Orphee5966 * Notes *
Philip GlassOrphée was performed impressively by Ensemble Parallèle last night in San Francisco. The 14 musicians sounded lush but clean under Maestra Nicole Paiement. Brian Staufenbiel‘s production involved rather stunning circus art, including Roue Cyr, aerialism, and juggling. However, the video art, especially in the beginning, did not quite work, and people even laughed at the repetition in the introduction. It was used sparingly, and the pleasing retro circus feel was certainly attractive. The vision was carried through all the way from start to finish and the acting was convincing from all sides.

The singing was all very strong. Aglaonice, sung by Brooke Muñoz, sounded sweet. Austin Kness sounded robust in his two roles as a policeman and commissaire. Thomas Glenn was haunting particularly as Cégeste, also singing the role of the Reporter. Philip Skinner (Poet/Judge) was threatening, as was appropriate. Susannah Biller was a characteristically brilliant Euridice. John Duykers (Heurtebise) sang with tenderness, and Marnie Breckenridge (the Princess) was alluring. Breckenridge sounded icy and pure. In the title role, Eugene Brancoveanu was most awe-inspiring, his voice is hearty and sympathetic.

* Tattling * 
The audience was fairly well-behaved, but for some reason, the circus artists brought out the worst in them. The women in G 111 and 112 of the orchestra level could not stop talking during Act II, and one of them insisted on clapping and screaming for the aerealist despite the music.

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6 responses to “Ensemble Parallèle’s Orphée”

  1. CruzSF Avatar
    CruzSF

    I thought the performance was very good, and Breckinridge, Duykers, and Brancoveanu were especially good. Why isn’t Brancoveanu given more to do in the bigger companies?
    The production was well-designed, I thought, with the exception of the first 10 minutes. The opening video segment was too long, I agree (with you), and the staging of the cafe scene at the far right must have made it difficult to see for a third of the audience. But once the main story got under way, I think the production settled down into clarity. I’d been warned that it might be difficult to distinguish between the real and fantasy elements, and the underworld and our world, but it seemed straightforward to me.
    I’d certainly see another production by this company.

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  2. Pat King Avatar
    Pat King

    Good review. For me it was slow starting and the orchestra on stage blocked view. But kudos to the pit! The music was exciting and spot on. I’m looking very forward to “Four Saints in Three Acts”. This is an extremely talented group.

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  3. OperabuffSF Avatar
    OperabuffSF

    This production was daring and engaging – opera needs more companies willing to do something this bold and exciting – kudos to Ensemble Parallele. The opera may be called Orphee, but story, music and magic revolved around the gorgeous and gifted Princess. Death has never been so alluring. Breckenridge brought world-class singing and acting to this role. It was impossible to look anywhere else when she was on stage haunting us with her voice and grace. Which is not to take anything away from Duykers and Brancoveanu who both did great work and elicited sympathy and inspiration in turns. The only negative is that this production had only two performances. This show deserves many, many more.

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  4. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    I am not sure why we don’t hear Brancoveanu more at LA Opera or SF Opera.

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  5. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Thank you. I am looking forward to the Virgil Thomson as well.

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  6. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Breckenridge was great and I agree, it is too bad there weren’t more performances.

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