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Video interviews with:
Conductor Rob Ainsley

Stage Director Ned Canty

Soprano Sharin Apostolou

 

“The studio production comes of age.”

When gods mix it up with mortals, the edge is sometimes very hard to find.

Jove’s head over heels for Calisto.  But she’s sworn to follow the goddess Diana and a life of virginity—a fact that doesn’t slow Jove down one little bit! Needless to say, Jove’s wife is none too pleased with the whole affair. But egads! Turning Calisto into a bear is just a bit harsh, wouldn’t you say?

Baroque opera continues its conquest of the 21st century with this heady brew of humor and sincerity.

Featuring some of the best young singers in the country- members of the Portland Opera Studio.  And now, for the very first time, in the beautiful intimacy of the Newmark Theatre.

 

Sung in Italian with projected English translations.

All performances are held at the Newmark Theatre located at 1111 SW Broadway (at Main Street)—the perfect setting for this special work.

Chamber operas offer riches to composers, performers and audiences alike.  Things not possible on the Keller Auditorium mainstage become magical in this intimate theater setting.

 

Performance time is approximately two hours and fifteen minutes, including one intermission.

Cast
Il Destino/Satirino (Satyr)/Furia 1 Anne McKee Reed
Calisto/L'Eternita Sharin Apostolou
Giunone (Juno) Angela Niederloh
Linfea/Furia 2 Kendra Herrington
Diana/Giove in Diana Hannah Sharene Penn
Endimione (Endymion) Gerald Thompson
Pane (Pan)/La Natura Brendan Tuohy
Silvano (Sylvano) Bobby Jackson
Giove (Jove) Jonathan W. Kimple
Mercurio (Mercury) José Rubio
   
Conductor Robert Ainsley
Director Ned Canty

Featuring an ensemble of 17th century instrument specialists assembled by Portland Baroque Orchestra.

The Plot

Prologue

Destiny persuades Nature and Eternity that Calisto deserves a place among the stars in heaven.


Act I —The world is suffering the consequences of a war between mankind and the gods. Jove (Jupiter) and Mercurio (Mercury) are making sure that everything is as it should be on earth. Jove observes Calisto, a nymph, lamenting the lack of drinking water, for which she blames Jove. Charmed by the girl's beauty, Jove immediately replenishes a spring and makes improper advances to Calisto. She, however, belongs to the retinue of Diana, a daughter of Jove, and has proclaimed that she will die a virgin. In great indignation, Calisto rejects Jove's advances. Mercurio advises Jove to take on the form of Diana, to whose charms the unsuspecting Calisto will surely succumb. The plan succeeds: Calisto has no objection to accepting affectionate kisses from her beloved goddess.

Endimione (Endymion) is also in love with the chaste Diana. When she appears in the company of Linfea (Lynfea) and her nymphs, he can no longer hide his feelings and thus immediately incurs Linfea's anger. Diana also treats Endimione rather coldly, in order not to betray the fact that she is secretly in love with him. Calisto joins Diana and the nymphs, ecstatic at the pleasure she has experienced with the kisses she and "Diana" have just exchanged, which understandably causes some confusion in Diana. She accuses Calisto of being a shameless hussy and banishes her from her entourage.

Linfea admits to herself that she would also really like to have a lover. A little satyr, Satirino, offers himself as a solution to her problem. Together with Silvano (Sylvano), the god of the woods, he subsequently tries to give new heart to Pane (Pan), the god of the shepherds, who is suffering from the throes of unrequited passion for Diana.

 

Act II — Endimione wants to be near Diana and sees her in the form of the moon. When he has fallen asleep, Diana can no longer withstand her feelings for him. She kisses Endimione, who immediately awakes and finds that reality is as attractive as his dream, he has achieved his heart's desire. Satirino, who has observed the scene without being noticed, now voices his own opinion on the constancy of women.

Jove's jealous consort Giunone (Juno) suspects that her husband's visit to earth is not only the result of his concern for the ravishes wrought by war and now decides in her turn to pay earth a visit. She immediately comes across Calisto, who in her despair innocently tells her how Diana was at first so loving and then so cold and cruel towards her for no apparent reason. Giunone knows her husband well enough to suspect immediately what has actually happened. Her suspicions are confirmed when Jove, in the form of Diana, comes into view with Mercurio and arranges another assignation with Calisto. Giunone angrily swears to be revenged on her rival, Calisto.

