Judging 1920s Fashion, Alice Sydow

A little bit of fun knowledge on the fashion & style in the 1920′s

The key to 1920s women’s fashion was femininity and grace, but without the curves we often see today. A slender and flat chested silhouette was the key objective for women in this era, and large busts could actually be flattened with the help of early bras that were created. Most people actually tend to think of the 1920′s style as the Flapper Look.

 

The 1920s man will be best characterized by Prohibition and the 3-piece suits that were favored by both the FBI and gangsters like Al Capone himself. Trends started during this time for men with the fedoras,  two tone brogue shoes, and bow-ties.

 

 

To read the full post from Alice Sydow of i’vegotyourstyle.com visit her website.

If you really want to impress Alice on Saturday, give her a call and she can help you pick the right dress or suit for The Rogue Song!

Alice Sydow
Image Consultant & Wardrobe Stylist
I’ve Got Your Style
612.759.3733
www.ivegotyourstyle.com
alice@ivegotyourstyle.com

For details on retail discounts, tickets and all the Rogue Song dish visit www.mnopera.org/roguesong.
*Tickets are limited for VIP and advanced sales end Friday,  March 22, 2013, 6pm.  General Admission at the door will be $40/person.

Puttin’ on the Ritz – Denny Kemp Salon and Spa

Denny Kemp Salon and Spa, retail partner for The Rogue Song, has you covered. In addition to offering a 15% discount on services and products for event-goers – just mention “The Rogue Song” – DK’s talented staff will help you complete your look with hair, make-up and nails. Call 612-676-0300 to book today. Also, a shipment of Art Deco-styled jewelry from SequinNYC just arrived, to add the finishing touch.  Several colors are available in each style of bracelet, necklace and earrings. You can’t get these baubles anywhere else in town, so move fast!

Alright dolls, this section’s for you.  To capture the look of a 20’s screen siren or fabulous flapper, photos are a helpful starting point. Famous stars of the time included Greta Garbo, Louise Brooks, Marion Davies and Clara Bow (Marion and Clara pictured below).  These ladies usually went for several trends at the same time, both in their films and out on the town. Pencil-thin brows, lush lashes, smokey eyes and statement lips with the cupid’s bow emphasized rounded out the make-up look, while hair was usually set in finger waves or cut in a sleek bob. Waves or faux bobs for long-haired dames as well as these dramatic make-up looks (including false lashes!) can sometimes be difficult to achieve at home, so take advantage of the discount and treat yourself to an afternoon at the salon for the event. DK carries hair products from Bumble and bumble, Kerastase and Shu Uemura and make-up from Becca Cosmetics (pictured below) so you’re certain to have the best of EVERYTHING to get glam.


As for the fellas, although there may not be as much variety to the hair looks of the time, you’ll be able to pull off a statement style with more ease. Head in to DK for a trim or cut the day of and they can easily mold your hair into a sleek 20’s style like Rudolph Valentino  – jungle cat accessory is optional. For more on Valentino, tune in next season at Minnesota Opera in for an opera based on his life!

If you’re game to try his look at home, Bumble and bumble’s Gellac or Bb Gel will be helpful. Apply generously to damp hair and comb back or off to the side. The more product the better, since it will keep the style from being mussed up by your fedora.

Visit www.mnopera.org/roguesong and get your tickets to The Rogue Song on March 23, 2013 at The Pourhouse in Downtown Minneapolis.

L’avenir Luxury at The Rogue Song

luxury n. : 1. the state of great comfort and extravagant living 2. something inessential but conducive to pleasure  adj: luxurious, fancy, deluxe

Inessential, I don’t think so. In preparation for the fabulous Rogue Song event, L’avenir has been busy creating some amazing new and delicate accessories.

Jewelry is only the tip of the marquis for the local designers who take recycling to a higher level. Feather head pieces made from beat up hats from the 1950′s transform your look and authenticate it with modern vintage appeal. What was luxury then can still be luxury now, with a little revamping (after all, they don’t make it like they used to). L’avenir has a firm grasp on how to breath new life into beloved pieces from the past.See more at LAVENIRDESIGN.COM

 

AVAILABLE NOW! Lining the cases at Via’s Vintage you will find these luxury items and more! And thru March 23rd if you mention the “Rogue Song” receive 20% off your entire purchase. Subject to availability. Other restrictions may apply.

