Tag Archives: classical music

HOT's Daughter of the Regiment

10 Reasons to see The Daughter of the Regiment

Still looking for reasons to see HOT’s production of Donizetti’s Daughter of the Regiment? Here’s 10! 

Photo by Brian Kuhlmann

1. Metropolitan Opera Star Audrey Luna 

Hawaii’s own Grammy Award-winning Soprano Audrey Luna stars as Marie! Audrey broke the record for the highest note ever sung on the Metropolitan Opera’s stage earlier this year. Opera News has said that she “has power and a blazing coloratura facility that most lyric sopranos can only dream of.” Read Audrey’s thoughts on returning to Hawaii in this #HOTSpeaks post
 

2. The Tenor Aria With 9 High C’s 

With no less than 9 high C’s, Donizetti’s “Ah, Mes Amis,” sung by the character Tonio, is famously considered an impressive vocal feat for a tenor. Listen to this recording of HOT’s Tonio, Italian-American Tenor Michele Angelini, flawlessly performing the aria. Then come see him sing it live in his HOT debut! 

Photo Courtesy of Fort Worth Opera

3. It’s a Comedy 

“It’s a rollicking combination of esprit de corps, slapstick antics and innocent romance — not to mention intoxicating music highlighted by spectacular vocal writing.” ~ NPR 
Few associate comedy with opera. But the Daughter of the Regiment is filled with parody, irony, and eccentric characters. Even the premise of an army brat adopted by the French Regiment is comical. So get ready to laugh! 

Opera History in Hawaii
 
4. The Local Historical Significance 

A rich history of opera in Hawaii dates back to the 1800s. Donizetti’s Daughter of the Regiment was the first known operatic performance in Hawaii in 1854. Learn more about opera’s local history in this #HOTSpeaks article


 
5. The French Language 

The French language is regarded as beautiful and romantic when spoken – imagine it sung! But don’t worry, HOT provides English supertitles, so you’ll always know what’s going on in the plot. 

 
6. HOT Debuts 

Tenor Michele Angelini Debuts with HOT in the role of Tonio, along with Mezzo-Soprano Jenni Bank, who debuts in the role of the Marquise. Michele is heralded by the Dallas Morning News as an artist who “displays a voice of silken loveliness as well as graceful agility.” The Baltimore Sun has said of Jenni that she has a “deep, dark, penetrating tone… that can extract Verdian richness.” 


 
7. The Duchess Guest Appearance 

HOT recently announced surprise guest as the Duchess of Crackenthorpe in Donizetti’s comedy, Daughter of the Regiment: Soprano Jill Gardner. “The Southern Songbird” joins a long list of guest stars to play the non-singing role of the Duchess, including US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. 


 
8. HOT Favorites Jake Gardner and Jamie Offenbach 

HOT is thrilled to welcome back Baritone Jake Gardner and Bass-Baritone Jamie Offenbach, singing the roles of Sulpice and Hortensius, respectively. You’ll remember Jake from the 2008 production A Little Night Music, and Jamie most recently sang in the 2016 HOT production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.  


 
9. It’s Donizetti 

Along with Gioachino Rossini and Vincenzo Bellini, Donizetti was a leading composer of the bel canto opera style during the first half of the nineteenth century. He penned some of opera’s most famous shows, including LElisir dAmoreDon PasqualeLucia di Lammermoor, and Anna Bolena

Photo Courtesy of Fort Worth Opera

 
10. There’s a Happy Ending 

Opera can be pretty grim. La Bohème, Macbeth, Roméo et Juliette, and more end with death, insanity, or both. We won’t spoil the ending of The Daughter of the Regiment for those who haven’t seen it, but rest assured that every character lives to see the end! 
  

 

Festa Italiana

HOT at Festa Italiana on Oct. 7th

Join us on October 7th on Cooke Street for Hawaii’s first-ever Italian festival Festa Italiana! Our Orvis Opera Studio Singers will be performing Italian opera favorites. There will also be Italian food, wine, art, fashion, and cars. Come enjoy everything you love about Italy right here in the Aloha State!

Let your friends know you’re going on the Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/275527682854533/

Festa Italiana Hawaii is the Aloha State’s first ever Italian Street Festival bringing a myriad of authentic Italian and Italian-inspired experiences and flavors to Honolulu’s vibrant Kaka’ako district.

Access to the street festival portion of the Festa Italiana is FREE and open to the public.

FESTA ITALIANA NELLA STRADA – STREET FESTIVAL

Street Vendors offering a variety of authentic Italian and Italian-Inspired culinary delights for purchase. View food vendors.

Wine & Beer Garden offering a selection of Italian wines, beer and traditional spirits for purchase.

Entertainment featuring Hawaii Opera Theatre, Hawaii Youth Symphony, Mango Season, Pierre Grill and more, with event master of ceremonies Tantra Grillo. View entertainment.

