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SCHMOPERA | #UncleJohn: the Toronto Story

By Jenna Douglas on December 13, 2014

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AtG #UncleJohn Photo: Darryl Block

I went to see opening night of Against the Grain Theatre‘s (AtG) re-imagining of Mozart’s Don Giovanni, #UncleJohn by Joel Ivany. It was fantastic, but I’m hardly the unbiased media figure I should be to offer a critical review. The reason is, I joined the AtG team this summer with the Canadian Opera Company and Parks Canada, to present a workshop performance of #UncleJohn at the Cave and Basin National Historic Site in Banff. The project was new for everyone, and the rehearsal room was a special place during that summer workshop. There were few details to iron out (both musical and dramatic), and so it was one of those stimulating processes of creative thinking and openness that artists dream of.

Joel Ivany is all about the audience’s experience, which translates into unconventional venues, like outdoor spaces subject to rain, mosquitoes, and sulphur, and extraordinary demands on the mechanics of opera, like the AtG Messiah chorus performing from memory, or managing Mozart recitative without any singer-conductor sight lines. The AtG creative team tends to work with a wild idea, and enough open minds around to try it out; the award-winning company has been full of successes from the beginning. All these unknown elements hover in the air throughout the rehearsal process, including the first performance, and no one really knows how they’ll all settle. In my own experience working with their team, there’s always a bit of alchemy that happens in AtG shows. In Banff, #UncleJohn was an incredible mix of good energy amongst the team, green and responsive audiences, and an unforgettable venue. The reward for all that creative work was enormous.

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AtG #UncleJohn Photo: Darryl Block

For #UncleJohn in Toronto, I was only around briefly during the rehearsal process (and to interview Joel and Miloš), so the production wasn’t entirely new to me when I saw it on Thursday night. I remember seeing real excitement and awe in the audience during the Banff shows, and it was neat to experience it for myself. I got to hear the effect of opera singers scattered around an open space, how different corners of the audience heard different sides to all the ensemble numbers, and how the cast seemed to like popping up behind you without warning (*cough, Leporello). I looked up with empathy at Miloš and the Cecilia Quartet, hopelessly out of view of the singers, and marvelled at how the thing relentlessly held together. I know a good chunk of the cast well, especially in these roles; even so, there were things I had never seen before, and the novelty managed to outweigh any sense of “been there, done that”.

What I heard between my brief time in rehearsal and opening night was on par with the amazing process that happens organically at AtG. This #UncleJohn was as different as it could have, and should have been. The new venue called for an entire re-design by Patrick DuWors (sets and costumes) and Jason Hand (lighting), and Joel made some changes in his libretto to fit Toronto audiences. But the coolest part was the cast. About half of the singers were new to this production, and just like the cast in Banff, they took on their roles as if they were versions of themselves. They were true to the dialogue and score (I know that much well), but they found something real about these very old characters.

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AtG #UncleJohn Photo: Darryl Block

It seems like an obvious result of hiring great artists to be in your show, but it’s more special than that. I work with a lot of singers, and a truly organic performance is a hard achievement; they don’t happen that often. But here, over just two productions of #UncleJohn, it had happened twice. That’s a rare thing, you know. It’s certainly a testament to Canadian artists, and to the audience-considerate approach of AtG Theatre. I think it’s also a testament to opera; that Don Giovanni, for example, can travel through transformations of language and orchestration and still move people.

#UncleJohn shows us that opera is not dependent on large theatres or full orchestras, and that the best operas aren’t even dependent on specificity of text. Opera is dependent on its artists, specifically the ones that can deliver a meaningful performance without distance, ideal acoustics, and distractingly elaborate sets. Within less than a year, I saw two groups of singers collectively evolve this show and its people. If artists like these aren’t so rare after all, perhaps the responsibility lies in the hands of the directors and conductors to step back and watch them.

Jenna Douglas

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