Melinda has spent the past couple of weeks interviewing our Opera Workshop students in order to put together this new video about the Workshop. We’re constantly blown away by the brilliance of these kids! See and hear about what they’d been doing (and what’s up for 2015) right here!
Act Too Studio Opera Workshop – About the Workshop from Act Too Studio on Vimeo.
Now that the Workshop has really taken on a life of its own, we’ve also created a new Facebook Page. Like the page to keep up on all the latest news! We’ll be sharing photos, videos, and tales of our operatic exploits, hopefully for years to come. Also: Opera Workshop 2105!
Congrats to all the students in the Act Too Studio Opera Workshop!
Secondly, this summer we’ll be presenting a full production of Gian Carlo Menotti’s The Medium! Here’s our cast (in order of appearance):
We began the season with classes, specifically “Voice, Speech, and Spontaneity for the Actor,” taught by Joseph Bromfield—whom I met, incidentally, when I hired him as an actor at my previous job. Joseph’s background includes a lot of classical theater, so he was a natural choice for this workshop.
This was my first full-time summer here at the studio, and I was apparently determined to make it as full-time as possible! I began with a workshop as well—this time, a version of my class “Music Appreciation: Total Arts Immersion” designed for our younger students. Since the class was originally structured for teens, I expected to have to adjust it considerably for the pre-teen set, but of course these kids astonished me with their thoughtfulness and creativity!
Things then took a more serious turn, as we began production for the studio’s first production,
While Goblin Market has, since its publication, been dissected as a religious allegory, an exploration of Victorian sexuality, or even an addiction narrative, the aspect of the poem I’ve always been most interested in is its portrayal of Laura and Lizzie’s devotion to each other, both as sisters and as young women taking care of each other in an era when women and women’s lives were largely marginalized. Whether their experience with the goblins is real, metaphorical, or entirely imagined, the result is a deepening of the sisters’ love for each other and their recognition of its value in their lives.


Because Figaro is a comedy, we chose to study the act in English (it’s not funny if nobody knows what’s happening), mainly using the Boosey & Hawkes Royal edition with Edward Dent’s translation. Though that edition includes at least two small, traditional cuts (in the duet, “Aprite, presto, aprite”), we made no additional cuts in the score ourselves. Students were expected to learn as much of their music in advance as possible, so that the workshop itself could focus on putting it all together.
Though the initial goal of the workshop was to introduce students to Mozart’s brilliant work, the actual result was more exciting than I’d ever anticipated. Students who spent significant time working on their roles found themselves strengthening their voices and increasing their skill levels in areas like sight-reading and intonation at an astonishing rate. 
