Harvey Milk (opera)

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Harvey Milk
Opera by Stewart Wallace
Harvey Milk in 1978 at Mayor Moscone's Desk crop.jpg
The opera's protagonist, gay activist and politician Harvey Milk, photographed in 1978
LibrettistMichael Korie
Premiere
January 21, 1995 (1995-01-21)

Harvey Milk is an American opera in three acts, with music by Stewart Wallace to a libretto by Michael Korie.[1] The opera was a joint commission by Houston Grand Opera, New York City Opera, and San Francisco Opera, and received its premiere on 21 January 1995 by Houston Grand Opera. The opera is based on the life and death of the American gay activist and politician Harvey Milk, who was assassinated along with San Francisco mayor George Moscone on 27 November 1978.

Background and performance history[]

John Dew originally suggested the idea for a stage work based on the life of Harvey Milk to David Gockley, then the general director of Houston Grand Opera. Gockley then approached Stewart Wallace and Michael Korie, who had been looking for a new opera subject, after their previous collaborations on the dance opera Kabbalah and the two-act opera Where's Dick?. The latter had its world premiere at Houston Grand Opera in 1989.[2] According to Gockley, Dew's original conception to stage the work as a musical was:

"...very, very weird, with strange dreamlike drag ballets and the like. He had a distorted idea of the subject."[2]

The artistic relationship with Dew subsequently deteriorated in 1992 when Dew went to Houston to direct the premiere of Robert Moran's opera, Desert of Roses. When both the opera company and Wallace found Dew's concept unacceptable, Harvey Milk took form as an opera instead. Houston Grand Opera, New York City Opera, and San Francisco Opera jointly shared in the commission of the opera. The work premiered on January 21, 1995 in Houston.[3][4][5] Christopher Alden was the director, with set designs by Paul Steinberg, choreography by Ross Petty, and fight direction by Michael Kirkland.

New York City Opera then presented the opera with the same cast in April 1995.[6] Both the composer and librettist considered the New York premiere "a debacle". The conductor, Christopher Keene, was ill with AIDS during much of the rehearsal period. According to Korie:

"Christopher was very committed to this, but my hair went gray. The chorus never learned the music. The stage manager was never around."[7]

John Dew produced the German premiere of the opera at the Opernhaus Dortmund in February 1996. The Dortmund production used a German translation and a completely different staging devised by Dew.[8][9]

Wallace and Korie revised the opera for the San Francisco Opera performances, in collaboration with Donald Runnicles, music director of the company, and Peter Grunberg, a vocal coach with the company. Wallace tightened the score, and simplified the orchestration and the rhythmic notation, with a reduction in the opera's running time from nearly three hours to just over two. The changes to the libretto included reduction of the role of Dan White and of the final act, and the addition of two new arias for Harvey Milk.[9][10][11] San Francisco Opera premiered the revised version, considered the definitive edition,[9] at the Orpheum Theatre on 9 November 1996 and ran for eight performances. The principal roles were sung by the original Houston cast, apart from the role of Milk's mother which was sung by Elizabeth Bishop. In the Houston production, Juliana Gondek had sung both that role and the role of Dianne Feinstein. The November 27 performance was timed to coincide with the 18th annual candlelight march through the city's Castro District commemorating the day that Moscone and Milk were assassinated. The march ended in front of the Orpheum Theatre, and several of Milk's friends and associates appeared in the opera's Act 2 parade scene.[7][12] The première San Francisco production of 1996 was recorded in November and later released on Teldec Records.[13]

For a scheduled 2020 revival of the opera in commemoration of the 90th anniversary of Harvey Milk's birth, Opera Parallèle collaborated with Wallace and Korie on a new two-act version of the opera, scaled to allow smaller companies to present the opera.[14] The COVID-19 pandemic caused the postponement of this scheduled production.[15]

Roles[]