Before Jove, still in the form of Diana, can disappear for his rendezvous with Calisto, Endimione returns. Believing that it is Diana whom he has come upon, Endimione chats in lovesick fashion about the kisses he has exchanged with the goddess the previous night, thus revealing to Jove that Diana is perhaps not as chaste as he has been led to believe. Pane, Silvano and Satirino are also taken in by Jove's disguise: convinced that they have caught Diana with her lover, they take Endimione prisoner and threaten to kill him. Mercurio urges Jove to have nothing to do with the whole affair and to disappear. Endimione has no choice but to think that Diana has heartlessly abandoned him to his plight and loses all will to live. Linfea, on the other hand, is now determined to go to any lengths in her urgent search for a lover.

 

Act III — Calisto waits expectantly for "Diana" at the appointed time. In her place Giunone appears with furies and turns Calisto into a bear. In this form, she believes, her rival will no longer be quite so attractive in Jove's eyes. Jove, however, is determined to raise Calisto to divine status. He cannot, in fact, turn the clock back and restore Calisto to her original form, but he promises that when her life on earth as a bear comes to an end she will have a place among the stars in the firmament.

In the meantime the real Diana rescues Endimione from the hands of Pane and Silvano, who see this as a confirmation of their opinion of her as someone who appears chaste but who is in reality obviously sensual through and through. Diana decides that she will keep Endimione as her lover, in eternal sleep in the mountains.

In order to give Calisto some idea of her future glory, Jove shows her the firmament in all its magnificence, where her place in the constellation of Ursa Major is secure. But that time has not yet come; Jove and Calisto say farewell to each other. Calisto has to return to earth as a bear.

© Bavarian State Opera
 

Origins: La Calisto

“See how the cold crystals gush from the abundant spring! My lovely, languid one, immerse the coral lips of your sweet, enticing mouth in the escaping jet of water…”

Giove, king of the gods, to Calisto upon their first meeting

 

La Calisto is an opera of depth and beauty masquerading as a bedroom farce. That it is funny is undeniable; that the plot is frivolous is certainly arguable; that it is entertaining is obvious. Its depth however, is often overlooked by modern audiences, lost in the novelty of this recovered star of the opera firmament.

When Cavalli wrote La Calisto, he was an acknowledged master. His librettist, Giovanni Faustini (1615-1651), was a familiar collaborator. Faustini was also an experienced impresario in the first generation of that mercenary profession, and planned La Calisto for his Teatro S Apollinare.

In the new and exciting world of opera, Faustini rose preeminent as poet turned professional librettist. He was a cagey theatrical man who wore his scholarly robe of “poet” easily—he certainly was not averse to making a profit. His ten year partnership with Cavalli made him one of the most influential librettists of his generation—a worthy match for Cavalli, who impacted the history of opera much more than his genius mentor Monteverdi did. Part of this undoubtedly had to do with the fact that the vast majority of Cavalli’s operas were written for the popular opera house, and the Venetian audience had become voracious and demanding connoisseurs of opera. Their thirst for the new and original makes Cavalli’s successes all the more remarkable, because his works enjoyed frequent revivals,

Faustini usually liked to write his own plots, but for Calisto he chose to combine two Greco-Roman myths as told by Ovid in Metamorphosis. By combining the story of Calisto’s seduction by Jove and Diana’s love for Endymion, Faustini was able to create a series of intersecting love triangles, with myriad possibilities both for broad and bawdy sexual comedy and also for tender love scenes underscored by Cavalli’s deftly responsive score—music so sensitive to the poetry and situation that they meld seamlessly into one cohesive work. Beneath the surface of this cross-dressing comedy of disguises and infidelities, Faustini weaves such a tapestry of allusions that modern audiences which look “beyond the veil,” as it were, might be dazzled by the possibilities beneath.

Faustini blankets the denouements of both of the intersecting myths in his libretto with Christianity. In fact, this is very interesting taken with a suggested analysis of the character Endimione (Endymion) as a thinly disguised allusion to Galileo. Libertine Venice and papal Rome fostered an antipathy for each other, constantly complicated by Venice’s willingness to defy Rome. Renaissance intellectuals did not believe that the pursuit of knowledge and science were incompatible with Christianity and Faustini’s use of Christian values and language in the late speeches of both Calisto and Endimione underscores this. Calisto quotes the Virgin Mary when she discovers that her goddess lover is actually Giove in disguise, saying, “Behold me, your handmaiden. Command me as you will…” The ultimate decision of Endimione and Diana to share a passionate yet chaste love obliquely recalls the “Salve Regina.”

