Current:Home > StocksMason Bates’ Met-bound opera ‘Kavalier & Clay’ based on Michael Chabon novel premieres in Indiana -Aspire Money Growth
Mason Bates’ Met-bound opera ‘Kavalier & Clay’ based on Michael Chabon novel premieres in Indiana
View
Date:2025-04-14 18:42:03
BLOOMINGTON, Indiana (AP) — When composer Mason Bates approached Michael Chabon about turning his novel “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay” into an opera, he said the writer told him frankly that “opera was not his thing.”
“He was very supportive of the endeavor and he gave it his blessing, but he said he couldn’t be involved,” Bates recalled. “He was really more giving it a thumbs-up on a rights level.”
So Bates and librettist Gene Scheer proceeded on their own to wrangle into operatic form Chabon’s sprawling, Pulitzer Prize-winning tale about two young Jewish cousins set over more than a decade before and after World War II.
Now, six years after Bates first read the novel and became inspired by it, the opera is bound for the Metropolitan Opera, due to open the company’s next season in September 2025.
But first it’s having its world premiere on Friday in what might seem an unlikely spot, at the Jacobs School of Music on the University of Indiana campus in Bloomington. The premiere was originally planned for the Los Angeles Opera, but the company begged off, citing the costs involved.
Bloomington turns out to be not such a surprising choice given that the school has nearly 300 voice students and the Musical Arts Center, built in 1972, was modeled after the Met stage.
“The space and technology and those kinds of production elements were very attractive to the Met in terms of how the opera would play here,” said Catherine Compton, managing director of the school’s opera and ballet theater program.
“It’s been heartening to see how our students have reacted and been elevated by the Met’s creative team that’s been in residence here,” she said. “And also how the creative team has been able to adapt their process to our students.”
In fact, Met staff will be back in Bloomington in January to workshop another forthcoming commission, an opera by Carlos Simon called “In the Rush” with a libretto by playwright Lynn Nottage and her daughter, Ruby Aiyo Gerber.
“Kavalier & Clay” was commissioned by the Met after Peter Gelb, the company’s general manager, attended a performance of Bates’ first opera, “The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs,” in 2017 in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Paul Cremo, the Met’s dramaturg, connected Bates with Scheer, a veteran librettist widely praised for his work in turning Herman Melville’s unwieldy masterpiece “Moby Dick” into the text for an opera composed by Jake Heggie. The Met will perform that opera next March.
“I give ‘Moby Dick’ to new librettists for a model of how to get to the essence,” Cremo said. “‘Kavalier & Clay’ goes down a lot of side roads into history and nooks and crannies. I figured we needed somebody who gets how to adapt and condense a book into an opera.”
With many of the “nooks and crannies” — like a 40-page detour to Antarctica — stripped away, Scheer was able to focus on the two main characters.
There’s Joe Kavalier, who escapes to America from Czechoslovakia on the eve of the Holocaust, dreams of bringing his younger brother to safety in America, and falls in love with Rosa, a Bohemian artist. His cousin is the Brooklyn-born Sammy Clay, who dreams of striking it rich and, ambivalent about his sexuality, has a thwarted love affair with a handsome actor.
Together, using Sammy’s talent for story-telling and Joe’s artistic genius, the cousins invent a wildly popular comic strip character called The Escapist.
Scheer and Bates identified three distinct worlds depicted in the novel, each of which lent itself to a different compositional style.
“There’s the world of World War II, where we see the Kavalier family picked off one by one,” Bates said. “It’s a very dark musical space with a lot of drums and mandolins. Then the big band music of 1940s New York, a lot of swing, a lot of jazz. Then when they start to draw and they create art, we go into this electro-acoustic, techno-symphonic space.”
Bates said he deliberately keeps these sound worlds separate at first, but “what becomes really exciting in the opera is that as Joe goes through kinds of a psychedelic spiral, these worlds start to collide and smash together.”
Keeping these worlds visually separate and then merging them posed both a challenge and an opportunity for director Bart Sher, who worked on the set design with 59 Productions, a company known for its innovative use of projections and animation.
“The unique challenge to ‘Kavalier & Clay’ is the simultaneity of space and time,” Sher said. “You might see them working in the office of Empire Toys and at the same time see their family struggling in Prague, and at the same time see them try to capture what the experience is like through The Escapist.
“And if you can get all three of those elements to work at the same time and have music and song — then you really have something in this piece that I think is very special.”
veryGood! (54)
Related
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Pro-Palestinian protesters set up tent encampment outside Los Angeles City Hall
- Messi joins Argentina for Copa América: His stats show he's ready for another title run
- Justin Timberlake pauses concert to help fan during medical emergency, video shows
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Rural pharmacies fill a health care gap in the US. Owners say it’s getting harder to stay open
- Three boys found a T. rex fossil in North Dakota. Now a Denver museum works to fully reveal it
- Dead black bear found in Arlington, Virginia was struck by car, illegally dumped, AWLA says
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Diver found dead in Lake Erie identified as underwater explorer
Ranking
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Search for climbers missing in Canada's Garibaldi Park near Whistler stymied by weather, avalanche threat
- How Hallie Biden is connected to the Hunter Biden gun trial
- Demi Lovato Details Finding the “Light Again” After 5 In-Patient Mental Health Treatments
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Mexico appears on verge of getting its first female president
- How To Prepare Your Skin for Laser Hair Removal
- Nebraska funeral home discovers hospice patient was still alive hours after being declared dead
Recommendation
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
A court might hear arguments before the election on Fani Willis’ role in Trump’s Georgia case
Free Krispy Kreme for all on National Doughnut Day. How to walk off with your favorite flavor
Gen Z sticking close to home: More young adults choose to live with parents, Census shows
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Book Review: ‘When the Sea Came Alive’ expands understanding of D-Day invasion
For gay and transgender people, these are the most (and least) welcoming states
How Hallie Biden is connected to the Hunter Biden gun trial