 

 

You’ll see L’avenir pieces on many ladies at The Rogue Song on March 23 at The Pourhouse.  Bergen Baker, Minnesota Opera Teaching Artist as well as featured Rouge Song performer placed a custom order with L’avenir for the event.  ”I loved working with L’avenir. I was in need of a headpiece that not only would “wow” at the Rogue Song event, but also be versatile enough to wear to other formal functions. They made the process fun while still remaining attentive to my requests and personal style. The quality and artistry in their pieces is unprecedented…tres chique!”

L’avenir is also gifting a fascinator to the “Best Dressed Dame” of the evening!  Alice Sydow, Image Consultant & Wardrobe Stylist, owner of www.ivegotyourstyle.com will be our “Style Expert & Best Dressed Judge”.

The Devil is in the Details

When invited to a 1920’s party, many people are at a loss as to what to wear. At Via’s Vintage, we frequently put together 1920’s looks from the casual to very formal. 1920s clothing is a vintage category all its own. When you see the light as air chiffons studded with glistening glass beads, you know it was an amazing and decadent time to be alive.

While assembling your 1920s outfit, start by thinking about what you want to look like. Do you wish to be the classic fringed and feathered vamp? Or perhaps the cool and elegant lady? For inspiration, you can always check out an original 1920s film. They provide the best and most accurate representation of what people wore, and how they wore it. One thing you need to keep in mind is that the 20s was all about the complete head to toe look. Although there is something to be said for wafting about in the incredibly simple, yet insanely intricate gowns of the 1920s, it is really all about the jewelry, shoes, gloves, hair and makeup. Details, details, details!

If you do not have the disposition for wearing an authentic dress simply start with a loose fitting dress or slip. Many times, 30s, 40s or 60s dresses will do. They are still vintage and can look 20s if accessorized appropriately. For an evening event, opt for hair adornments rather than a cloche hat. You can use a scarf headband knotted on the side, and add a brooch at the center of the knot. Or take a sequined headband and add a comb or clip feathered hairpiece. You can accessorize with authentic jewelry, like a fabulous deco bracelet and earrings. They are easily worn again and are beautiful to own. For shoes, wear something with low heels and oval toes, Mary Janes work well. Don’t forget a handbag, something small with a handle. Finish off with gloves, fishnets or sheer hosiery and a cigarette holder, and your look will be complete.

Via’s Vintage is offering an exclusive discount on all of their inventory for attendees of The Rogue Song as well as a gift certificate for the best dressed dame at the event.

We also have Pintrest boards created to provide additional inspiration for our Dames and Fellas.  For details on the Via’s Vintage discount and The Rogue Song visit www.mnopera.org/roguesong.

Hats are HOT at The Rogue Song

Hello from Goorin Bros., your local hat shop(Uptown), here to chat briefly about the basics of Prohibition style headwear.  We’re delighted to be partnering with Tempo for The Rogue Song this year and figured we’d share our knowledge to help all of you dress your 1920s best!

In 1895, Cassel Goorin sold his first hat off a horse-drawn cart in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Cassel’s sons – the Goorin Brothers – continued the tradition when they moved the family business to San Francisco in 1949. Today, Goorin Bros. is led by Cassel’s great grandson who remains dedicated to the hat business.  In other words, we know our classic hats- and luckily hats are hot again!

Fedoras, cloches, bowlers, feathered headbands are all in the mix!

There’s no way of knowing if the thanks goes to period television dramas such as Mad Men, Downtown Abbey and Boardwalk Empire, or musicians like Bruno Mars wearing throwback styles, but whatever the reason, hats are back.

Ladies, the 1920s was entirely about rebelling! During the wild ride of Prohibition, dress hemlines were shortened, along with new bobbed hairstyles to match the hat of the day: the cloche.  This famous style has a rounded top and frames the face in the classic flapper style.

