The Hamilton Spectator

‘Of the Sea’ draws on Black experience­s

New Canadian production offers inspiring alternativ­es to Eurocentri­c works, narratives

- CHRISTIAN COLLINGTON KANIKA AMBROSE LIBRETTIST, PLAYWRIGHT, SCREENWRIT­ER

A new Black Canadian opera brings to life a story of resilience, amplified by hopeful arias and performers drawing from their own experience­s in facing obstacles.

The Tapestry Opera and Obsidian Theatre co-production titled “Of the Sea” is written by Kanika Ambrose and composed by Ian Cusson. It is a story of Black fatherhood and the lengths a parent would go for their child.

Ambrose, a Toronto-based librettist, playwright and screenwrit­er, says before writing “Of the Sea” she didn’t know any operas in English.

“Everything I’d seen at the Canadian Opera Company was in some European language,” she said.

She began writing the 90-minute production with Cusson in 2018 as a part of a Tapestry Opera program that pairs composers and librettist­s to collaborat­e on projects that can become full commission­s of new operas.

Ambrose decided to create something based on the mythologic­al narratives she’s heard since childhood about oceanic waters.

“I thought about the water and our African ancestors, and how if hundreds of thousands or millions of them were thrown to the bottom of the sea that means that the sea has forever changed,” Ambrose, who is of Caribbean background, said. “So how does that transform the sea forever?”

“Of the Sea,” which includes the Canadian Opera Company orchestra playing the music, premieres March 25 and runs until April 1 at the Bluma Appel Theatre in Toronto. It details the story of Maduka, his daughter Binyelum and fellow Africans thrown overboard during the Middle Passage stage of the Atlantic slave trade.

In the opera, those individual­s, portrayed by Black performers, populate mythical underwater kingdoms that span the ocean floor.

Ambrose, whose previous works have premiered at Opera Philadelph­ia and the Curtis Institute of Music, said collaborat­ing with Cusson helped bring out both their strengths.

“Ian was able to pull lightness, colour and create this water world that I couldn’t come up with through my texts alone,” she said of his music.

“It was magical seeing how the fruits of that pairing evolved.”

Audiences can expect powerful storytelli­ng heightened by the compositio­n, orchestrat­ion and vocalizati­on, Ambrose said.

“I think there’s an expectatio­n that opera can be dry or boring for some people who aren’t into it or familiar with it. I think people will be surprised with the fact that they can connect with this dramatic piece of storytelli­ng.”

Audiences will experience a piece that has the music and words working in tandem, Cusson added.

“It really celebrates the human voice and the incredible artistry that the singers bring.”

With the opera being set in a mythologic­al world and drawing from Black experience­s, Cusson, who is of Métis and French-Canadian descent, acknowledg­ed the responsibi­lity of telling this story and considers it an honour, despite not having the same background.

Cusson’s point of entry for the compositio­n was finding emotional parallels between Indigenous and Black experience­s. Despite those being different in many ways, he found commonalit­ies on the subjects of displaceme­nt and resilience.

“This is a story of incredible power in the face of overwhelmi­ng oppression and the attempt to snuff out people,” he said. “That for sure is something that runs parallel in Indigenous communitie­s and history.”

Cusson, who has held posts as composer-in-residence with the National Arts Centre Orchestra and the Canadian Opera Company, said “Of the Sea” is groundbrea­king and will help set the tone for the future of Canadian opera.

However, there is a problem with diversity in the industry, he said.

“The stories that have been told often come from a particular Eurocentri­c perspectiv­e.”

He said opera companies should be finding ways to allow different communitie­s to create works inspired by their own experience­s.

Canadian actor and director Philip Akin was drawn to direct “Of the Sea” after seeing a 10-minute version showcased as part of an opera shorts program called Tapestry Briefs.

He has known Ambrose since he was Obsidian Theatre’s artistic director. At the time, she was in the theatre’s playwright­s unit and they worked together on the 2019 play “Actually.”

After leaving Obsidian Theatre in 2020, Akin, whose directing credits include “Trouble in Mind” and “Gatsby Jazz, Sonny’s Blues” at Shaw Festival, said he heard that Ambrose was going to do the opera and he wanted to be a part of it.

“It’s important to me to have people who I’ve been able to help support and develop,” he said. “If they ask for my help then I’m going to do it.”

Akin said he cherished the rare opportunit­y to be in a room with other Black performers. He also loved being able to bring Black characters to life.

“You’re not just fulfilling a stereotype or a quota,” he said.

“You are a fully formed human being.”

Akin hopes “Of the Sea” encourages more Black artists to get involved with opera.

“It’s less about changing opera in Canada. It’s more about changing Black artists in Canada who can dream to maybe write an opera,” he said. “That’s how the change comes.”

Michael Mori, artistic director at Tapestry Opera, says putting on “Of the Sea” helps spark the conversati­on that opera can deviate from the European repertoire that it’s commonly known for.

“We’re in the most multicultu­ral city in the world and we still have a predominan­tly European mythology, predominat­ely European literature and music in terms of influences,” he said.

Everything I’d seen at the Canadian Opera Company was in some European language.

 ?? DAHLIA KATZ ?? The Tapestry Opera and Obsidian Theatre co-production titled “Of the Sea” is written by Kanika Ambrose, right, and composed by Ian Cusson, left. It’s a story of Black fatherhood and the lengths a parent would go for their child.
DAHLIA KATZ The Tapestry Opera and Obsidian Theatre co-production titled “Of the Sea” is written by Kanika Ambrose, right, and composed by Ian Cusson, left. It’s a story of Black fatherhood and the lengths a parent would go for their child.
 ?? CANADIAN OPERA COMPANY ??
CANADIAN OPERA COMPANY

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