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Wichita Grand Opera
Century II Concert Hall
225 W. Douglas Ave.
Wichita , Kansas 67202
316.683.3444 Admin Office
316.262.8054 Box Office
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2010-2011 Performances: Madama Butterfly
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| Giacomo Puccini’s |
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Madama Butterfly
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An Opera in Three Acts Sung in Italian with English translations projected above the stage |
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Saturday, January 8, 2011, 7:00 PM Century II Performing Arts Center, Concert Hall |
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Libretto in Italian by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa After the short story “Madame Butterfly” by John Luther Long World Premiere: Teatro alla Scala di Milano, February 17, 1904 |
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| Shayna Leahy |
Whitney Reader
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| Stage Director |
Conductor |
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| Set Design |
Philip Pougnet |
| Scenic Artist |
Stefan Pavlov |
| Lighting Design |
Giurgi Boyukliev |
| Wigs and Makeup |
Toshka Kanchaska |
| Chousmaster |
Paul Smith |
| Costume Coordinator |
Julie Craig |
Costumes Courtesy of TRI-CITIES OPERA COMPANY, INC. Costumes Designed by: TRI-CITIES OPERA COSTUME SHOP |
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| Wichita Grand Opera Orchestra |
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| CAST OF CHARACTERS |
| Cio-Cio San (Madama Butterfly).......................................................... Yunah Lee |
| B. F. Pinkerton, U.S. Navy Lieutenant......................................... Alexey Sayapin |
| Sharpless, United States Consul................................................. Michael Nansel* |
| Suzuki, Butterfly’s maid.............................................................. Suzanne Hendrix† |
| Goro, a marriage broker................................................................. Patrick Greene* |
| The Bonze, Butterfly’s uncle........................................................... Charles Turley* |
| Prince Yamadori.............................................................................. Stanford Felix* |
| Yakuside.......................................................................................... Terry McManis† |
| The Imperial Commissioner............................................................ David Settle† |
| The Official Registrar............................................................................... Jim Ellis* |
| Cio-Cio San’s Mother........................................................................ Erin Mundus† |
| The Aunt...................................................................................... Stephanie Gilmore |
| The Cousin.......................................................................................... Stella Roden* |
| Kate Pinkerton................................................................................. Kristee Haney† |
| Dolore (“Sorrow”), Cio-Cio San’s child..................................... Daniel D'Acosta |
CHORUS: Cio-Cio San’s Relatives, Friends, and Servants - Back to top - |
| *WGO Resident Artists †WGO Young Artists |
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| Production and Artists subject to change |
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This production is sponsored in part by: Dr. & Mrs. Dennis Ross and Galichia Heart Hospital |
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Setting:Japan, 1900 - Back to top - |
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Synopsis: ACT I. ACT I. In a garden above Nagasaki, Japan, U.S. Navy Lieutenant B. F. Pinkerton inspects the house he has leased from a marriage broker, Goro, who has just procured him a geisha wife, Cio-Cio-San (Butterfly). The American consul, Sharpless, arrives and Pinkerton describes his carefree philosophy of a sailor roaming the world in search of pleasure. He is currently enchanted with Cio-Cio-San, but his 999-year marriage contract contains a convenient cancellation clause. Sharpless warns that the girl is not so casual, but Pinkerton brushes aside his concerns, vowing to marry a "real" American wife one day. Further discussion is interrupted by the arrival of the bride and her relatives. In a quiet moment, Butterfly confides to Pinkerton that she has decided to embrace his Christian faith. Soon the Imperial Commissioner performs the wedding ceremony, but the celebration is interrupted by Cio-Cio-San's uncle, who bursts in cursing the girl for renouncing her ancestors' religion. Pinkerton angrily sends the guests away. Alone with Butterfly in the moonlit garden, he dries her tears, and she joins him in singing of their love.
ACT II. Three years later, Cio-Cio-San waits on the porch of her house for her husband's return. Sharpless arrives with a letter from the lieutenant, but is interrupted when Goro arrives with a suitor, the wealthy Prince Yamadori. The girl insists Pinkerton has not deserted her. When they are alone again, Sharpless starts to read the letter and suggests Pinkerton may not return. Cio-Cio-San proudly carries forth her child, Dolore (Sorrow), saying that as soon as Pinkerton knows he has a son he surely will return. Moved by her devotion, Sharpless leaves without finishing the letter. Cio-Cio-San, on the point of despair, hears a cannon report signaling Pinkerton's ship entering the harbor. Now delirious with joy, she orders Suzuki to help her fill the house with flowers. As night falls, Cio-Cio-San, Suzuki and the child wait for his arrival.