Gentlemen, the end of World War I brought about a switch to less formal suits in the 1920s.  Tailcoats and top hats were abandoned in favor of pinstripes suits and bowlers or fedoras in fashionable circles.  The bowler, a rounded top hat with a shorter brim, was worn in more formal situations.  The fedora was saved for more casual circumstances and the classic 20s gangster look…

Give our website a glance for ideas, come in and visit us!

Goorin Bros is offering an exclusive discount on all of their inventory for attendees of The Rogue Song as well as a handmade hat for the best dressed fella at the event.

 

Get your tickets to The Rogue Song on March 23, 2013 at The Pourhouse in Downtown Minneapolis.  For details on the Goorin Bros discount and The Rogue Song visit www.mnopera.org/roguesong

Kyle Ketelsen

The Proust Questionnaire is a questionnaire about one’s personality. Its name and modern popularity as a form of interview is owed to the responses given by the French writer Marcel Proust. At that time, it was popular among English families to answer a list of questions that revealed the tastes and aspirations of the taker.

A similar questionnaire is regularly seen on the back page of Vanity Fair magazine, answered by various celebrities.

This week’s Proust Questionnaire profiles Kyle Ketelsen, Enrico VIII in Minnesota Opera’s upcoming production of Anna Bolena.

What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?

The loss of a child.  (Way to start a questionnaire, Proust!)

Where would you like to live?

In nature

What is your idea of earthly happiness?

Spending every day surrounded by the people you love (and who love you) the most

To what faults do you feel most indulgent?

Consumption of chocolate

Your favorite musician?

Jack White.  Rock’n’Roller, modern-day Blues man, champion of the eclectic.

The quality you most admire in a man? The quality you most admire in a woman?

Integrity.  Standing for something, whether it’s personal or professional.  Living by a code.

Your favorite virtue?

Loyalty

Your favorite occupation?

Athlete

What natural gift would you most like to possess?

Dunking from the 3-point-line.  OK…dunking from anywhere.

Do you have a website, Facebook fan page, or a Twitter for everyone to follow?

http://www.kylek.net
http://www.facebook.com/kyleket
@kyleket

How do you eat your eggs?

Increasingly without yolk, but often wrapped in bacon.

How long have you been involved with opera and what drew you to the art form?

My mother introduced me to opera when she bought an “Opera Goes to the Movies” cassette, somewhere around 1986.  I found the music incredibly moving (particularly the Puccini excerpts from “Moonstruck” and “Fatal Attraction”), and it seemed familiar to me, though I previously had no idea what opera was.  I was in high school, and sang Sarastro’s O Isis und Osiris in state competition; at the time, I didn’t even know it was from an opera!  In my third year of general studies at the University of Iowa, I decided to take voice lessons, in order to keep my voice in shape.  I auditioned for the vocal faculty, and they suggested I become a voice major.  Having no other specialty in mind, I agreed.  Gradually, but on a sure course, I discovered I had the abilities to make a career.  I left grad school at Indiana University in 1999, and began working professionally.

Favorite behind-the-scenes memory…

In 2000 I was a finalist in Placido Domingo’s Operalia competition.  Before the finals concert, we drew numbers – literally out of a hat – to determine concert order.  I picked the number one, which is just death for a competition.  No one wants to go first!  However, since Placido was conducting, I had the great luck to wait with him before we entered stage at the beginning of the show.  While standing there he asked me if I sing Escamillo, and that perhaps I could for Washington Opera’s Carmen the following season.  I told him indeed I do, and so I was hired for a string of engagements in D.C.  Before Carmen, however, I debuted there as the villain in “The Tales of Hoffmann.”  In the audience was a man who’d become my European agent.  I attribute a great deal of my success in Europe to my experience with Domingo, and being heard in his competition.

Visit Minnesota Opera’s blog every week for Feature Friday.

