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.

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Minnesota Opera’s premiere of ‘The Dream of Valentino’

Minnesota Opera is excited to announce its next New Works Initiative production, The Dream of Valentino. Composed by Dominick Argento, with libretto by Charles Nolte, as a joint commission by Washington and Dallas operas, the work received its world premiere in 1994 at The Kennedy Center, where it was described by the Chicago Tribune as “visually and theatrically … a thumping success.” Eric Simonson (The Grapes of Wrath, Silent Night) directs and Maestro Christoph Campestrini (Werther) conducts this revised premiere as a part of the company’s 2013–2014 season.


This YouTube clip is of Argento’s Valentino Dances, an orchestral suite of two dances premiered at Minnesota Orchestra shortly after the opera’s premiere.

“I have known Dominick since my first season when Minnesota Opera premiered Casanova’s Homecoming in 1985 and have always admired the freshness and vibrancy of his works,” said Artistic Director Dale Johnson.The Dream of Valentino is the only major Argento opera that we have not staged and I thought it imperative, as we began the New Works Initiative, that we invest in producing his entire canon. After I approached Dominick to discuss this revival, he spent the summer making major changes to literally give Valentino a new beginning. By reworking the dramaturgy and focusing more on Valentino the artist, Dominick feels that the work will better embody how Hollywood uses its artists and tosses them away when they are no longer convenient.”

The Dream of Valentino is part of Minnesota Opera’s New Works Initiative, a landmark program designed to invigorate the operatic repertoire with an infusion of contemporary works. Produced as part of the Initiative: an American premiere, The Adventures of Pinocchio (Dove); two revivals, Casanova’s Homecoming (Argento) and Wuthering Heights (Herrmann); and a world premiere, the Pulitzer Prize Award-winning Silent Night (Puts). Doubt, composed by Douglas J. Cuomo with libretto by John Patrick Shanley, makes its world premiere in January 2013. Following The Dream of Valentino, a yet-to-be-announced world premiere will complete the seventh and final year of the Initiative in the 2014–2015 season. Since fundraising began in March 2008, Minnesota Opera has raised more than $6.68 million to support the New Works Initiative.

About The Dream of Valentino
Rudolph Valentino, an Italian immigrant, becomes a popular Broadway dancer after his arrival in 1913 and aspires to become a great stage actor. A Hollywood film mogul discovers him and makes a note to watch him in the future even though he is on contract with a rival studio. Valentino signs a personal contract with the famous actress Alla Nazimova. Afterwards, he proposes to the actress Jean Acker what turns out to be a disastrous marriage. He becomes an overnight sensation with the release of The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, and the Mogul buys out Valentino’s Metro contract. In the course of filming The Sheik, the beleaguered Mogul finds out about both Valentino’s personal contract with Nazimova and his potentially scandalous marriage with Acker. As a result, Valentino is forced against his will into his next film, which fails miserably at the box office. He loses control of his career, and drops out of Hollywood, taking up the life of an itinerant actor and dancer. Valentino dies at the age of 31 in New York as headlines proclaim his passing and propel him into legend.

About the composer
Dominick Argento, considered to be America’s pre-emininent composer of lyric opera, was born in York, Pennsylvania in 1927. He earned his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees at Peabody Conservatory and his Ph.D. from the Eastman School of Music. Fulbright and Guggenheim Fellowships allowed him to study in Italy and following his Fulbright, Argento became music director of Hilltop Opera in Baltimore, and taught theory and composition at the Eastman School. In 1958, he joined the faculty of the Department of Music at the University of Minnesota, where he taught until 1997. He now holds the rank of Professor Emeritus.

Following his arrival in Minnesota, Argento helped to found Minnesota Opera (then Center Opera Company) in 1963 and premiered his opera, The Masque of Angels, at the company’s opening. Since the early 1970’s Argento’s operas have been heard with increasing frequency abroad. Among these are Minnesota Opera commissions, The Voyage of Edgar Allen Poe (1976) and Casanova’s Homecoming (1984), which Robert Jacobson of Opera News called “a masterpiece.”

Dominick Argento received the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1975 for his song cycle From the Diary of Virginia Woolf. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1979 and in 1997 he was honored with the title of Composer Laureate to the Minnesota Orchestra, a lifetime appointment.

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.

What Fat Lady?

I would like to take a moment of your time to be a bit less refined and admire opera for qualities rarely discussed.

When considering the average opera singer, most in the general public think of the classic scary woman, spear in hand, wearing a horned helmet and pigtails. Hopefully these will help put that image to rest.