ACT III. At dawn, Suzuki insists that Cio-Cio-San rest. Humming a lullaby, she carries her son to another room. Before long, Sharpless enters with Pinkerton, followed by Kate, his new wife. Suzuki realizes who the American woman is and collapses in despair, but agrees to break the news to her mistress. Pinkerton, seized with remorse, bids farewell to the scene of his former happiness, then rushes away. When Cio-Cio-San returns, she finds only Kate in the room. Guessing the truth, she agrees to give up her child if his father will return for him. Then, sending everyone away, she takes out the dagger with which her father committed suicide, choosing to die with honor rather than live in disgrace. As she raises the blade, Suzuki pushes the child toward her. Sobbing farewell, Cio-Cio-San sends him into the garden to play, then stabs herself. As she dies, Pinkerton is heard calling her name.
To read more about the story and history of Madama Butterfly, click here.
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Star Bios:
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Yunah Lee Cio-Cio San, Soprano
Born in Daegu, Korea, lyric soprano Yunah Lee is thrilling audiences in the U.S., Europe, and Asia with her “commanding and touching performance” as Butterfly. (Das Opernglas). Making her debut with Wichita Grand Opera, Ms. Lee has also performed the role of Cio-Cio-San with New York City Opera, San Antonio Opera, Opera Ireland, and the Bern Opera in Switzerland, to mention a few. This WGO performance marks her 100th performance as Butterfly. She has won acclaim for many other roles, including Mimi in La Bohème, Marguerite in Faust, Liù in Turandot, Zerlina and Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni, Micaëla in Carmen, and Leila in The Pearl Fishers. Her concert repertoire includes appearances with the New York Oratorio Society at Carnegie Hall, Mahler’s Symphony No. 2 with the Hiroshima Symphony, and a Christmas Concert with the Beijing National Symphony. Ms. Lee won First Prize in both the Mario Lanza Competition and the Verismo Opera Competition. |
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Alexey Sayapin Lieutenant B. F. Pinkerton, Tenor
A native of Saratov, Russia, tenor Alexey Sayapin is one of the most talented young tenors in the world. His performances in Russia include appearances as Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor at the Saratov Opera Theater, and Alfredo in La Traviata at the Mikhailovsky Theater in St. Petersburg. His numerous awards include First Prize at The International Competition of Tenors in Memory of Luciano Pavarotti (2008, St. Petersburg), Second Prize at the Galina Vishnevskaya II International Opera Singing Competition (2008, Moscow), and Third Prize at the Elena Obraztsova International Competition of Young Opera Singers (2007, St. Petersburg). Upon hearing Mr. Sayapin, Plàcido Domingo declared him “The Russian Corelli” after the legendary Italian tenor. In addition to his debut with Wichita Grand Opera this season, Mr. Sayapin is currently a member of the Domingo-Thornton Young Artist Program at Los Angeles Opera, where he is understudying The Duke in Rigoletto, among other roles. |
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Suzanne Hendrix Suzuki, Mezzo Soprano
Mezzo-soprano Suzanne Hendrix returns to Wichita Grand Opera after performing Mercedes in Carmen last season. She made her San Francisco Opera debut this season in Wagner’s Die Walküre. As a young artist in the 2009 Merola Opera Program she performed the roles of Baba in The Medium and Mary in Der Fliegende Holländer to critical acclaim. The San Francisco Examiner said she “filled the house with her rich and velvety mezzo.” Suzanne has also been a young artist with Des Moines Metro Opera, and regularly sings with Lyric Opera Kansas City. In addition to her singing career, she is completing doctoral studies at the University of Missouri-Kansas City where she has appeared as Zita in Gianni Schicchi, the Princess in Suor Angelica, and Florence Pike in Albert Herring. |
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Michael Nansel Sharpless, Baritone
Michael, a former resident of Wichita, returns to Wichita Grand Opera after singing the roles of Zuniga in Carmen and Belcore in The Elixir of Love last season; and Fiorello and the Sergeant in The Barber of Seville in 2009. Since 2004, he has performed with the Washington National Opera in the roles of Major Duomo in Andrea Chénier, the Bartender in the North American premiere of Sophie’s Choice, and Alcindoro in La Bohéme, among others. He is a crossover artist, equally at home on the operatic and musical theatre stages. He has received critical acclaim for his many performances. The Washington Post, reviewing his performance as Juan Peron in Evita, observed that “Nansel dominates the performances, displaying impressive dramatic range and a magnificent voice,” and the Arlington Sun Gazette said as Fred Graham in Kiss Me Kate Nansel “can control the stage with his personality.” |
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Whitney Reader Conductor |
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Composer Bio:
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Giacomo Puccini emerged into the twentieth century music world as the "King of Verismo," not through the conducting background of Mascagni or through the skilled compositional ability of Giordano, but as a master of theater. Puccini wrote solely for the operatic stage and he understood the dramatic intensity and melodic poignancy of real life subject matter. Critics have sometimes dismissed his work as overly impassioned, melodramatic, and sentimental. The composer himself proclaimed, "The only music I can make is that of small things," although he admired the grander stylistic abilities of Verdi and Wagner.
