THEATRE PREVIEW
“LA BOHÈME”
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine May 2005
It
was the first opera he ever saw, the first opera he ever directed and the first
opera performed by his company. Now, to conclude the San Diego Opera’s 40th
anniversary season, general director Ian Campbell directs the work that’s
perhaps nearest and dearest to his heart: Giacomo Puccini’s La Bohème.
“I
was 16 when I first saw La Bohème,”
says the ever-impassioned Campbell, “and it changed my life. Instead of
becoming a lawyer, as I’d planned, I became an opera singer.”
He
spent several years in the first national opera company in his native
Australia, and in 1981, directed La
Bohème for the State Opera of Southern Australia. Now it’s all come full cycle.
Campbell
knows why La Bohème, which premiered
in 1896, is one of the most popular and most performed operas. The reasons, he
says, are both musical and dramatic.
“Puccini
had a genius for melody. And his story isn’t about kings or queens, princes or
potentates. They’re people like you and me, who fall in and out of love.
Everyone sees something of themselves somewhere on that stage. And I don’t
think there’s a more clearly told story in opera. It all happens in linear
fashion, between Christmas eve and spring. It’s a wonderful mix of romance and
tragedy.”
The
story focuses on the beautiful but consumptive Mimi, a sickly seamstress who
finds true (if stormy) love with the struggling poet, Rodolfo. There’s a
parallel love story in the volatile relationship between Musetta, the flirt,
and Marcello, the jealous painter. The characters are all starving, freezing
artists living the Bohemian life (“la vie bohème”) in the lively Latin Quarter
of Paris in the 1830s. Based on incidents from Henri Murger’s novel, “Scènes de
la vie de Bohème,” the opera spawned the rock musical, Rent, and the hip, young Broadway version of La Bohème, directed by filmmaker Baz Luhrmann.
“It
has such depth of emotion,” Campbell says. “Mimi and Rodolfo love each other so
much, but they can’t live together. They can’t find a way to work through their
issues. If they were living today, they’d be going to see a psychologist. But
he doesn’t even have enough money for a doctor to save her life. It ends, of
course, in tragedy.
“I’m
not going to do anything clever or bizarre with the piece. I want people to
focus on the story. Even if it’s somebody’s first time seeing La Bohème, they’ll have no trouble
following the plot or feeling the emotions.
I want them to cry -- repeatedly.”
Tugging
at onlookers’ heartstrings will be tenor Richard Leech as Rodolfo and soprano
Fabiana Bravo as Mimi. A long-time friend of Campbell’s and a frequent
performer at San Diego Opera, Leech has played Rodolfo many times. Bravo is new
to her coveted role; Campbell loves to discover and encourage fresh talent.
He’s certain that his current production of La
Bohème will be quite different from his first one.
“I
think that one was a bit superficial, a little naïve,” he admits. “I don’t
think I was capable then of getting into the souls of people; now, with added
years and maturity, I see a far greater sadness in the piece, even though it is
often rollicking fun. It may be dark, but there’s some optimism at the end.
Mimi and Rodolfo are reconciled. And I’m convinced that Marcello and Musetta
stay together, despite all their conflict.”
In
order to convey all the nuances of the text, Campbell has written the
supertitles himself.
“I
know enough Italian to get as close to a direct translation as I can manage,
while still maintaining the poetry of Puccini.”
In
the forty years of the San Diego Opera (during 22 of which Campbell has been at
the helm), La Bohème has been the
second most performed opera (Puccini’s Madama
Butterfly is first). This is the tenth production of Bohème, and Campbell and Company are targeting a new audience,
including a “Student Ticket Initiative” to attract the college crowd, and the
usual student-invited dress rehearsal, which accommodates 2000 attendees, age
10 through high school.
“Kids
love opera,” asserts Campbell. “Because no one’s told them they aren’t supposed
to. No one told them opera is ‘all about fat ladies with horns singing their
lungs out.’ They’ve never heard voices like this, without amplification, with
spectacle and a live orchestra. We keep the curtain up and show them what goes
on behind the scenes. They’re fascinated by the technical stuff, too.”
“We want to attract new people to the broad
expanse of musical theater,” Campbell says. “That you can tell a story in song.
We’ve made the opera experience more audience-friendly. We have a range of
prices, we have supertitle translations. And it’s no longer a black tie affair.
Anyone who likes music can enjoy opera. And this is one opera everyone can fall
in love with.”
[La Bohème runs for five performances,
May 7-15; 619-533-7000; www.sdopera.com.
For
more about La Bohème, tune in to “At
the Opera with Ian Campbell” on KPBS radio (89.5FM), Sunday, May 1 at 7pm. And
watch “Opera Talk” and “Opera Spotlight” on UCSD-TV, hosted by the Opera’s
Geisel Director of Education, Nicolas Reveles.]
©2005
Patté Productions Inc.