Blog

Archives

A Well-Deserved Spotlight

16 talented, generous, resilient, smart and energetic singers + Scenes from some of the best operas ever = The 2011 Studio Spotlight. Amazing. Showcasing the 2011 Studio Artists Sopranos Amy Owens, Jacqueline Piccolino & Claudia Rosenthal Mezzo-sopranos Jill Phillips, Aleksandra Romano & Allegra De Vita Tenors Jake Armstrong, Jason Lee, Dustin Lucas & Galeano Salas

Read More

Hats

Today, a guest post from my partner in crime, Lee Anne Myslewski, the WTOC Administrative Director. (Although as you’ll see below, that job title is barely sufficient…) The Inspector, the opera that we started this whole crazy season with, has an aria about shoes. (I like to call it my aria…we acolytes of Imelda treasure

Read More

Marry Me a Little

Another afternoon in the theatre with Steve Blier proved to be a memorable experience. A full house, an adventurous and dedicated cast, and some irreverent and beautiful music. These concerts undergo many changes in the several months leading up to the performance. Steve puts forth a number of options for the cast we’ve assembled, and

Read More

A Movie for the Stage

I’ve spent the last few weeks combing Sondheim’s Finishing the Hat. In the preface to the Sweeney Todd chapter, the composer writes: “Sweeney Todd has been called by people who care about categories everything from an opera to a song cycle. When pressed, I have referred to it as a dark operetta, but just as

Read More

Sing Me a Rainbow, Paint Me a Dream

Yesterday morning, five of our Studio Artists and one of our coaching fellows took their latest project to Children’s National Medical Center’s New Horizons Cultural Arts Program. They paired songs by Rossini, Copland, Wildhorn, Bareilles and others with original artwork by Children’s National patients. Sincere thanks to Claudia Rosenthal, Aleks Romano, Jason Lee, Stephen Pace,

Read More

“At Last… My Cast is Complete Again!”

(Yes, that was a geeky Sweeney reference, for those of you who are as nerdy as I.) The Kennedy Center production of Follies that just swept through town on its way to Broadway took a few Wolf Trap casualties with it. Conductor James Moore was to have been here with us this week, prepping our

Read More

Aria Jukebox!

An audience of Wolf Trap donors, housing hosts, and frequent ticket-buyers made their own one-of-a-kind concert on Sunday. 52 songs were offered, 13 were chosen. (I was simultaneously stoked and terrified of playing Rachmaninoff’s “Spring Waters” in 5 flats, but I didn’t have to.) Curious about the playlist? Scroll down (past the picture of tenor

Read More