Harvey Milk | |
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Opera by Stewart Wallace | |
Librettist | Michael Korie |
Premiere |
Harvey Milk is an American opera with music by Stewart Wallace and libretto by Michael Korie, based on the life and death of the American gay activist and politician Harvey Milk, who was assassinated along with San Francisco mayor George Moscone on 27 November 1978. [1] The opera was originally in 3 acts, and was a joint commission by Houston Grand Opera, New York City Opera, and San Francisco Opera, and received its premiere on 21 January 1995 by Houston Grand Opera. A revised version in 2 acts received its premiere on 11 June 2022 by Opera Theatre of Saint Louis.
John Dew originally suggested the idea for a stage work based on the life of Harvey Milk to David Gockley, then the general director of Houston Grand Opera. Gockley then approached Stewart Wallace and Michael Korie, who had been looking for a new opera subject, after their previous collaborations on the dance opera Kabbalah and the two-act opera Where's Dick? . The latter had its world premiere at Houston Grand Opera in 1989. [2] According to Gockley, Dew's original conception to stage the work as a musical was:
...very, very weird, with strange dreamlike drag ballets and the like. He had a distorted idea of the subject. [2]
The artistic relationship with Dew subsequently deteriorated in 1992 when Dew went to Houston to direct the premiere of Robert Moran's opera, Desert of Roses. When both the opera company and Wallace found Dew's concept unacceptable, Harvey Milk took form as an opera instead. Houston Grand Opera, New York City Opera, and San Francisco Opera jointly shared in the commission of the opera. The work premiered on January 21, 1995 in Houston. [3] [4] [5] Christopher Alden was the director, with set designs by Paul Steinberg, choreography by Ross A. Perry, [6] and fight direction by Michael Kirkland.
New York City Opera then presented the opera with the same cast in April 1995. [7] Both the composer and librettist considered the New York premiere "a debacle". The conductor, Christopher Keene, was ill with AIDS during much of the rehearsal period. According to Korie:
Christopher was very committed to this, but my hair went gray. The chorus never learned the music. The stage manager was never around. [8]
John Dew produced the German premiere of the opera at the Opernhaus Dortmund in February 1996. The Dortmund production used a German translation and a completely different staging devised by Dew. [9] [10]
Wallace and Korie revised the opera for the San Francisco Opera performances, in collaboration with Donald Runnicles, music director of the company, and Peter Grunberg, a vocal coach with the company. Wallace tightened the score, and simplified the orchestration and the rhythmic notation, with a reduction in the opera's running time from nearly three hours to just over two. The changes to the libretto included reduction of the role of Dan White and of the final act, and the addition of two new arias for Harvey Milk. [10] [11] [12] San Francisco Opera premiered the revised version, then considered the definitive edition, [10] at the Orpheum Theatre on 9 November 1996 and ran for eight performances. The principal roles were sung by the original Houston cast, apart from the role of Milk's mother which was sung by Elizabeth Bishop. In the Houston production, Juliana Gondek had sung both that role and the role of Dianne Feinstein. The November 27 performance was timed to coincide with the 18th annual candlelight march through the city's Castro District commemorating the day that Moscone and Milk were assassinated. The march ended in front of the Orpheum Theatre, and several of Milk's friends and associates appeared in the opera's Act 2 parade scene. [8] [13] The première San Francisco production of 1996 was recorded in November and later released on Teldec Records. [14]
For a scheduled 2020 revival of the opera in commemoration of the 90th anniversary of Harvey Milk's birth, Opera Parallèle collaborated with Wallace and Korie on a new two-act version of the opera, scaled to allow smaller companies to present the opera. [15] The COVID-19 pandemic caused the postponement of this scheduled production. [16] The revised 2-act version received its premiere at Opera Theatre of Saint Louis on 11 June 2022. [17] [18] [19] [20] [21]
Original 3-act version | Revised 2-act version | ||
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Role | Voice type | Premiere cast, 21 January 1995 [22] Houston Grand Opera Conductor: Ward Holmquist | Premiere cast, 11 June 2022 Opera Theatre of Saint Louis Conductor: Carolyn Kuan |
Harvey Milk, gay activist and member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors | baritone | Robert Orth | Thomas Glass |
Dan White, member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and Milk's assassin | tenor | Raymond Very | Alek Shrader |
George Moscone, Mayor of San Francisco | bass | Gidon Saks | Nathan Stark |
Dianne Feinstein, member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors | mezzo-soprano or soprano | Juliana Gondek | Raquel González |
Scott Smith, Milk's lover | tenor | Bradley Williams | Jonathan Johnson |
Henry Wong (countertenor) / Henrietta Wong (soprano), Milk's associate | Randall Wong (countertenor) | Xiao Xiao (mezzo-soprano) | |
Messenger | James Maddalena (baritone) | Kyle Sanchez Tingzon (countertenor) | |
Anne Kronenberg, Milk's campaign manager | mezzo-soprano | Jill Grove | Mack Wolz |
Medora Payne, 11-year old supporter of Milk | child soprano | Lilly Akseth | (omitted) |
Harvey Milk as a boy | Matthew Cavenaugh (boy soprano) | Mishael Eusebio (tenor) | |
Harvey Milk's mother ('Mama') | mezzo-soprano or soprano | Juliana Gondek | Elizabeth Sarian |
Concentration camp inmates, San Francisco supervisors, men at the opera, closet lovers, reporters, people of San Francisco |
In addition to the ten principal roles, the opera has over 70 smaller singing roles. Except for the singer of the title role, the principal cast members also sang multiple smaller roles. [13] [22]
The revised version eliminates several roles, such as Medora Payne, and uses smaller instrumentation and generally smaller musical forces compared to the 3-act version. [18]
Harvey Bernard Milk was an American politician and the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, as a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.