In casting this mythological tale as a uniquely Venetian one, we examine Endimione’s character. In the libretto, he is hardly an imposing figure. Written to be played by a castrato, now typically sung as a pants role by a mezzo soprano, his role as romantic lead confuses modern audiences. If Endimione hardly seems like a hero worthy of the music he sings, it might be helpful to know that in the 17th century, the castrato was considered “the most sensual and erotic of men”, attractive to both men and women. In addition, if Endimione is a representation of Galileo’s sufferings at the hands of the church for his scientific discoveries, his story is elevated to nobility. In Jennifer Williams Brown’s fascinating essay, she points out that Faustini spent as much time emphasising Endimione’s love of astronomy as his sex appeal and attraction to Diana. His adventures recall Galileo’s. Galileo too understood the moon; he too is imprisoned and threatened with death for his love and understanding of the science of the heavens (Diana) by the Church (the gods). One does not have to agree with this analysis for it to add dimension to a character elevated by Cavalli’s music if a bit pale and flaccid on the page.

A problem with staging 17th century operas is that their scores are so difficult to “realize.” They are written with only the melodies fully notated, some do not mention the intended orchestration, and the indications for the instrumentalists are written out as a figured bass line that the musicians were/are expected to flesh out. We are lucky that there are so many clues as to how La Calisto was originally conceived. We know from Cavalli’s manuscript that it was often changed for production expedience and that it had to be changed even within its rehearsal period. From the theater’s records we know that it was originally performed by ten singers, some of whom were double cast, and six instrumentalists, plus harpsichord, from which Cavalli played and conducted. Also from the theater’s records we know that it was a box office failure, and while many explanations have been offered, it seems the simplest is most likely. They opened a month prior to the regular season, and they didn’t have a famous castrato in the cast. Faustini himself had died during the rehearsals and this too put the cast and theater into disarray. The opera was withdrawn on December 31, 1651 and disappeared from the repertory until it was revived by Raymond Leppard in a 1970 production. La Calisto now enjoys a wide array of performances, from student productions at conservatories to early music ensembles to major opera houses. A brief perusal of the internet will yield several recordings and many performance notices. It is our very good fortune that scholarship has given us enough information to perform this gem and through their art gain insight into the compassion and humanity of Cavalli and Faustini.

About the Composer:  Rediscovering a Master: Cavalli, the Man and His Music (1602-1676)

Performing these works again is like a love affair, you either give and risk all, or better leave it alone.
          --Raymond Leppard, who pioneered the 20th century rediscovery of Cavalli’s music

 Cavalli In 1637 the Gran Teatro del Mondo in Venice made history and paved the way for the entrepreneurial birth of a new art form.  The theater doors were flung open and paying audiences witnessed, for the first time, the musical spectacular that is opera.

Cavalli was born in Crema, Valentine’s Day, 1602 and first studied music with his father, the maestro di cappella of the Crema Cathedral.  He was a boy soprano whose lovely voice attracted the attention of a wealthy Venetian politician who, upon his return to Venice, took the boy with him and placed him with Claudio Monteverdi at St. Mark’s Cathedral.

The extent of his talent soon became apparent.  Cavalli was a talented organist, and worked not only at St. Mark’s but at the church of Saints Giovanni and Paolo, where he played for 10 years.  In 1630, Cavalli married a wealthy widow, whose estate freed him to pursue opera in a more serious way, first as a producer and then as a composer

When Monteverdi died, Cavalli continued his association with the church, but also began to expand his work in the world of opera.  In addition to composing, Cavalli acted as producer.  Cavalli also had a knack for spotting the gifts of others and surrounding himself with exceptional poets, whom he quickly utilized as librettists.  His operas began to gain popularity, his work slowly made its way across Italy with the newly formed touring companies.  Very soon Cavalli was a recognized master of the thrilling new theater of opera.