PASSAPORT ITALIANO – VIP PASSPORT TO ITALY EXPERIENCE

Open from 6pm to 9pm

Tickets required.
(8) food tastings from top tier Italian chefs and restaurants.
(6) 2 oz wine pours
(1) specialty cocktail from Hawaiian Aroma Cafe
Eligible to purchase additional wine tastings “Biglietto del Vino” ($15 add-on at check-out or $20 at the door)

Grazie mille to our event sponsors and partners.

Sponsors: Velocity Honolulu, Island Olive Oil, National Italian American Federation, Our Kaka’ako, Mango Season, Joseph Magaldi

Partners: Flavors of Italy Hawaii, Street Grindz, Memoirs Catering, Hawaii Opera Theatre, Hawaii Youth Symphony, Pierre Grill.

#HOTSpeaks: HOT President Jim McCoy

A Former Navy Commanding Officer’s Voyage with Opera

It was opening night of the Hawaii Opera Theatre’s production of Puccini’s Tosca in 2006.

As Baron Scarpia, the opera’s villain, sang his famous aria Va, Tosca! (Te Deum) in the setting of a Roman church near the end of the first act, the accompaniment swelled. A full choir belted at fortissimo, the orchestra jerked their bows along the instruments’ strings with vigor, and pressurized air resonated through the pipes of an organ.

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Underneath a lavish, golden robe and mitre cap stood retired U.S. Navy Captain and Hawaii Opera Theatre Board President Jim McCoy. He had volunteered to play the non-singing role of the Cardinal.

It was his first on-stage opera performance.

Years later, standing in a room surrounded by naval memorabilia, Jim held a photo of his performance in Tosca and smiled nostalgically.dsc00745

“I’m not a musician. I’m not a musicologist. I’m just a passionate opera lover,” he said. “And having a role in Tosca – my favorite opera – was a thrilling experience.”

Preparing For Voyage

Jim grew up playing classical music on the piano, and he said it was natural to make the transition from classical music and the pop music of the day to opera.

“It was easy to listen to a Rodgers and Hammerstein song from Oklahoma or The King and I and then hear something from La Bohème, for instance, and say, ‘There’s a lyrical similarity there,’” he said.

Growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, Jim was exposed to opera through television. Opera singers were often guest stars on popular television series like The Ed Sullivan Show or Your Show of Shows.

And the year that he began high school coincided with the introduction of 33 RPM vinyl records. The long-playing records revolutionized private opera listening, since listeners no longer needed a tall stack of breakable 78 RPM records to listen to a complete opera.

Jim began renting vinyl records of opera soundtracks and librettos from the Mill Valley Public Library in California when he was in high school. Latin and French classes in school helped him read the librettos – the words of the opera – while listening to it.

Before long, he was hooked.

“Opera, with its plots and characters and their arias and so forth, reaches an emotional depth that is deeply moving,” McCoy said. “I love all forms of classical music, but opera is special.”

Out At Sea

Classical music aside, Jim was a career Navy man.

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“When I was growing up, I never had any desire to do anything else but go to the Naval Academy and be a naval officer,” he said. “And that’s what I did.”

Jim commanded two ships and a squadron of 12 ships during his 30-year naval career.  When these ships deployed to the Mediterranean or North Atlantic, port visits introduced him to opera houses in Italy, France and Spain.

When on shore duty in the States, he saw opera performances in Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, Washington, San Diego and San Francisco.

“It’s thanks to the Navy that I saw all those shows,” he said.

Back On Land

After retiring in 1990, he assembled various memorabilia from the three at sea commands.  There are photos, paintings, models, pennants, flags and awards that pay tribute to the many tough judgment calls he had to make, the stormy seas he faced, and the leadership skills he learned.

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Jim’s naval ships had docked, but his voyage with opera was far from over.  He has been traveling on opera tours to Europe since 1998 and has seen productions at many of the most important opera houses on the continent.  He believes these experiences give him credibility when he asserts that HOT stages world class opera.

In 1997, a new opportunity with opera presented itself: Jim joined the HOT Board of Directors.  He has been on the Board ever since and has served as Treasurer and President.

OPERA America, the national service organization for opera, presented Jim with a National Opera Trustee Recognition Award for his dedication to promoting HOT in 2015.

“I had no idea that was coming,” he said. “But that was very gratifying.”

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But his favorite moment with HOT was still the moment that he stood on stage in 2006, surrounded by the music of the opera he had discovered as a teenager.

That night, as the powerful sound vibrated the stage, Jim bowed and blessed the chorus, then turned to bless Scarpia, and finally he turned to face the thousands of people in the audience.

His blessing fell upon the crowd just as the final dramatic chord was struck, and the heavy velvet curtain fell.

“I was the cardinal,” he said, “and it was very grand.”

Active duty, retired or dependent military personnel receive 20% off on all single tickets to Hawaii Opera Theatre productions.
Call the HOT Box Office at 808.596.7858 for more information.

Mahalo for your service.