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{a cautionary tale featuring music of Janáček and Dvořák}
Antonín Dvořák and Leos Janáček
January 2008
The Morgan Library & Museum
Read press reviews of this production.
credits
Musical Direction / Piano Neal Goren
Production Eric Einhorn
Scenic Design Cameron Anderson
Costume Design Candida K. Nichols
Lighting Design Shawn Kaufman
Choreography Seán Curran
CAST
Janíčku Garrett Sorenson
Zefka Abigail Nims
Gypsy 1 Leah Edwards
Gypsy 2 Amanda Crider
Gypsy 3 Hannah Penn
musical director’s notes
When I spoke with members of
The Morgan Library & Museum’s
music committee about presenting
an opera in their as-yet-unfinished
Gilder Lehrman Hall, my
interest was tempered by a
healthy dose of skepticism. Here
was a beautiful performance
space without any of the standard
features of an opera house:
orchestra pit, wings for entrances
and exits, flies for scenery, etc. I
would have to choose repertoire
and an artistic team that could
make a virtue out of necessity,
and it was in this spirit that Scenes
of Gypsy Life was born. In
Janáček’s Diary of One Who
Disappeared, a theatrically conceived
song cycle for tenor, four
female singers, and piano, I found
an operatic composition naturally
scaled to complement the space.
And Dvořák’s Gypsy Songs was a
natural choice to provide dramatic
context, sharing as it does a
common nationality, setting, and
language with Janáček’s gripping
tale.
For Scenes of Gypsy Life, Eric
Einhorn and I are delighted to be
working with a team of designers
whose youth and ingenuity
allowed them to create a timeless
and flexible visual environment
for our drama. It is, after all, an
aspect of Gotham Chamber
Opera’s mission to promote the
next generation of directors and
designers whenever possible, in
addition to exposing our audiences
to the brightest young vocal
talents. With particular thanks to
Mr. and Mrs. George Lindemann
and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Crawford
for underwriting Gotham’s most
intimate production to date, I
hope you will find the gypsy life
as alluring as did our young protagonist—
at least for the coming
hour. - Neal Goren
producer’s notes
Ozef Kalda’s text for The Diary of
One Who Disappeared tells the
rather simple story of a young
peasant, Janíčku, seduced by a
dark-haired Gypsy girl. As in
much of Western lore, the Gypsy
girl, Zefka, is painted as the
aggressor, preying on the helpless
farm boy. Janáček’s music,
though, points to a darker layer
within the story. Is it possible that
Zefka is actually innocent, and
that Janíčku disastrously
misinterprets her simple attempts
at friendship?
From first hearing, this piece
struck me as a confession: the
poetry and music portraying the
guilt of our “victim,” Janíčku.
Rather than being helpless against
the advances of Zefka, the opera
suggests that he becomes a willing
partner in his own seduction,
which ultimately leads him to
destroy the object of his desire.
With the addition of Dvořák’s
Gypsy Songs to the evening, we
create a framework that furthers
Janíčku’s guilt. The simple gypsy
world Dvořák paints so vividly is
also shattered by the “helpless”
farm boy’s lust and rage. - Eric Einhorn
This production of Scenes of Gypsy Life is made possible by generous gifts from Mr. and Mrs. George Lindemann and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Crawford.
Additional production support provided by Eve Yohalem and Nicholas Polsky.
These performances are made possible, in part, through public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and the New York State Council on the Arts.
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