Image includes the 6-box screen of characters and their fictional names |
Today’s contribution is a review of a pandemic opera – one that I’ve just taught in my Music, Pandemics, and History class. Since not a lot has been written about the opera yet, I thought this overview might be helpful to the interested reader.
In the middle of the pandemic, the creative team of David Shenton and Christine Steyer took on the lived experience of COVID-19 directly. They focused their three-scene / one-hour opera on the voices of healthcare workers. Their information was, as they explain, well-researched, “drawn from 200 articles about health care workers facing the pandemic.” While news as opera may seem surprising, questions of moral codes and strong emotion – especially tension, fear, and hope – emerge from the script as part of its operatic landscape. By the end, we care for the characters, as one should, and have traveled their story arc – from angst to connectedness and from outrage to hope. It is, as critics note, an “operatic love letter to global front-line healthcare workers.” The opera was also deemed successful by judges, for the first production was the winner of the National Opera Association Production Award and garnered 3rd place in the 2022 American Prize for Opera Production.
Set as a zoom call, the operatic performance cleverly begins with that moment of recognition: “Please wait. The host will let you in soon.” Yes, we all came to know that phrase all too well during the early stages of the pandemic. Likewise, as we move into the first scene, the mood of melancholy set by the Overture gives way to a frenetically repeated piano, underscoring the urgency in which the characters have been immersed. We meet the various characters, especially Sandra, the RN who has convened the group out of near-overwhelming frustration and a need for connection.
In this first aria, Sandra describes the nominal perks accorded the frontline workers, including fancy hotels and invitations to jump the queue (!), but points out “it all comes down to nothing” because she’s not able to see her own family. She snapped, she tells us, when the hospital started talking about pay cuts because of the lack of elective procedures. Pay cuts? In the middle of a pandemic? So her frustration boiled over into the need for this call/this opera.
The opera is divided into three scenes set several months apart: “Of the Heart”; “Just when things couldn’t get Worse” and “Tell Me Something Good.” Within each scene, several of the six healthcare working characters will share some part of their COVID-related experiences; Paolo, in “Fratelli” (I.3 – 17:25) explains the Italian penchant for balcony singing and its historical grounding, Gordon uses a refrain aria to articulate the frustration with a lack of progress in “One step forward” (II.2); Jane questions what we are all inheriting as a society, and whether it’s actually the good place that she was raised to see (“I’ve always been taught to respect my elders,” II.4).
Elements of the contextual news for the pandemic also peak
through – for instance, Gordon’s experience (II.2) with the Beirut
explosions, and Rolanda’s with deforestation in the Amazon, and
the spaces it left for graves (II.3). A concatenation of negatives layers up in
the closing part of scene 2, where five of the six characters pile on with
their anger and worries about the way in which the pandemic has unfolded, until
Sandra calls a halt to it all.
CLIMAX AND RESOLUTION (AN EXCERPT)
In fact, if you only have ten minutes to sample the opera, this climax and its resolution across the boundary of the entr’acte into scene 3 is the part of the opera that I think is perhaps the most worth viewing. This section follows Jane’s aria, previously mentioned, where she balances respect for her elders and dismay at behaviors that have led us to the current moment with its multitudinous ills (39:24). Ultimately, she tells us (40:07), she finds herself “unable to remain silent.” The Ensemble joins in for a group layering up of concerns: (41:00) “the World leaders protected from accountability… (42:29) deny responsibility and find a scapegoat…” The libretto goes on to distinguish problems from dilemmas: “problems have solutions; dilemmas don’t.” And the pandemic for many countries is a dilemma. This leads into the climax, which is where we pick up:
The excerpt itself features several returning lines. At the start of the excerpt (45:00), we hear how the virus “brought planet to its knees.” And that in turn raises the repeated question, “…how did we come to this?” The layers of concern, each character adding thoughts and observations into a cacophony of stress, reaches a climax, prompting Sandra to intervene (45:41), saying “Stop, please, please, enough!” These calls began, she reminds everyone, as “a space for me to share,” and after making a claim for the usefulness of connections, asks the other characters to “promise me you will tell me something good” when they return.
As the excerpt continues, we segue (46:56) into a keyboard entr'acte, designed to shifts our mood for the upcoming arrival of the new year. It’s “Hard to believe” (47:33) that it’s been almost a year, the characters observe at the start of Scene three. After toasting the new year with wine and water, the characters share positive updates. Sandra has just gotten a second dose of the vaccine so is able to return home to her family; Mario speaks to the legacy of learning that he has from his grandmother, whose advice helped get him through a difficult delivery (50:06). It is a different sound-world than the echo-chamber scapegoating at the end of the previous scene.
