The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Reimagined ‘Carmen’ is thrilling, dramatic

Atlanta Opera stages reinvigora­ted classic in a Texas dive bar.

- By Jon Ross

“Carmen,” Georges Bizet’s sprawling opera about a transfixin­g gypsy and the love triangle she cultivates, is one of the most performed operas in the world.

This familiarit­y – a dose of comfort amid chaos – should make “Carmen” the ideal opera for the pandemic. But performing the nearly three-hour opera, full of lavish sets and a large chorus, is untenable during COVID-19 due to safety protocols; large choruses can’t be socially distant, and the opera must be significan­tly shorter to meet pandemic guidelines.

For “Carmen” to work during the coronaviru­s pandemic, The Atlanta Opera’s general and artistic director Tomer Zvulun had to be a keen editor, streamlini­ng the opera without reducing its impact. The result is a compelling drama presented in an open-air tent in the parking lot of the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre, the organizati­on’s true home. A live but thinnedout orchestra provides accompanim­ent from a separate tent, piped to the mainstage through speakers.

Thursday, The Atlanta Opera presented “The Threepenny Carmen,” a reimaginin­g by Zvulun and conductor Jorge Parodi, that clocked in at around 100 minutes, creating visual splendor with flamenco dancers instead of legions of chorus singers. The signature arias and music are all there, but the drama suddenly seems much more true to life. While some of

the grandiosit­y may have been lost, this new production is plenty thrilling and works well despite required pandemic precaution­s.

Instead of a gypsy encampment near Seville, Carmen’s world is the Threepenny Tavern, a dive bar in Texas. A new character, Lilas Pastia (Tom Key), serves as the owner of the tavern and a key narrative propellant. After the carnivalli­ke overture, Pastia explains directly to the audience that the goal of every tavern patron is “surviving Carmen.” This breaking of the fourth wall brought the audience into the action. Extending the elevated stage into the audience also creates a physical closeness to the drama not present in last fall’s big tent series production­s (or, for that matter, in traditiona­l opera staging).

The love triangle of Bizet’s opera is still there, with Don Jose (the unforgetta­ble Richard Trey Smagur) smitten by Carmen (Megan Marino), who is in turn in love with Zuniga ( Jose Caballero). When he enters the Tavern and sees Carmen, Don Jose forgets all about his beloved Micaela ( Jasmine Habersham), and in his single-minded obsession, ends up killing both Carmen’s suitor and the object of his obsession herself. And that’s not even taking the toreador Escamillo (the very funny Michal Mayes) into account.

Key’s character, complete with lazy Southern drawl and outsized attitude, helped shape the proceeding­s into more than just a series of arias. Dancer Sonia Olla’s entrancing flamenco steps wove through the entire production, grounding the action in the Spanish-themed Texas bar, but also providing an other-worldly, ephemeral quality to the performanc­e.

Even with vaccines proliferat­ing in the metro area, audience members were required Thursday to be masked at all times. Pods of two chairs were spaced three feet apart, consistent with new guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As with the opera’s performanc­es last fall, singers and dancers either wore masks or sang from within vinyl enclosures, which sounds odd but made sense with the storyline (think go-go cages).

The socially distant orchestra provided ample amplified sound, but at times it felt like the singers were performing to pre-recorded tracks. Habersham, Smagur and Marino sang with vitality and conviction, despite the masks and vinyl barriers.

“The Threepenny Carmen” embraces the coziness of familiar, beloved music, but also branches out, creating a new, satisfying work that could only have been borne of pandemic constraint­s. While last fall’s Atlanta Opera performanc­es felt at times like opera despite pandemic challenges, “The Threepenny Carmen” is a fitting new entry into the opera oeuvre.

 ?? COURTESY OF KEN HOWARD ?? Carmen (Megan Marino) sings an aria during the opening night of Atlanta Opera’s “The Threepenny Carmen.”
COURTESY OF KEN HOWARD Carmen (Megan Marino) sings an aria during the opening night of Atlanta Opera’s “The Threepenny Carmen.”

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