This fame led to a commission in 1660 from the French prime minister, for an opera celebrating the wedding of Louis XIV and the Spanish Infanta, Maria Theresa.  After arriving in Paris, Cavalli found that the theater in which his opera was to be performed had barely broken ground.  Cavalli waited in Paris for two years for the theater’s completion.  During this time, he produced another of his operas, distorted by the addition of five “entrées de ballet” by the ballet master/court composer Lully.  Cavalli was forced to capitulate to the dance requirement, and his celebratory opera, Ercole amante, became a six-hour extravaganza, including several ballets by Lully, in which the King, his queen and his courtiers danced.  

The entire experience seems to have left a bad taste in Cavalli’s mouth, and upon his return to Venice in 1662 he vowed never to work for the theater again, though he ended up setting three more librettos.  After thirty years of ascendance, it seemed that Cavalli’s star was waning.  Operatic fashion was changing and operas were moving in the direction that they would take in the Baroque period, a parade of recitative and aria that dominated until the Classical Period.  This transition was difficult for Cavalli, who allowed recitative and aria to bleed into each other, weaving a realistic tapestry of emotions not possible in the more stylized operas of the Baroque.  His operas went out of fashion and disappeared until their rediscovery and performance in 1967 and 1970 at Glyndebourne.  

Cavalli wrote nearly 30 operas for Venetian opera houses, and his work most perfectly embodies all that we know about the opera of the 17th century.  Few scores survive prior to 1650, and Cavalli’s carefully catalogued and preserved autographs represent a treasure trove to musicologists as they illustrate a successful composer’s musical journey over 20 years.  Cavalli was also a savvy and gifted man of the theater who dominated the public opera world in its infancy.  His operas have a direct manner of communicating and are often very funny, after the fashion of the commedia dell’arte that so delighted Italian audiences   The last forty years or so have seen a “Cavalli Renaissance,” and the power of his music is slowly being rediscovered and appreciated by modern audiences the world over.

Sharin Apostolou - Miss Wordsworth Sharin Apostolou - The Fire / The Princess / The Nightingale

Soprano

Former Portland Opera Studio Artist
Previously at Portland Opera:

Frasquita, Carmen, 2007; Clorinda, Cinderella, 2007; Rodelinda, Rodelinda, 2008; Miss Wordsworth, Albert Herring, 2008; High Priestess, Aida, 2008; Annina, La Traviata, 2008; Calisto/L’Eternità, La Calisto, 2009; Countess Ceprano, Rigoletto, 2009

Sharin Apostolou

Sharin Apostolou - The Fire / The Princess / The Nightingale

Soprano

Former Portland Opera Studio Artist
Previously at Portland Opera:

Frasquita, Carmen, 2007; Clorinda, Cinderella, 2007; Rodelinda, Rodelinda, 2008; Miss Wordsworth, Albert Herring, 2008; High Priestess, Aida, 2008; Annina, La Traviata, 2008; Calisto/L’Eternità, La Calisto, 2009; Countess Ceprano, Rigoletto, 2009

Sharin Apostolou came to the attention of the operatic world and to critical acclaim after stepping in at the last minute on opening night, replacing an ailing colleague in the title role of Handel’s Rodelinda at Portland Opera. Ms. Apostolou was lauded by The Oregonian for “her lovely, high, clear voice, and her coloratura -- the dazzlingly fast music that says "Don't mess with me" – was exuberant…she covered the musical terrain without fear,” and by Crosscut Seattle for, “[taking] on an impossibly daunting role with fearless flair, unraveling a sweet lyric coloratura voice of real promise.”

Sharin Apostolou’s 2010-2011 engagements include her Asian debut with the Macao International Music Festival as Belinda in Dido and Aeneas, her Avery Fisher Hall debut in two concerts with the National Chorale: Handel’s Alexander’s Feast paired with Mozart’s Requiem, and Handel’s Messiah; and a return to Portland Opera singing Le Feu, La Princesse and Le Rossignol in Ravel’s L‘enfant et les Sortilèges.

The summer of 2009 saw Ms. Apostolou’s debut with Vermont’s Green Mountain Opera festival as Barbarina in Le Nozze di Figaro and Adina in L’elisir d’amore where she “proved a brilliant Adina. Not only was her sound beautiful, she used it dramatically for just the right effect. In short, she used her voice expressively and effectively, which is what it's all about.” (Times Argus).  Also in the 2009-2010 season, Ms. Apostolou joined the European tour of Mitch Sebastian’s The Opera Show, as well as performed her first Belinda in Dido and Aeneas with
Opera Manhattan and Romilda in Xerses with Pocket Opera New York. The summer of 2010 brought her to the Caramoor Festival under the baton of Will Crutchfield as Clotilde in Norma, as well as a performer in many of the festival’s Bel Canto at Caramoor concert series.

