Undead diva: U of T opera students mix high art with zombie kitsch
Rebecca Gray had never practiced groaning for an operatic role, until rehearsing for the lead in the 重口味SM Opera composition program鈥檚 20th anniversary production.
The master鈥檚 student in opera stars as the un-dead diva Nellie Melba in Prima Zombie: The Diva that just Wouldn鈥檛 Stay Dead, an original work composed by seven students. The libretto was written by the opera program鈥檚 resident stage director, Michael Patrick Albano.
In the early 20th century, the real Dame Melba regaled audiences from Sydney to Brussels. In the U of T production, critics pining for the 鈥済olden age鈥 of opera bring the coloratura soprano 鈥 who gave her name to Melba toast and peach Melba 鈥 back from the grave using a gypsy curse and a cartoonish electric generator.
Safe to say, the role was a departure for Gray, who more recently played Frasquita in Carmen with the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music Summer Studio. Although she usually doesn't like to put on much makeup, she is excited to sing in zombie face paint.
鈥淚 have really enjoyed being ridiculous, and it has been a chance for me to explore sounds I never knew I could make,鈥 she said during break at a recent rehearsal at U of T Faculty of Music鈥檚 MacMillan Theatre.
She researched the part by watching Night of the Living Dead and YouTube-ing videos of 鈥渢eenagers in their bedrooms making zombie noises.鈥
For the young composers, too, the piece presented unique challenges. Stephanie Orlando, who is pursuing a master鈥檚 in music composition, says she drew on music by Melba鈥檚 historical near-contemporaries (composers like Donizetti, Puccini, Verdi) but added a dark twist.
鈥淪he鈥檚 a little distorted now, as a zombie, and so is the music,鈥 she said.
Each composer wrote their scene individually, and the work was stitched together like 鈥渢he Frankenstein monster of an opera鈥 that it is, said Liam Ritz, in the bachelor鈥檚 of composition program.
Opera aficionados sometimes take the genre too seriously. But no one would accuse the composers and performers of the irreverent Prima Zombie of that.
The production pokes fun of diva worship and music snobs, said Daevyd Pepper, who plays theatre critic Addison Witless. It鈥檚 also full of in-jokes like Pepper鈥檚 favourite scene, Melba鈥檚 zombie aria:
It鈥檚 not enough to give my art
My fans demand my heart
So take it, take it now!
At that point, Gray rips a plastic heart out from under her shirt and throws it at the audience.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a joke about how we have an unrealistic idea of perfection,鈥 Pepper explained. 鈥淧eople expect us to act perfectly, but they also want us to bare our souls and our hearts.鈥
Albano has staged over 30 operas at U of T and written many libretti for U of T Opera Student Composer Collective, including Rob Ford: The Opera. He says he encouraged students to go wild.
鈥淲hen you start breaking the rules, there鈥檚 a great feeling of liberation, almost like anything goes,鈥 he said.
And it paid off.
鈥淎 lot of the stuff you see successfully working on stage are things the singers thought of themselves,鈥 he said.
Prima Zombie: the Diva that just wouldn鈥檛 stay Dead, directed by Michael Patrick Albano and conducted by Sandra Horst, will be 80 Queens Park.