Gaetano Donizetti

b Bergamo, November 29, 1797;                                          

d Bergamo, April 8, 1848

With nearly 70 operas to his credit, Gaetano Donizetti was the leading Italian composer in the decade between Vincenzo Bellini’s death and the ascent of Giuseppe Verdi. Donizetti was born in the northern Italian city of Bergamo to an impoverished family. After showing some musical talent, he was enrolled in the town’s Lezioni Caritatevoli where he had the good fortune to study with Giovanni Simone Mayr, maestro di cappella at Santa Maria Maggiore. Originally from Bavaria, Mayr was a successful composer in Italy during the era preceding Gioachino Rossini’s rise to fame, with dozens of operas to his credit. Though offered many prestigious appointments throughout Europe, Mayr remained loyal to his adopted community and greatly enhanced the local musical institutions. Donizetti arrived at a time when Mayr was writing his greatest operas, and his impression on the younger composer was pronounced. Throughout his life, Donizetti regarded him as a second father, though he would outlive his master by only three years.

When it came time, Donizetti furthered his education at the Accademia Filarmonica in Bologna (shadowing Rossini, who had once studied there). He had already penned several short operas before receiving his first commission in 1818 from the Teatro San Luca in Venice – this was Enrico di Borgogna to a libretto by Bartolomeo Merelli. (In later years, as impresario of La Scala, Merelli was instrumental in the beginnings of Verdi’s career.) Further works were produced in Venice, but Donizetti returned to Bergamo for a few years of relative inactivity. A letter of introduction from Mayr to poet Jacopo Ferretti led Donizetti to Rome, where in 1822 he would have his first unequivocal success, Zoraide di Grenata. His career was just getting started.

Later that year Donizetti settled in Naples and used it as a base for the next 16 years. He arrived just as Rossini was finishing his seven-year contract with the royal theaters. Like Rossini he had the ability to work at the increasingly rapid pace demanded by the Italian theater industry and was able to produce three to four operas a year for most of his life.

Many remain timeless gems. L’elisir d’amore (1832), La fille du régiment (1840) and Don Pasquale (1843) demonstrate his expert handling of lighter subjects. Lucrezia Borgia (1833),Gemma di Vergy (1834), Lucia di Lammermoor (1835), Maria de Rudenz (1838) and Maria Padilla (1841) display the composer’s mastery of the Italian melodrama fueled by impassioned and unrestrained literature of the Romantic period. His influence on Verdi cannot be underestimated.

Donizetti’s success in dealing with both comic and tragic settings was due in part to his own manic depressive personality. Well acquainted with personal misfortune, Donizetti lost in the span of eight years his mother, father, two infant sons, an infant daughter and Virginia Vasselli, his wife of seven years. He never truly recuperated after her death, locking the door to her room and refusing to utter her name again. His melancholia may have been induced by early symptoms of syphilis, which he contracted as a young man. It may have also been brought on by the responsibility he felt for harboring the disease that likely cost him his wife and children.

Donizetti made his Paris debut in 1835 with Marino Faliero at the Théâtre Italien and later premiered Les martyrs (1840) at the Paris Opéra. A French translation of Lucia made his name a household word, and in 1840 the composer captivated audiences with La favorite, which became hugely popular throughout Europe and North America. One of his very last works for the stage, Dom Sébastien (1843), was cast in the mold of French grand opéra and was extremely well-received.

The composer had hoped to assume Niccolò Zingarelli’s post as director of the Naples Conservatory, but when the 85-year-old composer died in 1837, Donizetti’s considerable musical contribution to the city was overlooked. Preference was given to a lesser composer, Saverio Mercadante, chiefly because he was a native Neapolitan. After his brief stint in Paris, Donizetti turned toward the Austrian state, where he became music director of the imperial theaters. Two of his final works had their premiere at Vienna’s principal venue, the Kärntnertortheater: Linda di Chamounix (1842) and Maria di Rohan (1843). After the success of Linda, he was appointed Composer to the Austrian Court, a position Mozart had held a half century before.

By 1845, symptoms of his illness had become incapacitating, and his erratic behavior could no longer be excused by overwork. With his family’s intervention Donizetti was placed in a French sanitarium at Ivry for 17 months, then transferred to a Paris apartment. There he was regularly visited by musicians and colleagues, including Verdi, but by this point he was paralyzed, disoriented and rarely spoke. In September 1847, friends arranged his return to Bergamo, where he passed his final days at the home of a wealthy patroness.

