend. For information about the location, and for answers to other questions, write to info@bostonoperacollaborative.org

Be sure to take a look at their website, www.bostonoperacollaborative.org, which went on-line earlier this month.

Iphigenie en Aulide
Boston Opera Collaborative
Brimmer and May Chase Building
Ruth Corkin Theater
69 Middlesex Road
Chestnut Hill, MA
Adults: $15.00
Students/Seniors: $12.00
Children (10 and Under): $10.00
Members of the YMCA of Greater Boston receive a $3 discount with ID
Fri Aug 18, 2006 8:00 PM
Sun Aug 20, 2006 2:00 PM
Fri Aug 25, 2006 8:00 PM
Sun Aug 27, 2006 2:00 PM

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