A frequent performer of early music, Ms. Apostolou also sang the title role in Cavalli’s La Calisto with the Portland Opera and the Portland Baroque Orchestra, during which she “sparkled, using a clear and supple soprano to dash off numerous impeccable runs,” (Opera Magazine) and “sang with eloquence and shining focus” (Opera News). Ms. Apostolou recently sang the US premier of Johan Christian Bach’s Vaux Hall Songs with the New England Baroque Soloists, performed excerpts from both Purcell’s Harmonia Sacra and Vivaldi’s Bajazet with the Portland Opera and covered both Virtù and Valletto in L'incoronazione di Poppea at Central City Opera.  Ms. Apostolou made her European debut with the International Chamber Ensemble as part of the Operafestival di Roma in a Pergolesi double bill; the soprano soloist in Stabat Mater and Serpina in Pergolesi's La serva padrona.

A favorite of Portland Opera, Ms. Apostolou has also performed Ms. Wordsworth in Albert Herring, Clorinda in La Cenerentola, Frasquita in Carmen, The High Priestess in Aida, Annina in La Traviata, and Countess Ceprano in Rigoletto, while she covered Violetta, Gilda, The Governess in The Turn of the Screw, and Marzelline in Fidelio. In 2007 at Central City Opera, she sang Noémie in the youth performance of Cendrillon, and Isabelle/Madeline in The Face on the Barroom Floor, and covered Annina in The Saint of Bleecker Street under the direction of Catherine Malfitano. She also toured as Carolina in Torroba’s Luisa Fernanda with the Tulsa Opera Studio.

Ms. Apostolou was a 2010 International Grand Finalist in the Competizione Dell’Opera hosted by the Semper Oper in Dresden, Germany and subsequently performed several concerts of arias with the Bremer Philharmoniker. On the American concert stage, she has appeared with the Oregon Symphony as the soprano soloist in Vaughan Williams’ Serenade to Music, the First Fairy in Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and as Annina in excerpts from La Traviata. She’s also sung Ms. Silverpeal in The Impresario with both the Portland Chamber Orchestra and the Walla Walla Symphony, in The Pittsburgh Ballet Theater’s A Midsummer’s Night Dream, in the Fiddlesticks concerts with the Pittsburgh Symphony and in the world premier of The Lost Childhood with American Opera Projects led by Steven Osgood.

Ms. Apostolou was a 2010 Jensen Foundation Award Winner, received the Young Artist of the Year award from Central City Opera, a first place and audience prizewinner at both the Oregon and San Diego Districts, as well as an encouragement award winner at the Northwest and Western regional Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. She has also received awards from the Irene Dalis Competition of Opera San Jose, and The Eleanor Lieber Competition of Portland Opera.

Ms. Apostolou completed her Master of Music degree at the Manhattan School of Music, where she was seen in a variety of roles including Blanche de la Force in Dialogues des Carmélites, Zemire in Spohr’s Zemire und Azor, Nora in Vaughan Williams’ Riders to the Sea, and Vera in Hoiby’s A Month in the Country.  Ms. Apostolou holds a bachelor of fine arts from Carnegie Mellon University.

http://www.sharinapostolou.com/live/

 

Hannah Sharene Penn Hannah S. Penn - The Child

Mezzo soprano

Former Portland Opera Studio Artist
Previously at Portland Opera:

Carmen, Carmen, 2007; Mercedes, Carmen, 2007; Tisbe, Cinderella, 2007; Nancy, Albert Herring, 2008; Flora Bervoix, La Traviata, 2008; Diana/Giove in Diana, La Calisto, 2009; Giovanna, Rigoletto, 2009

Mezzo-soprano Hannah Penn enjoys a diverse career as a performer of opera, oratorio, and recital literature.

