Los Angeles Times

A trans story of love ... of self

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

When Long Beach Opera brought Laura Kaminsky’s “As One” to Southern California for the first time Saturday night, it was as one more. This is the ninth production of the opera, which had its premiere less than three years ago at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and has since been performed across the United States as well as in Montreal and Berlin. This year alone, Pittsburgh Opera and Opera Colorado have mounted “As One.” Next month: New Orleans.

The world clearly needs a readily accessible transgende­r opera with a warm heart.

The accessibil­ity concerns not only Kaminsky’s musical style and the opera’s emotional directness but also its compactnes­s. “As One” needs only a pair of

singers and a string quartet. It can be put on just about anywhere. Video backdrops take care of the set.

The real secret of the opera’s success, however, as revealed in David Schweizer’s understate­d yet persuasive production in Long Beach’s Beverly O’Neill Theater, is that under everything lays a winning coming-of-age story. The specific aspect of sexuality is, surprising­ly, almost incidental. No one grows up easily. Every first date is a trial. We all have issues with family. The point of “As One” is that we all are one.

The libretto by Mark Campbell (who has written texts for a number of new operas, most recently William Bolcom’s “Dinner at Eight”) and Kimberly Reed (a filmmaker who had been a starting quarterbac­k in high school) is essentiall­y a series of songs for Hannah Before and Hannah After. The first is a baritone; the latter, a mezzo-soprano.

But rather than having Before follow After, both Hannahs remain in dialogue. The female side comes out in a 10-year-old who likes to wear a blouse under a boy’s jacket while on a paper route. The male continues to support the female up to the time Hannah is Hannah.

In fact, “As One” is not so much an opera of rippedout-of-the-headlines relevance than a traditiona­l, if unconventi­onal, love story. Were you to attend a performanc­e sung in a language you didn’t understand, you might be led to believe it is a romance between two characters. They embrace often. The woman is protective of the young boy. The man is protective of the young woman. In the end, “As One” boils down to the easily relatable condition of a person learning to love one’s self.

Although structured as 16 distinct songs, “As One” is really a music theater piece in 16 vignettes. The string quartet sets each scene with a suitable music style. Kaminsky applies, say, propulsive post-Minimalism when she wants to wipe away angst and makes room for a lightness of being at the beginning. Here, the off-thecuff message Hannah learns at 10 is that she can wear a blouse and the paper still gets delivered.

A rhapsodizi­ng solo viola, its range between the violins and cello, is the ideal alterego for both Hannahs, the inquisitiv­e Before and the soul-searching After. But Kaminsky just as easily employs the full quartet to produce effusive romanticis­m, flamboyanc­e, folksiness and, in the one scene where Hannah narrowly escapes a hate crime, harrowing harmonics. One style, appropriat­ely enough for this story, doesn’t fit all.

The soloists, Lee Gregory and Danielle Marcelle Bond, sing mostly declamator­y phrases, Hannah Before more macho cool and Hannah After more willing to become flowery and flirtatiou­s and emotionall­y wrought. While clichés in the abstract, perhaps, these traits are the necessary raw material of Hannah’s interior negotiatio­ns as she works out, step by step, how to find herself.

Both singers are strong stage personalit­ies, but Bond’s job is the more considered. It is she who ultimately must transcend gender, which happens with the enlightenm­ent bathed by the Northern Lights in hers and the opera’s most impressive scene.

Effectivel­y grand as that Straussian transforma­tive final scene in the Norwegian woods is, “As One” remains a modest opera and, remarkable for its subject, a cheerful one. To that end, Andreas Mitisek conducted a performanc­e that favored atmosphere over point making and that allowed enough space for humor. On his own, violist Adam Neeley had a bold sound that could stand out for the solos yet seamlessly blend with the violinists Robert Schumitzky and Anne Tenney and cellist Charles Tyler.

By moving beyond the daily news, “As One” approaches admirable universali­ty.

But does that also make it too nice to get attention in an art form that thrives on sensationa­lism?

Different LGBTQ centers, as well as other organizati­ons, have thrown their support into the Long Beach Opera production, and even so the theater was far from full Saturday night.

 ?? Keith Ian Polakoff ?? LEE GREGORY plays Hannah Before and Danielle Marcelle Bond is Hannah After in the warm-hearted transgende­r opera “As One” from Long Beach Opera.
Keith Ian Polakoff LEE GREGORY plays Hannah Before and Danielle Marcelle Bond is Hannah After in the warm-hearted transgende­r opera “As One” from Long Beach Opera.

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