A Welcome Abduction

By Kathryn Miller

The Midsummer Mozart Festival’s first foray into opera, a production of The Abduction from the Seraglio at San Jose’s California Theater, was highly successful in most respects. The singers ranged from capable to excellent, with one standout. The orchestra, under George Cleve, was in fine form, and the production, though billed as semistaged, was brilliantly directed and full of comic verve. The only big mistake came on the administrative/ managerial end.

A scene from Abduction, with George Cleve conducting

Photos by Robert Shomler

The box office line in front of the California Theater last Saturday stretched for a full block, and moved at a snail’s pace. I found out that the box office was staffed with a single person, serving both the will-call window and ticket buyers. Tensions grew among the crowd as the 7:30 curtain time came and went, while the vast majority of the audience still stood in line outside. Surely, we thought, they would hold the downbeat until more people were seated.

We were wrong, because the overture began promptly, despite a nearly empty auditorium. Audience members were shown to the otherwise unused balcony seats for the first act, and were subjected to sarcastic jibes from theater staff about “late arrivals,” despite the fact that most had gotten to the theater nearly an hour prior. But the annoyance gradually faded in the face of Mozart’s delightful opera.

I have heard it said that George Cleve goes with Mozart as perfectly as chocolate does with peanut butter, and from the few minutes of the overture that I heard to the end of the show, that was certainly the case. His Festival Orchestra, made up of members of the Bay Area’s best ensembles, played sensitively and cohesively. The score’s more raucous moments, which imitate Turkish infantry bands, were dazzling, and gleefully rhythmic, while more emotional moments sounded sweet and tender.

Terror of the Entrance Aria

The singers in The Abduction from the Seraglio face challenges from the moment they step onto the stage. They must, in most cases, enter and immediately launch into fiendishly difficult arias. Indeed, two of Mozart’s most devilish creations, the lament “Ach, Ich Liebte” (Ah, I have loved!) and “Durch Zärtlichkeit” (By tenderness and flattery) occur right as the characters appear.

Isaac Hurtado, as the Spanish nobleman, Belmonte, was the first to be subjected to this hurdle, as his aria opens the first act. Hurtado certainly looks the part of a passionate young lover, but he acted and sounded somewhat unsettled. It wasn’t until his Act 3 duet with Konstanze that he appeared fully comfortable and musically secure.

A scene from Act 3

Christina Major fared better as Konstanze, Belmonte’s kidnapped lover. Although the middle high notes of her first aria sounded murky, her top C’s and D’s sparkled. Her extended scene in Act 2, in which she outlines her great sadness at being separated from her beloved, was far more grounded and comfortable. Major seemed to have trouble deciding what to do with her hands, however, and several times settled on awkward gestures that detracted from her character’s emotions.

The hardest of the difficult entrance arias, perhaps, belongs to Konstanze’s maid, Blonde. The second act opens on Blonde, who uses coloratura and three high F’s to admonish Osmin, her would-be seducer, for his bad behavior. Soprano Khori Dastoor hit the character, and the notes, dead on. Blonde’s second aria, “Welche Wonne, welche Lust” (What happiness, what delight), which is as unrelenting and demanding as her first, was bright, funny, and well-paced. Her energetic portrayal of the feisty maid called to mind Betty Hutton in the 1950 film, Annie Get Your Gun.

Flair for Comedy

Belmonte’s servant Pedrillo has also been kidnapped and imprisoned in the Turkish harem. Without an opening aria to negotiate, tenor Matthew O’Neill made his mark with a keen sense of comic timing. His singing was overly tense, though, as if he was struggling to be heard over the orchestra. He rallied, though, for his Act 3 serenade, which had wonderful clarity and simplicity.

Pasha Selim (William Neely) and Konstanze (Christina Major) with the chorus

The harem’s owner, Pasha Selim, does not sing. In this speaking role, William Neely used his operetta and musical theater experience to shine as the commanding and stern, but ultimately fair, lord of the Turkish manor.