Hannah S. Penn - The Child

Mezzo soprano

Former Portland Opera Studio Artist
Previously at Portland Opera:

Carmen, Carmen, 2007; Mercedes, Carmen, 2007; Tisbe, Cinderella, 2007; Nancy, Albert Herring, 2008; Flora Bervoix, La Traviata, 2008; Diana/Giove in Diana, La Calisto, 2009; Giovanna, Rigoletto, 2009

Mezzo-soprano Hannah Penn enjoys a diverse career as a performer of opera, oratorio, and recital literature.  Frequently praised for her musicality and the timbre of her voice, Ms. Penn has recently been called “…a major talent”, and “…an intelligent and wonderfully musical singer” by Portland’s Willamette Week, and was praised for having “…intriguing colors at both ends of her range” by The Oregonian.  She has performed with Florida Grand Opera, Portland Opera, Glimmerglass Opera, Opera Omaha, and Gotham Chamber Opera, in addition to numerous roles with Indiana University, where she was a student for six years.  A lover of new music, Ms. Penn has performed in the American premiere tours of John Adam's El Nino and Sven-David Sandstrom's High Mass, and has been involved in the American premiers of several operas, including Anthony Davis’ Wakonda’s and David Carlson’s Anna Karenina at Florida Grand Opera. As a recitalist, Ms. Penn has participated in the Steans Institute’s Vocal Chamber Music program, where she performed works by Jake Heggie under the composer’s direction.  Ms. Penn studied German Lied for three years with renowned collaborative pianist Leonard Hokanson.  She has performed in a staged recital of Hugo Wolf's Italienisches Liederbuch under the direction of the great lieder singer Hakan Hagegård, and in 2005 she participated in a masterclass on Schubert Lieder given by James Levine at Carnegie Hall.  

As a member of Portland Opera’s Studio Artist Program from 2007 to 2009, Ms. Penn sang the roles of Thisbe (La Cenerentola), Mercedes (Carmen), Flora (La Traviata), and Nancy (Albert Herring).  She also sang her first Carmen, under somewhat unusual circumstances; Ms. Penn was covering the role and went on with 24-hours notice, to critical acclaim.  The next summer she had the chance to reprise the role while making her international debut at the Teatro National Sucre in Quito, Ecuador. Operatic engagements for the 2009- 2010 season included Giovanna (Rigoletto) and Diana in Cavalli’s La Calisto, both through Portland Opera, and Cherubino with Tacoma Opera.  Ms. Penn also gave concert performances with the Sacramento Choral Society and Orchestra and with BodyVox, a modern dance troupe.

Ms. Penn received her Master’s and Bachelor’s degrees from Indiana University.  She finished her coursework for the Doctorate of Musical Arts at New England Conservatory this fall.  

www.hannahpenn.com

 

Brenda Touhy - Albert Herring

Brendan Tuohy

Tenor

Tenor Brendan Tuohy is currently in his second year as a Houston Grand Opera Studio Artist.  Recently he sang Goro in the company’s new production of Madama Butterfly.

Brendan Tuohy

Tenor

Former Portland Opera Studio Artist
Previously at Portland Opera:

El Remendado, Carmen (2007), Title role, Albert Herring (2008), Messenger, Aida (2008), Gastone, La Traviata (2008), First Prisoner, Fidelio (2008), The Prologue, The Turn of the Screw (2009), Pane/La Natura, La Calisto (2009), Matteo Borsa, Rigoletto (2009), Pong, Turandot (2011).

Tenor Brendan Tuohy is currently in his second year as a Houston Grand Opera Studio Artist.  Recently he sang Goro in the company’s new production of Madama Butterfly.  Last season Mr. Tuohy sang First Noble in Lohengrin and Tchaplitsky in The Queen of Spades with HGO. Also last season Mr. Tuohy sang Martin in the Tender Land with Vashon Opera, the Tenor Soloist in Rossini’s Stabat Mater with Oregon Symphony, the Tenor Soloist in Messiah with Portland Baroque Orchestra and the Tenor Soloist in Dvořak’s Requiem with the Grant Park Music Festival.
 
Before his time in Houston, Tuohy was a Studio Artist with Portland Opera.  During the 2007/08 season, Tuohy performed the role of El Remendado in Carmen, the title role in Albert Herring, and Messenger in Aida.  Mr. Tuohy also performed On Wenlock Edge by Ralph Vaughan Williams in the Studio Artists’ Spring Recital.  He spent the summer in Cincinnati where he sang Gastone in La Traviata with Cincinnati Opera.  

