Los Angeles Times

Opera: Marking a big transforma­tion in Philip Glass’ ‘Akhnaten.’

Anthony Roth Costanzo stretches all his talents as the falsetto pharoah in Philip Glass’ ‘Akhnaten.’

- By Catherine Womack calendar@latimes.com

When he was 11, Anthony Roth Costanzo already was a working Broadway actor. He sang in his first opera when he was 13. Since graduating from Princeton and the Manhattan School of Music, he has been a rising star in the opera world.

Now 34, he is singing his biggest, most demanding role yet: Akhnaten, the revolution­ary pharaoh in ancient Egypt and the title character in the minimalist opera that Philip Glass composed in 1983, when Costanzo was an infant.

That is partly because the role of Akhnaten is for a counterten­or, which means that Costanzo sings with a powerful, highly controlled falsetto. His vocal range matches that of a traditiona­l mezzo-soprano.

Costanzo sang “Akhnaten” in the world premiere of director Phelim McDermott’s production in March at the English National Opera in London. This month, Costanzo and McDermott bring “Akhnaten” to the Los Angeles Opera stage for its U.S. premiere, where the audience will include not only Glass but also Costanzo’s childhood mentor, filmmaker James Ivory, who directed Costanzo in the 1998 Merchant Ivory movie “A Solider’s Daughter Never Cries.”

Costanzo says this latest role is demanding vocally, dramatical­ly and physically. “It uses all the resources that I feel I’ve been working on for my whole 23 years of profession­al performanc­e,” he says, later adding: “It goes beyond athletic to Olympic. It feels like it is at the edge of possibilit­y.”

Costanzo likes to point out that, although the counterten­or voice sounds exotic to many first-time listeners, what he is doing is not terribly different from what Michael Jackson, Prince and Justin Timberlake all have done to sing the high notes.

Mezzo-soprano J’Nai Bridges plays Nefertiti, the queen to Costanzo’s king. She says she enjoys singing opposite him because their voices are so similar, and they share the same vocal sweet spots. In a twist from her usual roles, she sometimes sings lower than her male counterpar­t.

“Anthony has always been so extremely motivated, dedicated, consistent and hard-working,” she says of Costanzo, whom she’s known for more than a decade. “To see where that has taken him profession­ally has been inspiring.”

As a counterten­or, Costanzo says the roles available to him exist “at two ends of the spectrum: before 1750 and after 1950.” That excludes him from the Puccini, Verdi and Wagner that dominate many opera companies’ programmin­g.

“I really do think that Philip Glass writing ‘Akhnaten’ in the early 1980s for a counterten­or was incredibly revolution­ary,” Costanzo says. “He was, as he often is, totally ahead of the game.”

Today, more composers are eager to exploit the added color a counterten­or voice brings to their compositio­nal palettes. In 2015, Costanzo sang in two world premieres of major new American operas: Jake Heggie’s “Great Scott” at the Dallas Opera and Jimmy López’s “Bel Canto” at the Lyric Opera of Chicago.

Keith Cerny, chief executive and general director of the Dallas Opera, attributes Costanzo’s success partly to his vocal production and a stage presence that make audiences comfortabl­e with him. Cerny calls Costanzo “the complete package as a singer, an actor and a very media savvy profession­al,” adding that “composers are also lining up to write for him because of these same qualities.”

On stage, Costanzo seems to thrive when handed a dramatic challenge. He enjoys delving into the depths of Akhnaten’s psyche.

“Is Akhnaten good or bad? Is he a cult leader or a spiritual guru? There are many layers of complexity,” he says. “And character is so important to me.”

Because Glass’ “Akhnaten” is so intensely abstract and otherworld­ly, McDermott’s production requires what Costanzo calls “a different style of performanc­e and complete devotion.”

It also requires nudity. Which is why Costanzo has been following a strict diet and working with fitness trainer and Bravo reality TV star Craig Ramsay three times a week.

McDermott also asked Costanzo to shave his head and remove all the hair from his body for the role.

“Behold the #BOYZILIAN portion of the six hours of SUGARING,” Costanzo captioned an Instagram video last week during a full-body hair removal session at Sugar Me Beverly Hills.

The video is painful to watch, and it is just a glimpse into the effort Costanzo has poured into this role.

“It is a major transforma­tion,” he says of his physical metamorpho­sis, “but it feels really parallel to what this role has been profession­ally and artistical­ly for me. And that feels very satisfying.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? ANTHONY Roth Costanzo surveys the Dorothy Chandler Pavillion from the audience perspectiv­e before his “Sugar” treatment for his role as the pharoah “Akhnaten.”
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ANTHONY Roth Costanzo surveys the Dorothy Chandler Pavillion from the audience perspectiv­e before his “Sugar” treatment for his role as the pharoah “Akhnaten.”
 ?? Craig T. Mathew Mathew Imaging ?? FOR HIS “AKHNATEN” part with L.A. Opera, Costanzo underwent “a major transforma­tion.”
Craig T. Mathew Mathew Imaging FOR HIS “AKHNATEN” part with L.A. Opera, Costanzo underwent “a major transforma­tion.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States