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The University of Maryland under the direction of
Leon Major has commissioned an engaging new opera by music theater librettist Kathleen
Cahill and composer Robert Convery about the life of the extraordinary pianist and
composer Clara Schumann. Although Clara is
suffused with Romanticism in historical context and musical sound, there is nothing
idealized or sentimental about this story that relates the life of Clara Schumann, better
known as the wife of composer Robert Schumann.
The five-scene, 90-minute opera opens, as Clara, attended by two of her
eight children, lies dying and haunted by visions of dead family members including three
of her children, her husband, and her tyrannical teacher-father. Librettist Cahill, who
was the point of ignition for this opera, tells the story of Claras tumultuous life
using three actors to represent the dying Clara, the young Clara, and the
performer-at-the-piano Clara, running backwards in time. The five scenes, which reveal a
professionally driven woman tormented by the people who loved her, are separated by four
piano interludes that feature music by Schumann and Brahms.
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) met Clara (1819-1896) and Robert
(1810-1856) shortly before Robert was hospitalized for mental illness and died. Historians
conjecture that Brahms and Clara Schumann loved each other, but never consummated their
relationship. Collaborators Cahill and Convery depict this developing love in a duet
between the two friends in which Clara sings passionately about the return of her beloved
piano that had been under repair. The counter-balance to this scene is Robert complaining
that he cannot work if Clara is playing her piano. Robert also digs at his wife, reminding
her that she was her fathers magic music box
and that her father only saw his daughter as a source of money.
Indeed money was an issue in Claras life, especially since she
was the breadwinner for the Schumann family. Her dead son Ferdinand accuses her in the
deathbed visions of caring more about her hands (and her career as a performer) than she
cared about him, the son who became a morphine addict as a result of injuries sustained as
a soldier.
The music of Clara is
consistently lyrical within the framework of contemporary composition that nevertheless
grows organically from the music of Schumann and Brahms. Convery, who has written four
other operas, 22 cantatas, and more than 200 songs for voice and pianos, has set most of
the text as songs in Clara. He uses little
recitative and only a few spoken passages by Claras father. The orchestration, which
has satisfying rhythmic variation and interesting percussive embellishments, comes across
beautifully in this production under the baton of JoAnn Kulesza.
Stand out performers in the cast of ten players are mezzo-soprano
Michelle Rice as the dying Clara and baritone Bobb Robinson as Friedrich Wieck,
Claras father. Although both singers have recent affiliations with the Maryland
Opera Studio (Rice is currently doing graduate work in this program at the University of
Maryland), each has an impressive resume. In fact the experience of most of the players
selected by director Leon Major stands well above the experience of the average student of
opera. Despite the harder to hear deliveries by Lee Anne Myslewski (as the young Clara)
and Ole Hass (as Robert Schumann), this production could compete with many professional
opera companies.
Nationally known set designer Erhard Rom (he provided the outstanding
set for Wolf Traps Volpone)
provides a visually pleasing landscape for this production that includes a projected
wallpaper of music scores, a turntable stage and suspended piano mobiles that
descend from the ceiling as the musical interludes play. Nancy Schertler designed the
complementary lighting.
College Park, MD, May 3, 2004 - Karren L. Alenier