During the 2008/09 season, his second season as a member of the Portland Opera Studio, Tuohy sang Gastone in La Traviata, First Prisoner in Fidelio, The Prologue in The Turn of the Screw, Pane/La Natura in La Calisto, Matteo Borsa in Rigoletto, and was featured in recital.  Other engagements included singing the tenor soloist in Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 for Oregon Symphony.

Tuohy graduated with a Masters of Music in Vocal Performance.  While at the University of Cincinnati, his numerous roles included the title role in Albert Herring, Nemorino in L’elisir d’amore, Pylade in Iphigenie en Tauride, and The Doctor in The Voyage of Edgar Allan Poe.

Upcoming engagements for Mr. Tuohy include Ferrando in Così fan tutte, Brighella in Ariadne auf Naxos, and Don Curzio in La nozze di Figaro all with HGO.  He will also be featured in recital with HGO singing Schumann’s op 39 Liederkreis and will return to the Grant Park Music Festival this summer to sing the Tenor Soloist in Mendelssohn’s Lobgesang.

 

Jonathan W. Kimple Jonathan W. Kimple - Jove

Bass

Jonathan W. Kimple received his Master of Music degree from Manhattan School of Music.

Jonathan W. Kimple Jonathan W. Kimple - Jove

Bass

Jonathan W. Kimple received his Master of Music degree from Manhattan School of Music.  His credits include Count Ceprano in Rigoletto for Sarasota Opera, where he also covered the role of Don Alfonso in Cosi fan tutte, Sergeant of Police in Pirates of Penzance with Virginia Opera, Alcindoro/Benoit covers in La Bohème for Santa Fe Opera, William Emmons in The Village Singer for Manhattan School of Music Opera Studio, Talpa in Il Tabarro, as well as Simone in Gianni Schicchi for Muraco/Vaughn Seminar, Grande Prêtre in Oedipe à Colone and Scholar in Il Mondo della Luna for Opera Lafayette, and Hermann in Les Contes d’Hoffman for Maryland Opera Studio.  His roles at Portland Opera this season include Marquis d’Obigny in La Traviata, Second Prisoner in Fidelio, Jove in La Calisto, and Count Ceprano in Rigoletto.

 

Jose RubioJosé Rubio - Cardinal #1 / Oracle #1

Baritone

Previously at Portland Opera: Mercury, La Calisto (2009); Marullo, Rigoletto (2009); Schaunard, La Bohème (2009); Policeman, Orphée (2009); Baron Douphol, La Traviata (2008)
 

Internationally acclaimed Baritone José Rubio has quickly established himself as an important young artist, performing at major and regional venues across the country.

Jose Rubio

José Rubio - Cardinal #1 / Oracle #1

Baritone

Previously at Portland Opera: Mercurio, La Calisto (2009); Marullo, Rigoletto (2009); Schaunard, La Bohème (2009); Policeman, Orphée (2009); Baron Douphol, La Traviata (2008)

 

Internationally acclaimed Baritone José Rubio has quickly established himself as an important young artist, performing at major and regional venues across the country.  Equally comfortable in the concert hall as on the operatic stage, Mr. Rubio recently made his Carnegie Hall Recital Debut which was met with great acclaim.  The Opera Insider proclaimed that the "...recital was nothing short of stellar." describing the performance as "...an hour of intensely passionate singing and playing. It could have gone on forever without complaint." 


This past summer he performed the title role of Figaro in Il Barbiere di Siviglia with the Music Academy of the West.  The LA Times heralded him as a “…Figaro with an impressively booming baritone.”  While in Santa Barbara, he was personally selected by legendary mezzo-soprano Marilyn Horne to perform for William and Catherine Windsor, the newlywed Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, at a high profile charity event at the Santa Barbara Polo Club.  During the same summer, Mr. Rubio was selected as runner up  in the prestigious Marilyn Horne Song Competition.


This past season marked his New York City operatic debut in a world premiere production with Encompass Opera.  Mr. Rubio's performance was praised in creating the male lead, Luiz, for the new American opera,  Angel of the Amazon.  In North Carolina, he was engaged to perform the title role in Gianni Schicchi as a guest artist at Elon University.  José began the 2011 season as Figaro in Le Nozze di Figaro with the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, where he is currently a candidate for the Artist Diploma in Opera.


