A few weeks ago I had the pleasure of being part of
Out of the Box, a weekend of small-scale site-specific opera that is part of Sound
2012, North East Scotland’s Festival of New Music. Alex Reedijk,
Scottish Opera’s
General Director, concluded a panel discussion at the end of the weekend with
the observation that the future of opera lies in shorter productions as new
audiences are more likely to try out something new when it is not a sit of
several hours. A recent survey by
Tete-a-Tete: The Opera Festival for Arts
Council England shows that there are around 200 opera companies in England, mostly
outwith the subsidised sector. One in five of their productions are 21
st
century works. One can now genuinely say that opera is as vibrant as ever.
Yet, opera seems to have unleashed itself from conventions
and out of the box productions are becoming increasingly common.
Earlier this week I heard Vicky Featherstone,
Artistic Director of
The National Theatre of Scotland explain how her
organisation had performed within a 20 mile radius from most of Scotland’s
population. In order to bring theatre to people, the theatre had performed in
village halls, pubs, car parks. Opera has taken inspiration from site specific theatre.
Site specific opera lets concrete settings inspire the drama, and performs in
situ by making the site the stage. If anything, the opera weekend of Sound 2012
revealed that site-specific opera plays around with many of our expectations of
what opera is and should be.
In Out of the Box, operas were performed in pubs, hotel
rooms, stables, on a bus and in a lighthouse. Many of the spaces were small and
performers were physically close to the audience. In many cases the audience were
even an essential element in the production. The Sloan’s Project by composer
Gareth Williams and librettist David Brock, was an opera that took place in a
pub. The acts took place in different parts of the pub, and in
one act I was that close to the singer that I had to be careful not let her trip
over my feet when she moved around the piano. This being a pub scene, the
audience gathered around tables or hang about at the bar. The audience was
surrounding –even mingling with -the performers from all sites. The audience had
become pub-goers and thereby part of the staging of the opera production. Being
within reach of the performers meant that their facial expressions, gestures
and movements were watched closely, and from all sides.
The site-specific operas during the opera weekend were all
small-scale productions of an hour at most. To fit in the lighthouse keeper’s bedroom
at the Museum of Scottish Lighthouses in Fraserburgh, composer Gareth Williams had
scaled down his number of performers for Last One Out to a baritone and string trio. On a bus
tour to visit this opera, there was even an one-man opera performed by actor,
baritone and cellist Matthew Sharp. Being small-scale productions the operas
also revealed a new take on the role of musicians in opera. Traditionally,
musicians take their hiding in the pit from where they provide the necessary instrumental
scenery. In Out of the Box operas the musicians were on stage, and playing an
active role in the drama. The most
interesting example of this was in Bolted by composer Pippa Murphy and librettist
Ben Nicholson, a work for countertenor, soprano and cello. At times, the
cellist took on the role of horse through acting a horse with his whole body.
In a scene in which the soprano expressed her love for the horse, the cello had
became the voice of the horse with the singer and cellist basically entering a
duet.
To me there was one opera that epitomised site-specific
opera in all its facets: Faustus by composer Stephen Deazley and librettist
Martin Riley. At one moment during the bus tour the bus stopped alongside a
woodland. From between the trees a rather tatty looking man emerged, cello in
hand (actor, baritone and cellist Matthew Sharp). The bus driver opened the
door for him after which the man greeted us passengers with an aria before
telling his story whilst the bus continued its journey. In a rather confused
state of mind the man gave away his cello, bow, his wallet and passport, and
his jumper before jumping off the bus and walking away in the fading afternoon light
into another woodland. Whereas in grand
opera the start and conclusion of an opera is marked by the opening and closure
of the curtains, Faustus, like many of the other operas in Out of the Box, had
fluid openings and endings. Applause at the end of performances were fluid as
the audience wasn’t sure when the opera had actually finished. Faustus ended
with the librettist (who nobody expected to be part of the plot) running behind
the tatty looking man, putting his long black coat over the performer’s
shoulders and walking off into the fading afternoon light next to him. The
conclusion of this opera was a strong image, an eerie silence in the bus, and
no one to hear the applause as the performer was outwith hearing distance.
There was a real buzz around the opera-weekend with audience
members actively discussing the merits of the site-specific operas performed.
Opera is as vibrant as it has ever been, be it out of the box. It is up to us
composers to engage with it.
Copyright text Petra Vergunst