Despite that admiration, Puccini chose to concentrate on life's familiar bittersweet passions and intense emotional storms. Puccini was born in Lucca, Italy and descended from a long line of musicians, conductors, and composers. It was assumed he would inherit the talent and interest to continue in his family's chosen craft. At the tender age of six years, upon his father's premature death, he fell heir to the position of choir master and organist at San Martino Church and professor of music at Collegio Ponziano. However, plans to preserve these posts for the young Puccini may as well have been canceled the day he hiked thirteen miles to the city of Pisa to witness a production of Giuseppe Verdi's latest work, Aida. He determined his own future at that moment, falling completely under the spell of opera, never to recover.
A stipend from a wealthy great-uncle and a scholarship from Queen Margherita herself supported Puccini in his education at the music conservatory in Milan. The great composers Antonio Bazzini and Amilcare Ponchielli taught the young musician; Ponchielli eventually encouraging Puccini's participation in a one-act opera competition sponsored by the publishing house of Sonzogno. Friends of Ponchielli even provided the libretto. Unfortunately, Puccini's first opera, La Villi, didn't take the prize. However, the powerful critic/librettist, Arrigo Boito, raised funds for its performance before appreciative audiences at La Scala and Ricordi published the score. The modest success bolstered Puccini's confidence, but provided little compensation. A second opera, Edgar, failed as the result of a poor libretto.
Puccini's persistence was rewarded with the production of Manon Lescaut. Premiered in February 1893 in Turin, the opera proved a resounding triumph. Puccini was suddenly established as a wealthy composer and artistic successor to Maestro Giuseppi Verdi. The two operas that followed, La Bohème and Tosca, achieved success gradually with Bohème peaking after three productions and Tosca, after five years of presentations throughout Europe.
As Puccini acquired substantial wealth, he took on the persona which accompanied him throughout the rest of his life as the "grand seigneur." He built a reputation as a dedicated game hunter, collector of cars and motor boats, and a great romantic figure. "I am almost always in love!, " he declared, and defined himself as "a mighty hunter of wild fowl, operatic librettos and attractive women." His appreciation and compassion for women abounds in the substance of his operatic heroines, their valiant struggles and, most often, melancholy demise. He created these elegant, three-dimensional characters with the material of sweet and haunting melody. The innocent Mimi, embattled Tosca, abandoned Butterfly, embittered Turandot - each one a fascinating study in feminine psychology, each the perfect counterpart to an equally interesting tenor role. Puccini's own stormy relationship with Elvira Gemignani evoked a certain horror in fans and attracted something of a lurid interest from the general public. A married woman, she eloped with the composer and they were not married until some time after her husband's death. Seemingly an uninteresting and strangely unchallenging partner, she is said to have limited Puccini intellectually and emotionally, inexplicably cutting him off from most personal relationships with friends and other artists.
Eventually, she embroiled the household in scandal, hounding a young maid unmercifully with accusations of a liaison with her husband. The girl committed suicide and Elvira was jailed for five months. The Puccinis separated, then reconciled, but their relationship was forever damaged. Puccini fought hard to keep his difficult private life private, against impossible odds. "What a subject for an opera!," one social columnist exclaimed. During this tragic episode, despite his obvious emotional turmoil, the composer completed the opera La Fanciulla del West , which met with immediate acclaim.
- Courtesy of Arizona Opera
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