THE REST OF THE OPERA
I’ve ended the excerpt there with Mario and his grandma, but further positive news then continues to unfold across the third scene – the availability of vaccines, the recognized wisdom as a legacy of a beloved grandparent, volunteers helping with ventilators. Sandra perhaps sums it up best: “it all comes down to nothing if there’s no one to share.” The opera ends with an ensemble number from our main characters: “Microbes older than us” and its second part, “We are healers.” The close is provided in memoriam with a virtual choir.
OPERA OVERVIEW
A viewer-based (rather than score-based) summary of the opera’s structure looks something like this:
Scene 1: Of the Heart (early April, 2020)
1. Sandra’s aria
2. Mario: “We called her Lily”
3. Paolo: Fratelli
4. Jane: O what an awful blight
5. [Gordon and Rolanda passim]
Scene 2: Just When Things Couldn’t Get Worse (early September, 2020)
1. [Action: report on Beirut, Paulo]
2. Gordon: “refrain aria” “One step forward…”
3. Rolanda “Amazonia from above”
4. Jane: I’ve always been taught to respect my elders
5. ENSEMBLE: Scapegoat
6. [Stop, enough.] >>>
Scene 3: Tell Me Something Good (New Year’s Eve, 2020)
1. Sandra: 2nd vaccination
2. Mario: Hard delivery; grandma Lily
3. Jane: Family & pictures of the hospital
4. Paolo: sung to high A
5. Rolanda: volunteers help with ventilator
6. Gordon: y’all
7. Sandra: it all comes down to nothing if there’s no one to share
8. ENSEMBLE: Microbes older than us
9. ENSEMBLE: We are healers
10. In memoriam (choral)
THE OPERA'S CONTEXT
As A.A. Cristi noted in their initial review, the opera not only told a significant story, but also provided a “meaningful project” for the singers “who have been hard-pressed to find work during the pandemic.” To record the opera, composer and pianist David Shenton laid down the piano tracks, which the singers used as they recorded their own parts – safely, and at home. Those samples were then merged as a single soundtrack, at which point production turned to the video portion. The singers were asked to lip sync, pretending to sing on Zoom, as Schering captures in his news coverage of the premiere.
In fact, the executive producer situates this performance for us in the playbill: “We have yet to meet in person.” This counts as a “remote ensemble” production. The relatively small forces – the orchestra is a piano and sometimes violin, and six singers in gender-flexible casting – reflect the challenges inherent in all our various “safer at home” quarantines impacted music-making world-wide.
Overall, this one-act is a remarkably approachable 21st century opera, and has proven an effective entre to the genre for the non-music majors I’ve taught. The musical structure with its occasional use of refrains and its clear accompanimental markers to distinguish one section from another is relatively easy to follow. There’s perhaps more arioso than aria writing, but this keeps the action and events of the story line at its center. The singing of this performance is wonderfully done; my students voted for Paolo as the singer they’d most like to hear again. (It also helps that we’d just finished a unit on balcony music, and here it was, brought to life!)
Overall, the operatic takeaway is pretty simple: “kindness and compassion can be as powerful a tool as a vaccine and a ventilator.” Not a bad message for troubled times.
RESOURCES:
- Complete first performance of Shenton/Steyer’s On Call: COVID-19 (2021): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xDb70FfOSMc. This video can also be accessed through the Bellissima Opera website.
- Playbill: https://bellissimaopera.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/On-Call-Playbill.pdf
- Bellissima Opera: https://bellissimaopera.com/covidopera/
- Cristi,
A.A. "Working In Concert Premieres ON CALL: COVID 19 An Opera Love
Letter To Health Care Workers." Broadway World, April 12,
2021. https://www.broadwayworld.com/chicago/article/Working-In-Concert-Premieres-ON-CALL-COVID-19-An-Opera-Love-Letter-To-Health-Care-Workers-20210412
- Nelson, J. R. and Leor Galil. "A new Zoom opera honors the health-care workers fighting COVID." Chicago Reader, April 13, 2021. https://chicagoreader.com/music/a-new-zoom-opera-honors-the-health-care-workers-fighting-covid/
- Schering, Steve. "New international opera by Oak Park librettist tells story of health care workers battling COVID-19 pandemic." Chicago Tribune, April 16, 2021. https://www.chicagotribune.com/2021/04/16/new-international-opera-by-oak-park-librettist-tells-story-of-health-care-workers-battling-covid-19-pandemic/