Michael is playing Thomas Scott in Canadian Opera Company’s upcoming production of Harry Somer’s LOUIS RIEL) with colleagues Russell Braun (Louis Riel) and James Westman (Sir John A. Macdonald). Here is an interview about the production!
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Michael is playing Thomas Scott in Canadian Opera Company’s upcoming production of Harry Somer’s LOUIS RIEL) with colleagues Russell Braun (Louis Riel) and James Westman (Sir John A. Macdonald). Here is an interview about the production!
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9 MAY 2017 – 7:30 p.m.
ST-JEAN BAPTISTE CHURCH
4237 Henri-Julien, Montreal
ALINE KUTAN, soprano
LAUREN SEGAL, mezzo-soprano
MICHAEL COLVIN, tenor
JAMES WESTMAN, baritone (Elijah)
In collaboration with
McGILL CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
VANIER COLLEGE
BORIS BROTT and PHILIPPE BOURQUE, conductors
November 9 – 19, 2016
at English National Opera, London
[From ENO.org]
Beautiful. Damaged. Seductive. Lethal. Lulu’s whoever you want her to be.
Everyone falls victim to her fascinating beauty and irresistible magnetism. But it would be too simple to see her as a dangerous and amoral seductress. Maybe Lulu herself is really the victim? Even before she meets someone more deadly than she is.
With a highly emotional and intensely expressive score, Lulu is one of the seminal operas of the twentieth century. Berg’s gritty exploration of sexual desire comes to ENO in unforgettable staging from celebrated artist and director William Kentridge.
Conductor Mark Wigglesworth returns to ENO to conduct this major event of ENO’s season. Brenda Rae makes her company debut as Berg’s femme fatale, alongside a cast including Sarah Connolly, Willard White and ENO Harewood Artist Nicky Spence.
‘Music, theatre and visual art… at the highest calibre’
The Guardian
‘Visually stunning and searing’
New York Times
Creative Team:
Mark Wigglesworth, Conductor
William Kentridge, Director
Luc De Wit, Co–director
Sabine Theunissen, Set Designer
Greta Goiris, Costume Designer
Urs Schönebaum, Lighting Designer
Catherine Meyburgh, Video Designer
Kim Gunning, Video Operator
Richard Stokes, Translator
Cast:
Brenda Rae, Lulu
Sarah Connolly, Countess Geschwitz
Michael Colvin, Painter/Second Client
James Morris, Dr Schön/Jack the Ripper
Nicky Spence, Alwa
Willard White, Schigolch
David Soar, Animal Tamer/Athlete
Jeffrey Lloyd-Roberts, Prince/Manservant/Marquis
Clare Presland, Schoolboy/Dresser/Waiter
Graeme Danby, Theatre Manager/Banker
Sarah Labiner, Fifteen-year-old Girl
Rebecca de Pont Davies, Girl’s Mother
Sarah Champion, Female Artist
Geoffrey Dolton, Journalist
Joanna Dudley, Solo Performer
Andrea Fabi, Solo Performer
from operadeparis.fr: ABOUT | TICKETS
Palais Garnier – from 20 May to 12 June 2016
New show
“Where am I? Is it day? I don’t know what to say. Are these hands mine? How I long to know who I am!”
– Lear, Partie II, scène 6
Berlioz wrote nothing more than an overture to Shakespeare’s King Lear. Debussy went no further than the first two numbers of the incidental music he had agreed to write for André Antoine’s production of the play. Verdi, who procrastinated endlessly over this “vast and tortuous” tragedy that had haunted him since 1843, confessed towards the end of his life that the scene where Lear finds himself on the moor had terrified him. Hoping to do justice to the role “less out of theatrical ambition” than because he had long “believed that the various levels of the inner and outer drama could be adapted and effectively expressed in music”, the great German baritone Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau appealed to Benjamin Britten before turning to the German composer, Aribert Reimann.
At first hesitant, the latter finally set to work. After repeatedly reading the play, the work eventually took root and he stored away the music in “a sort of drawer somewhere in [his] head”.
A commission from the Munich Staatsoper in 1975 triggered the actual composition. “Rarely has anyone depicted so convincingly – except perhaps Alban Berg in Wozzeck – the fact that a man’s solitude is due to his own incapacity to see those around him”, wrote the first performer of this major 20th century opera composed at his initiative. This new production by Calixto Bieito marks the first revival of the work at the Paris Opera since its French premiere in 1982.
Opera in two parts (1978)
Music: Aribert Reimann
Libretto: Claus H. Henneberg
After William Shakespeare, King Lear
In German
Conductor: Fabio Luisi
Director: Calixto Bieito
König Lear: Bo Skovhus
König von Frankreich: Gidon Saks
Herzog von Albany: Andreas Scheibner
Herzog von Cornwall: Michael Colvin
Graf von Kent: Kor-Jan Dusseljee
Graf von Gloster: Lauri Vasar
Edgar: Andrew Watts
Edmund: Andreas Conrad
Goneril: Ricarda Merbeth
Regan: Erika Sunnegardh
Cordelia: Annette Dasch
Narr: Ernst Alisch
Bedienter: Nicolas Marie
Ritter: Lucas Prisor
Paris Opera Orchestra and Chorus
French and English surtitles
Broadcast on France Musique on 18 June.
Michael was proud to sing with his alma mater St. Michael’s Choir School in their Anniversary Concert celebrating 50 years of Christmas concerts at Massey Hall this past weekend (Dec 5/6, 2015)! He sang O Holy Night with the massed choir of students, and also sang with the alumni choir. Jordan De Souza, another illustrious alumni of the school, was guest conductor.
From TCDSB.org:
St. Michael Choir School’s Golden Jubilee at Massey Hall will showcase the school’s signature excellence in artistic performance, and will welcome special guests, including distinguished alumni Michael Colvin and Jordan De Souza, along with Lori Gemmel, True North Brass, and the SMCSAA Jubilee Choir. The concerts take place Saturday, December 5 and Sunday, December 6 at 3 p.m. at Massey Hall. Tickets can be purchased by calling 416-872-4255 or visiting the Roy Thomson Hall Box Office. To buy tickets online, visit www.masseyhall.com.
Take part in our Christmas tradition and let us become a part of yours. Let heaven and nature sing as you join us in celebrating glorious years at Massey Hall.
From MasseyHall.com:
Massey Hall’s longest-running repeat performers return this year for the 50th anniversary of their beloved Christmas concerts on December 5th and 6th. Hear the choristers of Bond Street as their voices swell in the singing of Christmas favourites old and new, as well as the great choral masterworks of such composers as Palestrina, Bruckner, Schubert and Bach.
Founded in 1937 with the purpose of providing sacred music for services at St. Michael’s Cathedral in downtown Toronto, St. Michael’s Choir School is a centre for musical and academic excellence. Each student admitted to the Choir School is trained in vocal, technical and instrumental music, and sings in at least one of the school’s choirs. The concert features the music of boys from Grade 3 to Grade 12. This year, make St. Michael’s Choir School at Massey Hall a part of your Toronto Christmas tradition.