Santa Fe New Mexican

Opera of Anaya’s ‘Bless Me, Ultima’ to premiere in Albuquerqu­e

Organizers: National Hispanic Cultural Center shows sold out

- By Russell Contreras

ALBUQUERQU­E — The opera adaptation of Rudolfo Anaya’s famed novel Bless Me, Ultima, one of the most recognizab­le works of Mexican-American literature, is set to premiere in Albuquerqu­e.

Organizers say all five dates for a performanc­e based on the book some scholars believed sparked the Chicano literary movement in the late 1960s already have been sold out.

The opera, a collaborat­ion with Opera Southwest written by California­based composer Hector Armienta, is scheduled to open Feb. 18 at National Hispanic Cultural Center. It stars mezzo-soprano Kirstin Chavez and runs until Feb. 25.

National Hispanic Cultural Center Executive Director Rebecca Avitia said the excitement around the Bless Me, Ultima opera shows that Latinos will attend opera production­s if they can recognize the themes and if the production­s have Hispanic performers.

“Bless Me, Ultima tells the story of the human spirit,” Avitia said. “This shattered the myth that Latinos don’t attend operas.”

Experts say Anaya’s World War II-era novel about a young Mexican-American boy’s relationsh­ip with an older curandera — a healer of Mexican Indian heritage — influenced a generation of Latino writers because of its imagery and cultural references that were rare at the time of its publicatio­n.

Despite its popularity on college campuses throughout the years, the novel has been banned in some Arizona schools. It was made into a feature film in 2013.

Anaya, sometimes called the godfather of contempora­ry Chicano literature, was born in Pastura, N.M., and raised in nearby Santa Rosa.

The opera production also will feature the debut of Daisy Beltran, a 15-year-old soprano, who will play Tony, the main character of Bless Me, Ultima. The daughter of Mexican immigrants, Beltran turned to opera after resisting her mother’s push to study mariachi music, according to her mom, Norma.

“When I came to this country, I cleaned houses,” Norma Beltran said. “Now, my daughter is singing opera. When she was a 7-year-old, she told me, ‘This is what I want to do.’ I’m so excited.”

The production comes six years after the National Hispanic Cultural Center faced financial problems amid declining donations and unstable leadership.

Avitia, a Columbia Law Schooltrai­ned attorney, has earned praise for increasing donations and bringing unique production­s to the center.

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