Minnesota opera opens Donizetti’s Anna Bolena on Saturday, November 10th, at the Ordway.

Visit Minnesota Opera’s blog every week for Music Monday.

Tempo’s Best Dressed

Saturday, September 22, was the opening night for Minnesota Opera’s 50th anniversary season with the stunning production of Nabucco. To quote the Pioneer Press, “When a character slits someone’s throat within seconds of her initial entrance, you know you have a baddy on your hands, and Harris paints an Abigaille as explosive as the volcano erupting in one of Strassberger’s evocative backdrops.” Brenda Harris may have been a “baddy” on stage but it was beauty to our ears. Thank you to the cast, crew, and creative team of Nabucco; we could not think of a better way to kick-off a season.

With the opera season off to an explosive start, it was time to celebrate. Not only is Minnesota Opera celebrating 50 years, but Tempo is celebrating 10 years, which calls for a fabulous Opening Night party at Silver & Gold Soirée! As soon as my date and I stepped into the James J. Hill Library we were both captivated by the sights. From the decorations, champagne, the band and most of all, the guests, we knew it would be a great night! He leaned over me and said, “I’ve never seen so many well dressed people in one place!” I replied, “You’re at the opera, what do you expect?!”

My mission for the evening was to find and single out ‘the best dressed’. Sadly, this disqualified me from being a contender, but I graciously decided to give everyone else a chance and find those starlets and dashing men adorning the evening.

Tempo’s Best Dressed

Meg Waterman © 2012 ClarePix Photography

Meg Waterman time warped from the 1920s in her grandmother’s vintage dress. Not only was she head-to-toe glamorous, her graceful presence and confidence made her outfit shine even more than the sparkles on her dress! Best of all? Her smile!

Tom Theoblad © 2012 ClarePix Photography

Spotted by several ladies from across the room was Tom Theoblad or as I like to call him the “James Bond” of the Soirée. He made the standard tux look daring and dashing.

Kevin Beckey © 2012 ClarePix Photography

Jenna Wolf & Kelly Kuczkowski © 2012 T.Murray

To choose only one lady and gent was way too hard, so I decided to give a couple shout-outs. Honorable mentions include Kevin Beckey, Jenna Wolf and Kelly Kuczkowski. If you know anything about our Development Ladies, you know they always show up dressed to impress.

Ben Jones & Carrie Walker © 2012 ClarePix Photography

Finally, I can’t resist mentioning our current Tempo Board Chair, Ben Jones (him and I pictured to the right). Ben is always well dressed and deserves credit for setting the standard. Thanks Ben!

-Tempo Board Member, Carrie Walker

 

Beyond Doubt

I had an interesting conversation with a friend a few days ago. We were discussing Minnesota Opera’s upcoming world premiere of Doubt. We were both excited about the future run because, in our minds, the opera addresses something relevant and deeply personal to many. Suddenly I wished there were more operas that touched on current events.

With a combination of music and theater, opera has this amazing ability to tap into carnal values, forcing us to recognize them–unrequited love, for instance, and the desire to possess. I am happy and proud to say that I have experienced how opera can make one internalize complex human relationships. Performances like The Grapes of Wrath, Silent Night, and even Madame Butterfly left me with a new perspective on culture, interpersonal relationships, and myself. As much as I love opera’s ability to do this, I sometimes wonder if the year in which the opera was published, or the era in which the opera takes place, can occasionally create sizable distance between the audience and the performance happening on stage.

I think it would be amazing to see how opera addresses current affairs. Watching how the opera approaches topics such as Wall Street, gay marriage, abortion, or the Bush Administration would fascinate me. I imagine an already heated and complex issue, complimented by the richness of opera, and find myself hungry to know the result. I love the vast display of beauty from various eras, and by no means do I intend to criticize a masterpiece. Seeing the richness and depth that opera adds to any classic story or moment in history, I am simply eager to see what it might bring the the dramas of our own time.

- Tempo Board Member Colin Dickau

Visit Minnesota Opera’s blog every week for Tempo Tuesday