Last August, the Glimmerglass Opera in Cooperstown, N.Y., suddenly found itself short an opera for the coming — now current — season. Stephen Hartke, who had been commissioned to write one, informed the company that the music would not be finished on time. Since opera productions are typically planned three years in advance, the company had already hired the director, the designers and the singers. In searching for a replacement, they had something very specific in mind: a contemporary work that would fit the singers and the creative team already under contract.There's only one more performance to catch, on August 22: road trip, anyone?
Stewart Robertson, the company's music director, remembered an opera he had seen many years before, "The Mines of Sulphur" by Richard Rodney Bennett. It was given its premiere at Sadler's Wells in London in 1965. The production then toured, and Mr. Robertson, at 17, saw it in his hometown, Glasgow. "I can still envision the wonderfully gloomy set of that English country house," Mr. Robertson said recently. "And as the production began, I found myself transfixed. The libretto is a real page-turner. The score is sensuous, colorful, glittering and skillful. I've never forgotten the impact of that opera."
The bulk of the CSMonitor article is about James Maddalena, who is playing a role that doesn't actually require much singing. As the author fills in some background on Maddalena's career, he drops another title, Stewart Wallace's Harvey Milk, which I have not heard yet either.
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