In 2010 he completed a 2-year engagement as a Studio Artist with the Portland Opera. During his time there, Mr. Rubio performed and covered over twelve roles for the mainstage, and performed two recitals as part of the Portland Opera's recital series.  His mainstage perfomances with Portland Opera include; Schaunard in La Bohème, Sam in Trouble in Tahiti, Mercurio in La Calisto, Fiorello in Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Marullo in Rigoletto, Barone Douphol in La Traviata, and Tancredi in Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda.  He also covered Figaro in Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Guglielmo in Così Fan Tutte, Germont in La Traviata, and the title role in Rigoletto.  His other leading credits include; Marcello in La Bohème, Dr. Rappaccini in La Hija de Rappaccini, Papageno in The Magic Flute, and Masetto in Don Giovanni.   


He received his Master’s degree from the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, and holds a Bachelor’s from the University of Washington.  José Rubio is a three time alumnus of the prestigious Music Academy of the West summer festival where he worked closely with Marilyn Horne, Warren Jones, and music staff from San Francisco and Metropolitan Opera.  He has also spent three summers in Italy performing and studying language at the Opera Theater and Music Festival of Lucca.  In 2008, Mr. Rubio won the Metropolitan Opera National Council District Competition in Oregon. 

 

Robert AinsleyRobert Ainsley - Conductor

 

Previously at Portland Opera
The Return of Ulysses, 2006; Albert Herring, 2008; La Calisto, 2009; Trouble in Tahiti, 2010

Robert Ainsley began his musical career at the age of eleven, studying the piano and violin at Durham School, in England. He became a Licentiate of Trinity College of Music, London, in solo piano performance at age 17 and won the National Schools’ Chamber Music Competition twice.

 Robert Ainsley

Robert Ainsley - Conductor

 

Previously at Portland Opera
The Return of Ulysses, 2006; Albert Herring, 2008; La Calisto, 2009; Trouble in Tahiti, 2010

Robert Ainsley began his musical career at the age of eleven, studying the piano and violin at Durham School, in England. He became a Licentiate of Trinity College of Music, London, in solo piano performance at age 17 and won the National Schools’ Chamber Music Competition twice. Subsequently, Mr. Ainsley was awarded the organ scholarship to St. Catharine’s College, Cambridge, where he studied with Dr. Peter Hurford, Dr. John Butt, and David Sanger. He also directed the chapel choir for three years, conducting and playing in many major venues around the world.

In 1999, he graduated with a degree in Mathematics, and later that year became the senior organ scholar at Christ Church, Greenwich, Connecticut. During his time on the East Coast, he also served as assistant conductor and accompanist of the New Haven Chorale and Greenwich Choral Society. Musical Director of the Marsh Singers, and completed a Master’s degree in solo piano performance at Mannes College of Music, New York City. After serving as Maestro Joseph Colaneri’s assistant in the opera department for a year at Mannes College of Music, Mr. Ainsley joined the Metropolitan Opera Lindemann Young Artist Development Program. His two years in the program culminated in his acting as assistant conductor and pianist for Wagner’s Die Walküre with Maestro Valery Gergiev and Plácido Domingo.

Mr. Ainsley is now the Principal Coach, Chorus Master and Assistant Conductor for Portland Opera, where his work is already receiving critical acclaim. Opera Magazine said of his work on John Adams’ opera Nixon in China; “Robert Ainsley did a superb job in getting a well-balanced and precise sound from the chorus.” Mr. Ainsley has conducted The Return of Ulysses (2006), Albert Herring (2008) and La Calisto (2009) for Portland Opera.

Mr. Ainsley spends his summers continuing to devote his time to the Greenwich Music Festival, of which he is the Co-founder and Principal Conductor.  Previous projects with this group include Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas (2005) and Orff’s Carmina Burana (2006), Handel’s Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne (2007), and Monteverdi’s The Return of Ulysses (2008), in addition to his work with other companies such as the Utah Festival Opera.

Other recent projects include Ullman’s Der Kaiser von Atlantis with the Greenwich Music Festival (June 2009) and Handel’s Messiah with the Portland Baroque Orchestra (December 2009).

 

Listen to the Music

Schedule

Mar 13, 2009
Friday 7:30 pm
Mar 15, 2009
Sunday 2:00 pm
Mar 19, 2009
Thursday 7:30 pm
Mar 21, 2009
Saturday 7:30 pm