Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Tom Goes to the Opera: letting go

Stephen Key, 2016
In week two, Tom dives deeper into his role as the Pasha, and experiences rehearsals a little differently than what he's used to. Illustrations provided by his son, Stephen Key.

OK, one week in to rehearsal for The Abduction from the Seraglio, and the attitude of “Just-do-it!”, “Go-for-it”, “Grow-or-go!” is absolutely necessary. It’s like preparation for a sporting event. We have now been guided through Mozart’s entire opera by our Director, Chris Alexander, and we cover seduction, betrayal, capture, escape, exile, love offered, love refused, love embraced - with life or death consequences – to mention a few plot points – and it’s a comedy!

Without trying to give any spoilers, I will just say that we did have to spend about ten minutes figuring out a bedroom scene gone really badly so that there’s a dagger on the ready from a part of my costume that is something I’ve never worn before onstage. This all has to be exact to the underscore of the orchestra, clear to the audience what’s happening, positioned in such a way that the singers can breathe and project, and, most importantly, very passionate. Of all the things opera
Stephen Key, 2016
singers may have to suffer, boredom is not one of them.  


"If acting in this musically charged world is a sport, it's probably more like diving - the art of letting go in a beautiful way to forces much greater than self."

The music empowers the actor with a quick and immediate understanding of character, plot, objective and action. When I make my first entrance in this opera, about 30 people are singing for cool breezes to blow my way and I’m being followed by a boy waving a palm frond to make sure that I’m cool (evidently things go badly for the people if the Pasha gets overheated), and when I raise my hand, they rush out backward to leave me alone with the beautiful Konstanze. It doesn’t take much discussion around the rehearsal table to understand who’s got the power in this palace. If acting in this musically charged world is a sport, it’s probably more like diving – the art of letting go in a beautiful way to forces much greater than self. -Tom Key


Stephen Key, 2016 



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