Shanghai Daily

Impromptu opera in Mexico City delights market-goers, and singers

- Amy Guthrie

The tenor breaks into song next to bunches of bananas strung high above ripe papaya. Wearing a red market apron, he approaches a woman wrapped in a purple shawl and serenades her for 90 seconds while clutching her hand and looking her in the eyes. Tears stream down the woman’s face.

The recent opera performanc­e is part of an effort to bring the arts to everyday life in Mexico City. A troupe of four singers surprise shoppers at one of the city’s 300 public markets, chopping beef while they belt out romanzas, courting fruit vendors with arias or, in the case of the tenor, moving a woman to tears with lines like “eyes that cry don’t know how to lie” from the Spanish-language opera “La Tabernera del Pueblo.”

After the song, the tenor hugs the women — a total stranger before the serenade — and kisses her on the cheek. Shopper Ana Garcia, 65, says she never expected to hear “such beautiful voices” browsing the fruit aisle.

The tenor is a market vendor himself: Francisco Pedraza sells shoes seven days a week near the Basilica of Guadalupe. He trained to sing opera via private lessons from the age of 16 until 30, but he felt excluded from the tightknit opera circle in Mexico. He performed when and where he could, often as a backup singer for bands that play regional Mexican music.

“The voice is an instrument that you have to exercise continuous­ly to always maintain the same range,” he said.

One day in June, the opera crew appeared for a sound check at the market where Pedraza sells shoes. Pedraza, who is 50, approached the group’s artistic director. He auditioned on the spot and was invited to join. Pedraza’s wife runs the store while he’s out singing.

The singers are on tour as part of a pilot program that began in June and concludes in November. Juan Carlos Diaz, coordinato­r of the community cultural action program for Mexico’s national fine arts institute, says he is planning more impromptu operas in 2019.

The idea is to awaken interest in the arts by bringing opera and dance performanc­es to places where people gather, such as public markets and metro stations. Diaz calls them “spontaneou­s interrupti­ons in social life.” The fine arts institute is also coaching kids to make puppets and other crafts at city museums.

Lydia Rendon, a mezzo-soprano in the troupe who is also a music therapist, describes opera as music that makes people vibrate both emotionall­y and physiologi­cally “like a magical acoustic massage.”

Bringing song to the marketplac­es, between tomatoes and avocados, injects a primal element to the performanc­e, Rendon says, since everybody eats. The concept also taps into deep cultural roots for Mexicans. Indoor markets are an adaptation of the open-air selling that has taken place in Mexico City since the days of the Aztecs.

 ??  ?? Tenor Dante Alcala performs at the Argentina market in Mexico City. The country’s Fine Arts Institute is bringing opera and dance performanc­es to places where people gather, such as public markets and metro stations. — IC
Tenor Dante Alcala performs at the Argentina market in Mexico City. The country’s Fine Arts Institute is bringing opera and dance performanc­es to places where people gather, such as public markets and metro stations. — IC

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