The San Francisco Opera (SFO) is an American opera company founded in 1923 by Gaetano Merola (1881–1953) based in San Francisco, California.
Houston Grand Opera (HGO) is an American opera company located in Houston, Texas. Founded in 1955 by German-born impresario Walter Herbert and three local Houstonians, the company is resident at the Wortham Theater Center. This theatre is also home to the Houston Ballet. In its history, the company has received a Tony Award, two Grammy Awards, and three Emmy Awards, the only opera company in the world to win these three honours. Houston Grand Opera is supported by an active auxiliary organization, the Houston Grand Opera Guild, established in October 1955.
Daniel James White was an American politician who assassinated George Moscone, the mayor of San Francisco, and Harvey Milk, a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, inside City Hall on November 27, 1978. White was convicted of manslaughter for the deaths of Milk and Moscone and served five years of a seven-year prison sentence. Less than two years after his release, he returned to San Francisco and later committed suicide.
George Richard Moscone was an attorney and Democratic politician who was the 37th mayor of San Francisco, California from January 1976 until his assassination in November 1978. He was known as "The People's Mayor," who opened up City Hall and its commissions to reflect the diversity of San Francisco, appointing African Americans, Asian Americans, and gay people. Moscone served in the California State Senate from 1967 until becoming mayor. In the Senate, he served as majority leader. Moscone is remembered for being an advocate of civil progressivism.
The White Night riots were a series of violent events sparked by an announcement of a lenient sentencing of Dan White for the assassinations of George Moscone, the mayor of San Francisco, and of Harvey Milk, a member of the city's Board of Supervisors who was one of the first openly gay elected officials in the United States. The events took place on the night of May 21, 1979, in San Francisco. Earlier that day White had been convicted of voluntary manslaughter, the lightest possible conviction for his actions. The lesser conviction outraged the city's gay community, setting off the most violent reaction by gay Americans since the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York City.
Michael Korie is an American librettist and lyricist whose writing for musical theater and opera includes the musicals Grey Gardens and Far From Heaven, and the operas Harvey Milk and The Grapes of Wrath. His works have been produced on Broadway, Off-Broadway, and internationally. His lyrics have been nominated for the Tony Award and the Drama Desk Award, and won the Outer Critics Circle Award. In 2016, Korie was awarded the Marc Blitzstein Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
Gidon Saks is an Israeli-born South African bass-baritone.
The Times of Harvey Milk is a 1984 American documentary film that premiered at the Telluride Film Festival, the New York Film Festival, and then on November 1, 1984, at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco. The film was directed by Rob Epstein, produced by Richard Schmiechen, and narrated by Harvey Fierstein, with an original score by Mark Isham.
On November 27, 1978, George Moscone, the mayor of San Francisco, and Harvey Milk, a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, were shot and killed inside San Francisco City Hall by former Supervisor Dan White. On the morning of that day, Moscone intended to announce that the Supervisor position from which White had previously resigned would be given to someone else. White, angered, entered City Hall before the scheduled announcement and first shot Moscone in the Mayor's office, then Milk in White's former office space, before escaping the building. Board of Supervisors President Dianne Feinstein first announced Moscone and Milk's deaths to the media, and because of Moscone's death, succeeded him as acting mayor.
The San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus (SFGMC) is the world's first openly gay chorus, one of the world's largest male choruses and the group most often credited with creating the LGBT choral movement.
Execution of Justice is an ensemble play by Emily Mann chronicling the case of Dan White, who assassinated San Francisco mayor George Moscone and openly gay city supervisor Harvey Milk in November 1978. The play was originally commissioned by the Eureka Theatre Company, but premiered at Arena Stage on May 10, 1985.
Christopher Alden is an American theater and opera director. He is the twin brother of David Alden, also an opera director. Both brothers belong to a generation of modernist directors that includes Robert Wilson and Peter Sellars. and are known for staging revisionist productions of opera.
Harvey Milk (1930–1978) was an American politician and LGBT rights activist.
Michael Chioldi is an American opera singer who has performed leading baritone roles in the opera houses and festivals of North and South America, Europe and Asia. He first appeared at New York's Metropolitan Opera in 1995 when he was a winner of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Competition.
Stewart Wallace is an American composer and cantor.
Anne Kronenberg is an American political administrator and LGBT rights activist. She is best known for being Harvey Milk's campaign manager during his historic San Francisco Board of Supervisors campaign in 1977 and his aide as he held that office until he and mayor George Moscone were assassinated. As an openly lesbian political activist, Kronenberg was noted for her instrumental role in the gay rights movement, both for Milk's campaign and in her own right.
David Gockley is an American opera company administrator. He served as general director of Houston Grand Opera from 1972 to 2005 and San Francisco Opera from 2006 to 2016. He is a student of Margaret Harshaw.
Where's Dick? is an opera in two acts composed by Stewart Wallace. The work uses an English language libretto by Michael Korie. The opera is a satire on 1980s American life and tabloid journalism and follows the experiences of Junior who in reaction to the crime and corruption he sees around him searches for the detective hero Dick Tracy.
Jonathan Moscone is an American theater director and arts consultant, having most recently served as a Council member then Executive Director of the California Arts Council under Governor Gavin Newsom's administration. Formerly the Chief Producer of Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (YBCA), and artistic director of California Shakespeare Theater in Berkeley and Orinda, California for 16 years, Moscone received the inaugural Zelda Fichandler Award, given by the Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation for his transformative work in theater in 2009.