Tuesday, August 15th those of us in the Tuckamore Festival
audience in St. John's were given the opportunity to hear composer Alice Ping
Yee Ho in a Q&A session with Bekah Simms, which was followed by the world
premier of Ho's Your Daughter Fanny and
Christopher Hall's "updated" version of Saint Saens' Carnival
of the Animals. Aptly named, "The Great War, Words and Whimsy" the
evening was an introduction to the composer's juggling act of the commissioning
process. Interviewer Bekah Simms
systematically took us through the composer's inspiration and her key
relationships with our province and the talents of Duo Concertante, soprano
Caroline Schiller, who commissioned the operatic work, and the original letters
of Great War nurse Fanny that are the basis for Lisa Moore's libretto. Ho's accessible answers were further
enriched by the participation of archivist Burt Riggs from the audience, who
co-authored with Bill Rompkey a published collection of Fanny Cluett's wartime
letters. Jackpot!
The intimacy of Fanny's letters and the epic historical
events that they span could have easily warranted a full-blown opera. Instead, Ho's version is a 45-minute
word drama that maximizes the strengths of Schiller as a soloist who
alternately acts and sings, richly supported by Nancy Dahn on violin and
Timothy Steeves on piano. All
three were in historically appropriate costume and there was a minimum of props
against a backdrop of projected photographs and letters. It is a lean production that would lend
itself to touring.
Fortunately for me, I had a direct line of vision with the
screen and found myself often following along with the lyrics that mirrored the
flowing cursive text of the letters.
Ho's musical manipulations brought out the poetry of the text as well as
its frankness. A simple phrase
like "blood and mud" took on a haunting quality in Schiller's soaring
soprano. Some audience members who
did not have the advantage of a clear view of the screen commented that
projected sub or super titles, as is the convention in some opera houses, would
have been useful while others would have preferred to have the text in their
programs.
Saint Saens composed Carnival of the Animals in 1886, Ogden
Nash wrote the humorous verses in 1949 and comedian, clarinetist and narrator
Christopher Hall presented his 2017 updated version– infused with irreverent
local content that likened Councillor Danny Breen to a creeping turtle and
transformed contender Andy Wells from hairy man to hare. The audience ate it up. Hall's light spirits were infectious
and the ten string, wind and percussion musicians on stage turned the Carnival
into an all-out musical romp.
From the heart felt insights into the Great War to the
lighthearted animal antics of the Carnival, it was evening where text and music
married.
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