Saturday, August 8, 2009

Concert Performance: Porgy & Bess At the Hollywood Bowl


A concert performance by the Los Angeles Philharmonic of “Porgy and Bess” began at the Hollywood Bowl on Sunday night as the opera always does, with “Summertime.” Nicole Cabell sang the lullaby with full voice and fine emotion. The living, as it so often is in this amphitheater, was easy. The evening was early; the light, gently fading; the air, soft and warm. “Porgy” and its composer, George Gershwin, have long belonged at the Bowl.

The most ambitious memorial to Gershwin was an L.A. Philharmonic benefit 72 years ago, after the 38-year-old composer succumbed to a brain tumor at Cedars of Lebanon hospital 5 miles away. That Sept. 8, 1937, the Bowl was crowded over capacity with an audience of 22,000. Excerpts from the opera, which had premiered on Broadway two years earlier, were sung by the original Porgy and Bess, Todd Duncan and Anne Brown. Lily Pons delivered an operatic “Summertime.” Alexander Steinert, the score's first conductor, led the orchestra.

I can’t imagine that many, if any, summers have since passed without Gershwin, in some form or another, at the Bowl. And yet Sunday was the amphitheater’s first full “Porgy.” Somehow such Gershwin specialists as former music director AndrĂ© Previn or former principal guest conductors Michael Tilson Thomas and Simon Rattle never managed to make it happen. Not even former Hollywood Bowl Orchestra music director, John Mauceri, who recorded “Porgy” three years ago in Nashville, could swing a “Porgy.”

The honors went to Britain's Bramwell Tovey, the L.A. Philharmonic’s principal guest conductor at the Bowl. But even this wasn’t an entire “Porgy.” Tovey used Mauceri’s restoration of the original score of the 1935 Broadway production, which trims nearly 45 minutes from the published full operatic version. Modern audiences are accustomed to hearing that full version.

This is controversial. On his recording, Mauceri argues that Gershwin was an overwriter, and the restoration reveals the composer’s final thoughts. In a new Gershwin biography to be published in September, however, Walter Rimler claims that the proper opera is exactly what Gershwin wanted and that he was forced to make the cuts by the producers of the show who rightfully figured a four-hour opera would not be a money-maker on the Great White Way. (The three-hour one wasn’t either, it turned out.)

Kn3bu4nc I, for one, love all the operatic business and bigness of the original “Porgy,” to say nothing of all the terrific music that was cut (including “The Buzzard Song”), but the trims no doubt made sense for the premiere, and they made sense at the Bowl where audiences can be restless. Tovey conducted at a reliably good clip, barely pausing for scene or act breaks (the three-act opera broke in the middle for a single intermission). He had us out of the Bowl in well under three hours.

Even at the Bowl, "Porgy" probably could have withstood less rush and more leisure. Still, Tovey, an engaging cast, an orchestra with Gershwin in its blood but playing the opera for the first time and a well-drilled Pacific Chorale caught the temper of a masterpiece. With “Porgy” at the Bowl, a milestone was reached.

Something can also be said for a concert “Porgy.” Singers decked out in white jackets and splendid gowns in front of a formal symphony orchestra lend dignity to a work of musical greatness and help avoid the queasy racial stereotyping inescapable on a lyric stage.

There was no sense, here, of dramatic consistency. Some singers acted, some didn’t. Some embellished, some didn’t. Some were flamboyant, some were straight. But Tovey’s talent was to make room for all while keeping things going. Nothing felt like indulgence, no moment was dull.

Alfred Walker was a noble, proud Porgy. I’m waiting for a performance where “I’ve Got Plenty O’ Nuttin’ ” is treated as both angry social satire and a swipe at Virgil Thomson (the critic and composer who had a snippy attitude toward Gershwin). Walker treated it as affecting triumph.

Kn3bo8nc Marquita Lister, the Bess on Mauceri’s recording (Cabell is also on it) provided an operatic Bess, grand and tragic. Jermaine Smith, Sporting Life in Los Angeles Opera’s “Porgy” two years ago, grabbed the limelight as an irresistibly over-the-top song-and-dance man. He ended “It Ain’t Necessarily So” in the splits.

There were beautiful, full-throated performances from Leon Williams (Jake) and Lisa Daltirus (Serena). Gregg Baker, who can be a scarily threatening Crown on stage, was this time stern and dispassionate, which made him even more menacing. Gwendolyn Brown was a fabulously vivacious Maria.