Enjoy! (And you’re welcome.)

Composer Kevin Puts, winner of the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Silent Night

Mezzo-soprano Roxana Constantinescu

Minnesota Opera production of Cos“i fan tutte, music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Denyce Graves, Mezzo-soprano

Bass-baritone Rodolfo Nieto

 

 

 

 

 

 

- Colin Dickau, Tempo Board of Directors

Visit Minnesota Opera’s blog every week for Tempo Tuesday

Previews, Pints, and Popera

This will be a busy month for Tempo!

If you don’t know Tempo well, October would be a great month to get to know us. The two events happening this month are so different, I feel they really show off the multiple facets of Tempo.

You’ll see what I mean. Here is what Tempo has going on this month:

Opera on Tap: Tempo Style

This event has always been a favorite of mine. If you’ve read my previous posts, you’ll know that now and then I think it’s nice to be able to go out and enjoy opera without the suit and tie. With events like Opera on Tap, you can see that Tempo gets that too. The event takes place at Honey, which, if you haven’t been there before, is kind of a sexy bar. The bar is below street level and I always feel like I’m walking into some place secretive when I’m there. Walk down the stairs and relax as opera singers sing opera favorites. Feel free to grace us all with your finest jeans and t-shirt. Enjoy your beer/cocktail, enjoy your friends, enjoy the music!

Thursday, October 18, 6pm – 9pm
Honey
205 East Hennepin Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55414

Boleyn: For Love, For Conquest (Anna Bolena Preview Event)

This is another event that I’ve been looking forward to. I’ve always loved learning about the Tudors and I was excited to see that Minnesota Opera is doing Anna Bolena. I’ll admit that deep down, I’ve always had a soft spot for juicy drama and scandal, so naturally, I’ve always been drawn to the story of Anne Boleyn. This event sounds fascinating to me. Here, you’re invited to join Tempo at Kieran’s Irish Pub, where there will be a panel discussion. Once there, Tempo will show you how this juicy true story made it from the pages of history to novels, to movies, and now, to the stage of the Minnesota Opera. This is a rare opportunity to take a peak inside the lives of royalty, and a rare opportunity to see how the creative minds of the Minnesota Opera work! John Birge from Classical MPR will be moderating a panel discussion that includes Professor John Watkins from the University of Minnesota, Director Kevin Newbury, and opera stars Keri Alkema (Anne) and David Portillo (Lord Percy).

Wednesday, October 24, 6pm – 9pm
Kieran’s Irish Pub  (Titanic Room)
601 First Avenue North
Minneapolis, MN 55403

Hope to see you guys there!

- Colin Dickau, Tempo Board of Directors

 Visit Minnesota Opera’s blog every week for Tempo Tuesday

Welcome Back, Jessica

 

New York City costume designer Jessica Jahn revisits Minnesota Opera this season to join the creative team of Anna Bolena. Watch Brenda Harris sing a Bel Canto masterpiece as Queen Elizabeth in Minnesota Opera’s 2010 production of Roberto Devereux, wearing a stunning red gown designed by Jahn.

“Jessica Jahn evokes the Tudor period with a… striking red gown [which] gives no doubt of her sovereignty, “ raved Examiner.com, “[and] Elisabetta’s attire grows increasingly subdued over the course of work in reflection of her progressively fraught emotions and exposed humanity.”

Subscribe to Minnesota Opera’s Youtube channel for a closer look at ‘Anna Bolena’.

Minnesota Opera Votes No

I feel anxious about casting my vote November 6th. I’m sure lots of people feel that way when considering the next American President. The vote this November, however, addresses something so personal to me that it leaves me feeling uneasy. In the past, I’ve felt removed from the many political issues that have come and gone; my family, for the most part, has never been greatly affected by any major political shifts, and this is the first time in my life that we will be voting on something so personal. It’s the strangest feeling. I think the best way to describe it, and perhaps why I feel so uneasy, is that it feels as if I’m voting on whether or not my love is valid. I wonder, if my love is not considered valid, or is somehow considered less than yours, what am I?

It’s taken me years to get here. I first told myself that was I gay when I was 9 years old, standing in my parents’ backyard. It scared the crap out of me. I spent a lot of time praying, asking what I did wrong, and wondering what I was supposed to learn from it all. To this day, the memories of those moments continue to make my heart ache and go out to all of those thousands and thousands of young gay boys and girls living these very same moments. I didn’t come out until my sophomore year of college. Nothing major happened in my life to make me come out; perhaps it was the fact that “nothing major” was happening. I became very good at hiding my feelings, and very good at pretending to be someone whom no one would suspect was gay. My sophomore year, I decided I wanted to experience life like everyone else did. I wanted to be in love with someone, and to know what it was like to feel that intertwined physical and emotional bond.