The star of the evening, however, was Jeremy Galyon. His portrayal of Osmin, the overseer of the harem, was at once stern, gruff, dim, and wickedly funny. His voice is full, resonant, and clear from top to bottom, without a hint of the muddiness that can sometimes plague basses. He presented finely crafted and musically sensitive arias, and stole every scene in which he appeared.

The Abduction from the Seraglio features spoken dialogue rather than sung recitative, and like many productions, the Midsummer Mozart Festival used an English translation. While occasionally somewhat stilted, it effectively communicated the situation and atmosphere. Director Barbara Heroux’s production, full of emotion, energy, and humor, often had the audience laughing out loud. Comic opera has rarely been so genuinely comical.


Mezzo-soprano Kathryn Miller holds degrees in singing from London’s Royal Academy of Music and the San Francisco Conservatory of Music.

©2008 By Kathryn Miller, all rights reserved.


Comments

  1. Sunday night the house was packed and the entire cast oustanding! Christina Major stopped the show and the audience wouldn’t quit aplauding! At the end, the entire cast and orchestra got a standing ovation. This performance and production was so delightful it was better than some of the “Abductions” I have heard in the Big Houses. It is a shame it did not get more performances!

    Posted by Eloise Bouye on August 5, 2008 at 2:01 pm

  2. For all Ms. Miller’s musical credentials, one would have hoped that she would have taken the time to carefully look through the score of “Abduction”. The character of Blondchen does not sing any high Fs, but instead three high Es – a half-step’s difference, but an important half-step’s difference in a coloratura soprano’s highest register!

    (In the Mozart operas, the only characters who have Fs are Madame Herz in Der Schauspieldirektor and, even more famously, the infamous Königin der Nacht in Die Zauberflöte. Blondchen has her E-naturals, and Fauno in Ascanio in Alba extends to E-flat. Mozart was even more daring in the concert arias, writing up to high G in “Popoli di Tessaglia”, K. 316.)

    Posted by William Melvin on August 6, 2008 at 1:06 pm

  3. Actually, there is only ONE E in the aria. But, it still does not change the fact that it is difficult, however by NO means is it “perhaps the most difficult of the entrance arias.” If one has not sung or truly viewed the score of Ach ich liebte, one could never know the truth of how difficult it is.

    And just have a look at some of Osmin’s arias!

    Either way, the evening was magical, the audience DID stop for almost 2 minutes when Ms. Major sang her 20 minute plus scene with glorious magnitude, and she had to bow twice at curtain call. Quite frankly I have been saddened by the two reviews that have clearly outlined the lack of knowledge on these roles and of what is expected in them. One review evenin leaving out Galyon!

    I just think that some don’t know what to do with and “old world” or classically “golden age” sound, especially in a role like Konstanze. Ms. Major has it all, size, color, and massive agility with high notes that most coloraturas envy! This, to my knowledge was her first Konstanze and WOW, I can’t wait to hear it evolve over time, but this debut was MAGNIFICENT.

    She was surrounded by a fabulous cast as well. Galyon was incredible! The comedic parts were are sung well and the direction was great!

    But, we are all entitiled to our opinions.

    Having checked her website, Ms. Major sings Violetta next in Idaho. God, I would love to see that.

    Posted by John Smith on August 7, 2008 at 7:01 pm

  4. Yes, thank you for noticing my glaring typo! Blonde does indeed have E’s, not F’s. There are THREE of them, for the record (I have the score in front of me).

    I have no doubt, Mr. Smith, that Christina Major’s Violetta will be thrilling. Indeed, one of the things I thought to myself after this performance was “I would love to hear her sing Verdi.” Furthermore, I never implied that her Konstanze was in any way deficient. Merely that her first few minutes onstage weren’t quite grounded.

    Posted by Kathryn Miller on August 8, 2008 at 4:51 pm

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