Los Angeles Times

Long Beach Opera says it’s tracking a ‘Comet’

The Yuval Sharon picked 2021 season includes a Du Bois Monteverdi pairing.

- By Jessica Gelt

As concert halls and theaters across the country remain closed with no clear picture of how and when live shows will resume, Long Beach Opera forged ahead Tuesday and announced its 2021 lineup, a “Season of Solidarity” curated by interim artistic advisor Yuval Sharon.

The biggest question surroundin­g the season has been which production the MacArthur fellow would choose to direct himself. The answer: “Comet/Poppea,” new work conceived by Sharon that uses Monteverdi’s last opera, “The Coronation of Poppea,” as a jumping-off point for the work of another MacArthur fellow, George Lewis, whose newly written opera is based on the W.E.B. Du Bois short story “The Comet.”

“Comet/Poppea” is meant to both critique and celebrate all that is unique and compelling about opera. Sharon, as he is known to do, has conceived an unconventi­onal staging: a rotating playing space that divides the show and the audience in two. One half delves into an ancient world, with Monteverdi’s music performed by Philharmon­ia Baroque Orchestra (PBO), and the other half dwells in the 20th century, with Lewis’ music played by the American Modern Opera Company (AMOC). The libretto is by Douglas Kearney.

A co-production with lead producers Anthony Roth Costanzo and Cath Brittan, PBO and AMOC, “Comet/Poppea” will have its world premiere June 2 in New York before opening June 20 in Long Beach.

“Between Long Beach Opera and Yuval Sharon’s production­s for the Industry, opera has existed in parking lots, train stations, swimming pools, automobile­s and city streets during the past four decades in Los Angeles County,” Jennifer Rivera, Long Beach Opera’s chief executive and executive director, said in the announceme­nt Tuesday. “Together, we plan to continue to find creative ways to bring the incredible collaborat­ive art form of opera to people in our community.”

As proof of that mission, the three other 2021 Long Beach Opera production­s will include the regional premiere of Peter Maxwell Davies’ “The Lighthouse,” to be staged at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach.

“The Lighthouse,” which was postponed when the coronaviru­s outbreak canceled the remainder of the 2019-20 season, will kick off the 2021 lineup on Jan. 23. It takes place in Scotland at the end of the 19th century and dramatizes the mysterious disappeara­nce of three lighthouse keepers who are driven to madness by solitude. The company’s departing artistic director, Andreas Mitisek, will direct.

Next up is the Long Beach Opera premiere of “Les Enfants Terribles” by Philip Glass. The work marks the completion of Glass’ trilogy based on the work of Jean Cocteau and examines the unpredicta­ble nature of youth. The dance-heavy performanc­e is directed by James Darrah and features conductor and Wild Up artistic director Christophe­r Rountree presiding over a score featuring three overlappin­g pianos.

A phenomenal group of women leads the third production, a double bill of groundbrea­king work featuring solo female protagonis­ts written more than 100 years apart: Arnold Schoenberg’s

“Pierrot Lunaire” (1912), and Kate Soper’s “Voices From the Killing Jar” (2014). The former finds a solitary woman roaming 21 haunting dreamscape­s, and the latter asks the soloist to conjure up eight of literature’s most famous female characters from the likes of “The Great Gatsby” and “Don Giovanni” in service of reclaiming female narratives from a male-dominated playbook.

“Pierrot Lunaire” is staged and choreograp­hed by Danielle Agami in collaborat­ion with her dance company, Ate9. “Voices From the Killing Jar” is directed by Zoe Aja Moore. Both shows will be conducted by Jenny Wong, the associate conductor of Los Angeles Master Chorale and a co-conductor of the Industry’s “Sweet Land,” the critically acclaimed immersive opera that Sharon’s company had to close mid-run as the coronaviru­s outbreak spread in L.A.

The season announceme­nt continues a spate of good news for Long Beach Opera, coming shortly after Anthony Davis won the Pulitzer Prize for music for “The Central Park Five,” given its world premiere in Long Beach last summer.

 ?? Adam Larsen ?? THE COMPANY’S season will include “Les Enfants Terribles,” a dance-driven piece with music by Philip Glass. It’s shown here at Opera Omaha’s One Festival.
Adam Larsen THE COMPANY’S season will include “Les Enfants Terribles,” a dance-driven piece with music by Philip Glass. It’s shown here at Opera Omaha’s One Festival.

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