Role Voice type Premiere cast, 21 January 1995[16]
Conductor: Ward Holmquist
Harvey Milk, gay activist and member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors baritone Robert Orth
Dan White, member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and Milk's assassin tenor Raymond Very
George Moscone, Mayor of San Francisco bass Gidon Saks
Dianne Feinstein, member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors mezzo-soprano or soprano Juliana Gondek
Scott Smith, Milk's lover tenor Bradley Williams
Henry Wong, Milk's associate countertenor Randall Wong
Messenger baritone James Maddalena
Anne Kronenberg, Milk's campaign manager mezzo-soprano Jill Grove
Medora Payne, an 11-year old supporter of Milk child soprano Lilly Akseth
Harvey Milk as a boy boy soprano Matthew Cavenaugh
Harvey Milk's mother ('Mama'), concentration camp inmates, San Francisco supervisors, men at the opera, closet lovers, reporters, people of San Francisco

In addition to the ten principal roles, the opera has over 70 smaller singing roles. Except for the singer of the title role, the principal cast members also sang multiple smaller roles.[12][16]

Recording[]

  • Wallace: Harvey Milk – Robert Orth (Harvey Milk), Raymond Very (Dan White), Gidon Saks (George Moscone), Elizabeth Bishop (Mama), Juliana Gondek (Dianne Feinstein), Bradley Williams (Scott Smith), James Maddalena (Messenger), Randall Wong (Henry Wong); San Francisco Opera Orchestra and Chorus; Donald Runnicles (conductor). Recorded at Davies Symphony Hall, San Francisco, November 1996; released July 1998. Label: Teldec. OCLC 38981451[17]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ K. Robert Schwarz (1995-04-02). "A Brash Opera Holds a Mirror To Gay Life In America". The New York Times. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  2. ^ a b Mark Swed (1995-01-15). "A Life Custom-Made for Opera: Harvey Milk, gay activist, San Francisco politician and martyr is the soul of a new contemporary work". The New York Times. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  3. ^ John von Rhein (1995-01-23). "Harvey Milk Premieres with Timely Tribute to Gay Martyr". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  4. ^ Edward Rothstein (1995-02-12). "Heroes Make Good Opera; Icons Don't". The New York Times. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  5. ^ Edward Rothstein (1995-01-23). "Harvey Milk Opens in Houston with the Reverence Built In". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  6. ^ Bernard Holland (1995-04-06). "Harvey Milk, a Gay Opera as a Grand Coming-Out Party". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  7. ^ a b Tim Golden (1995-04-06). "A Gay Camelot Goes Home to Find It's True". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  8. ^ Jürgen Otten (1996-02-24). "John Dew inszenierte das Zeitstück "Harvey Milk" in Dortmund: Schwulen-Problematik in der Oper". Berliner Zeitung. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  9. ^ a b c Mansouri, Lofti (2010). Lotfi Mansouri: An Operatic Journey, pp. 235–237. University Press of New England. ISBN 1555537065
  10. ^ Timothy Pfaff (1996-11-09). "Harvey Milk comes home". San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  11. ^ Joshua Kosman (1996-11-09). "Welcome Home, Harvey Milk / Local story adds to moving S.F. Opera premiere". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  12. ^ a b San Francisco Opera Performance Archives. Harvey Milk. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  13. ^ David Schiff (1998-06-07). "Is Headline Opera Yesterday's News?". The New York Times. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  14. ^ "Opera Parallèle presents new production of Stewart Wallace and Michael Korie's Harvey Milk marking 90th anniversary of his birth" (Press release). Opera Parallèle. 21 January 2020. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  15. ^ "Harvey Milk, Presented by Opera Parallèle - Postponed" (Press release). Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. 2020. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  16. ^ a b "New Works Directory: Harvey Milk". Archived from the original on August 10, 2020. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  17. ^ Law, Joe K. (2000). "Harvey Milk. Stewart Wallace". The Opera Quarterly. 16 (4): 711–715. doi:10.1093/oq/16.4.711.

External links[]

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