“I do not like fake folklore, or fidgety accompaniments, or bittersweet harmony … or plum-pudding orchestration,” Virgil Thomson wrote in his review of the “Porgy” premiere. I do. And I’m not alone.

This week at the Bowl will bring Esa-Pekka Salonen’s Piano Concerto, with its bittersweet harmony and passages the composer labels as “artificial folk music.” Philip Glass, who more than any other has followed Gershwin’s example to create a uniquely American opera, is the master of fidgety accompaniments.
Source:http://latimesblogs.latimes.com

Friday, August 7, 2009

Big Brother 11 Episode 13 - Somebody Gets the Special Power Of Mystery



Last episode - Ronnie and Lydia were left on the block after Michele won the POV. Tonight, everything could change though, as someone would be given the new special mystery power. The Coup D'Etat would allow one player to change the nominations either this week or next. Who received this power? And will they use it tonight? Let's find out!

Paranoid Russell: Near the start of tonight's episode, Michele and Jordan were talking about books when Russell came into the backyard. When Russell came over they just happened to stop talking and when they told him they were just talking about books he didn't believe it. Paranoid are we? They were really talking about books. Russell asked Jordan later what they were talking about and he said they really were talking about books. Russell thinks everyone is talking about him behind his back. Michele told them that Chima, Jessie and Natalie had always been out to get him, so he shouldn't be surprised.

Russell asked Jessie about Chima wanting to backdoor him and Jessie said it wasn't true. He said she has never said that and Michele is the liar. Unfortunately for Jessie, Big Brother Flashback showed Chima saying Russell should go home. Chima denied it and called Michele in to say it to her face... and Michele said that she never said anything about Chima backdooring Russell. What??? Are they all playing mind games with Russell or what? Michele denied saying it because she was mad he told Chima anything. Now both girls were acting mad and both were lying. No wonder Russell is going nuts. The fight continued outside the HOH room as both girls wanted Russell to look like the rat of the house. Chima just wouldn't let it go and the other houseguests had to pull her away to keep them apart.

Ronnie "gives up": Ronnie decides to lay it on thick and pretend he knows he's going home and just wants a sympathy vote from Jordan. He hopes Jordan doesn't know he's already got 3 votes on his side and her 4th vote would make him a winner. Jordan and Jeff furthered their showmance tonight by making out. Too bad Ronnie came in and interrupted... farted... and begged for a sympathy vote.

Coup D'Etat: Sometime before tonight's live show, the mystery power was given to..... JEFF! Jeff received the ultimate power and the ability to change the nominations either this week or next. The catch it is a secret power and he's not allowed to tell anyone in the house. He wanted Ronnie to go home tonight, but would he use it tonight to maybe throw a wrench in the plans? Julie asked if the Coup D'Etat would like to use this power tonight and Jeff stayed quiet. Good one! Save it for next week when you might need it! In reality, you could say Jeff is already the HOH for the next week since he will ultimately decide who to put up.

The votes: After Lydia gave her short speech, Ronnie gave his fake cry speech and told Michele she's the "worst human being I've ever had the misfortune of meeting and I absolutely feel sorry for you." Wait a minute... didn't Ronnie back-stab Michele many times? Remember when he told the whole house Michele voted to save Chima when it was actually him? I'm sure the house isn't that dumb.



  • Jessie - Lydia

  • Kevin - Ronnie

  • Natalie - Lydia

  • Chima - Lydia

  • Jeff - Ronnie

  • Jordan - Ronnie

  • Michele - Ronnie


Woo hoo the rat is gone! However, with Jessie and crew voting for Lydia, they drew a line in the sand and said they were on the other side. It's obvious now that there is a divide, and this week's HOH is very important.... or actually it's not important at all because Jeff has all the power!

HOH Competition: Throughout the week, viewers called in messages for the houseguests. These pieces of advice played randomly throughout the night. The HOH Competition had the contestants trying to remember this advice and answer questions based on what they heard. The last one standing would win HOH.

Michele and Lydia were the first ones eliminated. Jessie was eliminated next, followed by Jordan and Jeff. At this point I was thinking it would be AWESOME if Chima won HOH and then had her nominations overturned at the end of the week! Chima got the next question right, eliminating the other two players. She was beyond excited, but also beyond clueless that Jeff can change everything on Thursday!! This is the best case scenario for Jeff fans because it's obvious Chima will put up two members of Jeff's team and he can just turn around and take them off the block on Thursday.

Next Episode: Sunday 8/7c

Chima will nominate two people for eviction... but it doesn't really matter because Jeff can change everything on Thursday! Can't we just skip to Thursday?

Did you miss it?