In ‘Love Sings’ at CCP, Philippine Opera Company talents to sing key arias in English

Company members rehearsing —PHOTOS BY EARVIN PERIAS

Operatic soprano Karla Gutierrez, president of Philippine Opera Company (POC), was depressed. The travails of promoting opera in this country were becoming too much, and there was not much coordination among the different opera groups. Unlike in theater, where once hostile drama groups were now cooperating with each other and actors appeared in one English-language production, and then showed up for a Filipino-language play without any hassle.

Philippine Opera Company president Karla Gutierrez and mom Zenaida Gutierrez

Gutierrez herself, a music conservatory product, is a young veteran of Repertory Philippines where she endured the harsh discipline of the late Zenaida Amador.

So one fine day she went to California and poured out her woes to the Los Angeles Opera Company. “The problem in promoting opera is the same here,” she was told.

Talent Jennifer Uy during rehearsal

“Oh c’mon,” she retorted. “You have great tenor Placido Domingo as your artistic director.”

“That helps to drum up sales but it’s only the New York Met which is making money! You really have to focus on audience development, for the youth are your future audience.”

So Gutierrez did just that.

The Friends of Philippine Opera Foundation created two programs: an Audience Development Program and an Artistic Development Program. Under the latter falls the Young Artists Series.

Lobby and reception of the Philippine Opera Company

Character analysis

 

“The conservatories focus too much on singing, not theater or dance,” observed the singer-actress. “We don’t focus on character analysis.”

Warming up to the subject, she added: “So I always tell the singer, to be an effective artist/performer, you have to be a storyteller. The audience should be able to understand you, so as a singer you should be able to understand what you are singing. That’s why text analysis is very important.”

So the students are told to sing the aria first in English to be able to connect with the song, study it first in English,   research, Google the English translation and dissect the lyrics. The workshops are free for the young artists, who are taught movement, diction, dance, basic theater, makeup, grooming, styling, career path and management.

“Love Sings” director Jaime del Mundo

There are some 20 POC performers, mostly young with a few veterans like tenor Nazer Salcedo and baritone Lawrence Jatayna.

Putting theory into practice, POC will hold a concert “Love Sings,” under the direction of Jaime del Mundo, at the lobby of Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) on March 15, 7 p.m.           It was CCP president Arsenio “Nick” Lizaso who suggested the venue.

There will be arias  translated into English from operas by Mozart, Puccini and Verdi.

“We make our workshops fun, out of the box, experimental so as to be appreciated by the young and the newbies for opera,” says Gutierrez. “We really need to build a new audience for opera.” –CONTRIBUTED

“Love Sings,” March 15 at the lobby of CCP. Call 09176452946.

Read more...