Los Angeles Times

Opera singers new to L.A.

Elisabete Matos and Tomas Tomasson voice excitement in making their Los Angeles debut in ‘The Flying Dutchman.’

- By Deborah Vankin deborah.vankin@latimes.com

Elisabete Matos and Tomas Tomasson visit to perform in “The Flying Dutchman.”

Amid the just-quieting lunch rush at Kendall’s Brasserie in downtown Los Angeles, there is no question who the internatio­nal opera stars are. Portuguese soprano Elisabete Matos and Icelandic baritone Tomas Tomasson sit tucked away at a nondescrip­t table; but their clear, mellifluou­s voices cut through the din of the restaurant. When Tomasson chuckles, it sends a gentle, merry rumble across the floorboard­s.

Both performers are new to L.A., a city Tomasson finds “huuuge!” he bellows.

Another first: the singers will see their L.A. debut in “The Flying Dutchman,” which opens at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on Saturday. The lavish Wagner opera is part ghost story, part love story, the tale of a cursed sea captain who must wander the stormy ocean with his crew for eternity until he finds true love, which breaks the spell. Tomasson anchors the production as the Dutchman and Matos plays his salvation, Senta — both roles they have performed multiple times before, just not together.

“He personifie­s the loneliness and suffering of the human condition,” Tomasson says of his character. “It’s very dramatic.”

Daniel Dooner will direct the Nikolaus Lehnhoff production, which premiered at the Lyric Opera of Chicago in 2001 and played at the San Francisco Opera in 2004. It’s a straightfo­rward interpreta­tion, presented without intermissi­ons over two hours and 20 minutes, the way Wagner had intended.

Matos — who last performed the role of Senta in 2010 at Madrid’s Teatro Real — says that in this particular version of “Flying Dutchman” her character is “more active, more driving of the action. She has this craziness, she makes everything happen.”

Tomasson — who transition­ed from bass to baritone seven years ago and last starred as the Dutchman in 2007 at Barcelona’s Gran Teatre del Liceu — never intended to be an opera singer. In college in his hometown of Reykjavik he set out to be- come an astrophysi­cist. He joined the college choir because it was the largest social network he could find, he says. The first opera he saw was “Aida” when he was 20.

“It was such an overwhelmi­ng experience,” says Tomasson, 47, who now lives in Berlin. “I fell in love with it and wanted to be an opera singer.”

For Matos, 49, music was an integral part of her upbringing. Her father played trumpet and she started playing the violin at age 9, something she aspired to do profession­ally; she began voice lessons as a teenager. The drama of opera and the liberation of playing a character led her to pursue it as a career instead of the violin, she says.

“It’s a way to not be Elisabete Matos, but to be a different person — a very bad woman, a very nice woman, to have all the possibilit­ies of living this character,” she says. “On stage, you have the courage to show your emotions.”

Matos met Spanish tenor and L.A. Opera general di- rector Plácido Domingo in 1997 when they were both performing in the world premiere of Antón Garcia Abril’s “Divinas Palabras” in Madrid, where she now lives. He invited her to try out for Jules Massenet’s “Le Cid,” which he would soon be starring in at the Teatro de la Maestranza in Sevilla and the Washington Opera (now the Washington National Opera) in 1999. She landed the role of Chimene in both production­s — Washington was her U.S. debut.

“I had paid my dues. But it was the moment of singing with Plácido that took my career to the next level,” she says.

This May marks the 200th anniversar­y of Wagner’s birth — something that is being celebrated by opera enthusiast­s worldwide. As a result, says Domingo via email, the L.A. production of “Flying Dutchman” was particular­ly tricky to cast.

“Every opera company has been competing for all of the same singers during the Wagner bicentenar­y,” Domingo says. “Fortunatel­y, the timing worked out to bring these two leads to Los Angeles for their debuts here. Elisabete is a wonderful artist ... the Dutchman has become a signature role for Tomas.”

Rehearsing for the first time in Southern California has had its challenges for both singers. The dry climate and central heating has wreaked havoc on their vocal cords, for one, so they have to drink inordinate amounts of water to keep their voices fit for performing, Tomasson says.

“It affects your breathing. And we don’t use microphone­s, there’s no amplificat­ion,” he says. “With these tiny little vocal cords, we have to fill 4,000-seat theaters.”

Then there’s the rigorous schedule of traveling, says Matos, who finished a concert in Lisbon before immediatel­y heading to Madrid to pack and then jetting off to L.A. the next morning for the first of four weeks of rehearsals.

“In the old days, opera singers traveled by ship,” she says. “Nowadays, we live in a more immediate world. It’s good to have work, but your vocal cords, your brain and everything else needs rest. You sing with your whole body.”

Still, they agree that the L.A. production of “The Flying Dutchman” is a dream realized for both singers, who have long wanted to perform with the L.A. Opera. They are especially pleased that the company’s music director, James Conlon, will be conducting.

“The quality of an opera company is always grounded in the quality of the orchestra,” Tomasson says. “And L.A. has been high on my list.”

At a recent Music Center rehearsal, amid the tangle of technician­s, soloists and musicians milling about onstage — all of whom appear dwarfed by an ominous, towering shadow of the Flying Dutchman looming on a scrim over the stage — there actually is some question as to whom the internatio­nal opera stars are from the near-vacant seats in the audience.

That’s exactly the point, says Tomasson, who sees opera as more collaborat­ive than any of the other performing arts.

“We’re a big, organic mass,” he says. “Like instrument­s working together. From the 100-piece orchestra, 60 to 80 chorus members, soloists and enormous amount of technician­s — it’s such a huge group effort. That’s part of the magic and beauty of this art form.”

 ?? Lawrence K. Ho
Los Angeles Times ?? L.A. OPERA’S “The Flying Dutchman,” opening this weekend, features soprano Elisabete Matos and baritone Tomas Tomasson.
Lawrence K. Ho Los Angeles Times L.A. OPERA’S “The Flying Dutchman,” opening this weekend, features soprano Elisabete Matos and baritone Tomas Tomasson.

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