After I came out, it took me a few years to figure out exactly who I was. I still get emotional when I think about how many years I spent terrified to tell my family that I was gay, and then now, realizing the overflowing amounts of love they’ve shown me. I’ve taken one step further and found someone so amazing, I finally get what that love feels like! Our lives are great! We’ve moved in together. I spend my week trying to work my way up in the world, while he painstakingly finishes his PhD. I have an amazing set of parents, a sister and brother-in-law who have given me two nieces and a nephew who I absolutely love! I reflect upon all of this and smile, but there’s always a crack in the image. The whole world doesn’t see what I see, or what my family and friends see. I am capable of the same love as you. And my love is worth as much as your love.

I am beyond thrilled that Minnesota Opera has publicly supported the VOTE NO campaign, and from the bottom of my heart I would like to thank them! This November 6th, I will be VOTING NO, because in my mind, voting no is telling those gay boys and girls that they will grow up in a world where they feel just as valuable as any straight person, and that they deserve just as much as everyone else.  I very much hope that you will reach out to others and join me in voting no on November 6th.

- Colin Dickau, Tempo Board of Directors

 Visit Minnesota Opera’s blog every week for Tempo Tuesday 

The First Decade

An Interview with Norton Hintz – Founding Board Chair

Norton Hintz Then

I came to Minneapolis in 1952 to take a faculty position at the University, and I met some people who were members of an invitation-only volunteer organization called the Center Arts Council. I worked closely with the Walker Art Center and around that time, the director was Martin Friedman. The Center Arts Council put on various programs – dance, lectures, architecture and concerts – and I got involved with the music committee. After various successes, including the famous water music concert in Loring Park, I became chairman.

While visiting Copenhagen, I went to the opera quite often and really liked the idea of an opera company. Minneapolis only had the St. Paul Opera nearby, which was sort of a “pick-up” company that brought in singers and scenery. So when I returned, the Guthrie Theater was being built, and the T. B. Walker Foundation had given the land in back of the museum for the theater. In return, the Walker was to have one night a week while the plays were on and four or five nights when it was dark. I felt that it was our chance to start a modest little opera company. We didn’t think in terms of a permanent company at that point, but intended to put on small-scale pieces, chamber operas using local singers and local musicians. Our first opportunity was at the close of the Guthrie’s season in 1963. I immediately got in touch with the leading composer, Dominick Argento, and also Tom Nee, who was the conductor of the Minneapolis Civic Orchestra. We formed a committee, and it was decided we would start with the baroque opera Venus and Adonis and a commission by Argento, The Masque of Angels.

An unofficial general manager, I was also doing research in physics and teaching. My secretary nearly quit because of all the calls coming to her, and we had trouble with the unions and the set people – all the problems you would expect from a start-up organization. But somehow we got it on the stage. The Guthrie people laughed at us, but congratulated us  afterwards. The theater at the time seated 1,437 seats, and we had about 900 the first night, which was very good, all things considered. It was a fairly big success and the critics praised it. For our second opera that season, we chose Benjamin Britten’s comic opera Albert Herring. Essentially everyone was a volunteer except the singers and musicians, who were paid, but not much. Our total budget turned out to be about $30,000 that year. Critics came from The New York Times because they had heard about this new, innovative opera in Minneapolis and we got a rave review.

One of the early things Martin did was to encourage that we use young artists as set designers rather than the traditional Broadway people. One
he discovered was this kid in his early 20s at MCAD named Robert Israel, and of course Bob became famous all over the world. He designed several
very innovative productions for us. As we got bigger and bigger, Martin gently pushed us out, and we then formed our own non-profit board. I was chairman for the first couple of years, and Martin had hired John Ludwig as general manager, realizing that I couldn’t carry that role any longer.

Norton Hintz and Family Today

John brought a colleague from Yale, Wesley Balk, who became the artistic director. They started doing a combination of chamber operas by Britten and Haydn alongside world premieres. The opera started to expand beyond small-scale works. It had outgrown the Center Arts Council and so Center Opera was a misnomer. At some point, it morphed into Minnesota Opera.

Minnesota Opera was built and founded by a number of key people. All I can claim credit for saying is, “How about we do an opera at the Guthrie.”

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