Community Artist Fellows Serve in Creative Ways

Recent Curtis graduates bring their artistry to underserved communities in Philadelphia through the Curtis Community Artist Fellowship. Fellows are placed in existing partnerships between Curtis and institutions such as schools, hospitals, prisons, and rehabilitation centers, and are able to continue their vital performance careers while serving the community. Throughout their year of service, each fellow will take leadership of a specific project and participate in community work involving students in Curtis’s Social Entrepreneur course.

Applications for 2021–22 Community Artist Fellowships are open to Curtis alumni through February 1. 

While distance learning continues in Philadelphia, Mr. Babcock will support Hanul Park (Community Artist Fellow ’20), who is serving as an itinerant music teacher for the School District of Philadelphia. This support includes the creation of short educational videos to be used in lessons and synchronous online instruction. He will also lead sectionals and interactive performances for students in the All City Orchestra.

While distance learning continues in Philadelphia, Mr. Goldsmith will support Louis Russo, who is serving as an itinerant music teacher for the School District of Philadelphia. This support includes the creation of short educational videos to be used in lessons and synchronous online instruction.

Karen Slack’s #SayTheirNames Project Detailed in Inquirer

Karen Slack (Opera ’02) and her new film project, #SayTheirNames, are the focus of a recent feature in the Philadelphia Inquirer. Created for Lyric Fest, the short film uses poetry, art, and song—as performed by Ms. Slack and other Philadelphia artists—to celebrate the “tremendous risk and sacrifice” taken on by such Black women as Sojourner Truth, Ida B. Wells, Fanny Lou Hamer, and Kimberlé Crenshaw in their work for social justice.


Read the full article HERE.
Watch the film HERE.
Video contains some graphic content. 

Curtis students, alumni, and faculty, are making remarkable accomplishments in the music world and beyond. Learn more about Curtis in the News.

Curtis Opera Theatre Presents Staged Duets in Opera OnDemand

PHILADELPHIA, PA—January 13, 2021—The Curtis Opera Theatre announces a new virtual offering entitled Opera OnDemand. Available for free online streaming from January 22 through February 1, 2021, the project features beloved duets from the Italian opera canon. Through months of musical preparation, innovative staging techniques, and state-of-the-art video editing, Curtis’s rising opera stars perform in custom virtual sets, united in pairs from their individual locations across the globe.

The electrifying evening highlights familiar scenes from masterful Italian operas by Vincenzo BelliniGaetano DonizettiGioachino RossiniGiuseppe Verdi, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Short, witty episodes follow nefarious schemes, tests of loyalty, playful escapes, mistaken identities, and soaring avowals of love. Stage director Scott Skiba and music directors Grant Loehnig and Miloš Repický lead the 90-minute performance, with concepts by production designer Brittany Merenda. Semi-staged duet scenes, accompanied by piano, are sung in Italian with English translations available. The Curtis Opera Theatre is supported by the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation and the Wyncote Foundation.

The performance video will be available online beginning Friday, January 22 in the evening. Free registration is required at Curtis.edu/OperaOnDemand. Registrants will receive program synopses and a private video link to explore and revisit these fresh takes on classic opera on an unlimited basis through Monday, February 1.

Preparations for Opera OnDemand began in the Fall 2020 semester. Students of the Curtis Opera Theatre, ranging from undergraduates to graduates with professional experience, rehearsed and recorded scenes in their own living spaces, which have been individually optimized using green screens and specialized lighting and audio equipment. Singers participated from homes across the United States and locales as distant as Switzerland and Malta. Highly-skilled production and musical staff worked with the performers from afar to set up at-home performance spaces, and to direct and perfect the recordings, which have been edited together to give the illusion that the duo partners are interacting in the same physical space.

In addition to achieving the same extensive musical preparation for which the Curtis Opera Theatre is known, the singers acquired and honed new technical skills that would not have been taught in a typical season. “The students are well-equipped to transfer these skills now to other virtual collaborations and audition recording production, which will become increasingly important and useful in future creative endeavors since the performing arts will likely include some form of digital programming delivery even as ‘traditional live in-theater performances’ return,” says stage director Scott Skiba. This project is one of many imagined by the Curtis Institute of Music in 2020–21 to prepare students for rapidly evolving careers as 21st-century musicians.

The Curtis Opera Theatre has become known for imaginative productions, bold concepts, and absorbing theatre. Under the artistic direction of Eric Owens, promising young singers work alongside established professional directors and designers, resulting in fresh interpretations of standard repertoire and contemporary works. All of Curtis’s 20 students in vocal studies are cast regularly throughout each season, receiving a rare level of performance in fully staged productions, in recitals at Field Concert Hall, and as soloists with Curtis on Tour and the Curtis Symphony Orchestra. Curtis’s educational approach opens professional opportunities for Curtis graduates, who sing with top opera companies across the United States and Europe, including La Scala, Covent Garden, the Vienna Staatsoper, Houston Grand Opera, the San Francisco Opera, and the Metropolitan Opera.

 


 

CURTIS OPERA THEATRE: Opera OnDemand

Friday, January 22–Monday, February 1

Available for online streaming

 

Scott Skiba, stage director
Grant Loehnig, music director
Miloš Repický, music director
Brittany Merenda, production designer

 

DONIZETTI           

 

“Caro elisir! Sei mio!” from L’elisir d’amore
Emily Damasco, soprano
Colin Aikins, tenor
DONIZETTI

 

“Cheti, cheti, immantinente” from Don Pasquale
Charles Buttigieg, baritone
Evan Gray, bass-baritone
BELLINI

 

“Sì, fuggire: a noi non resta” from I Capuleti e i Montecchi
Sage DeAgro-Ruopp, soprano
Sarah Fleiss, mezzo-soprano
MOZART

 

“Aprite, presto, aprite” from Le nozze di Figaro
Dalia Medovnikov, soprano
Hannah Klein, mezzo-soprano
VERDI

 

“Signor né principe… E il sol dell’anima” from Rigoletto
Lindsey Reynolds, soprano
Joseph Tancredi, tenor
MOZART

 

“Crudel! Perché finora farmi languir così” from Le nozze di Figaro
Sage DeAgro-Ruopp, soprano
Ben Schaefer, baritone
ROSSINI

 

“Ai capricci della sorte” from L’Italiana in Algeri
Anastasiia Sidorova, mezzo-soprano
Patrick Wilhelm, baritone
VERDI

 

“Un dì, felice, eterea” from La traviata
Merissa Beddows, soprano
Ethan Burck, tenor
DONIZETTI    

 

“Dio, che mi vedi in core” from Anna Bolena
Sophia Hunt, soprano
Ruby Dibble, mezzo-soprano
DONIZETTI

 

“Quanto amore! Ed io spietata!” from L’elisir d’amore
Lindsey Reynolds, soprano
Thomas Petrushka, bass

 

Semi-staged production with piano accompaniment, sung in Italian with English subtitles

Free registration required at Curtis.edu/OperaOnDemand.

The Curtis Opera Theatre is supported by the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation and the Wyncote Foundation.

 

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