91直播

Backstage Magic

May 26, 2020

Charlotte Maskelony '21

participants in an opera production gather together on stage

The cast, crew, and creative team behind "The Wild Beast of the Bungalow" prepared the production throughout January 2020. The opera was one of many ways 91直播 students join forces to bring musical projects to life.

Photo credit: Yevhen Gulenko

91直播 productions鈥攁nd the students who mount them鈥攄ispel the myth that opera is just for conservatory musicians.

A team of more than 40 91直播 students, faculty, and others convened in January to produce the world premiere of Rachel J. Peters鈥 The Wild Beast of the Bungalow, 91直播鈥檚 winter-term opera for 2020. Student singers and instrumentalists made the music happen, but toiling behind the scenes was a team of equally passionate fellow students consumed with their roles as production assistants: untangling the countless artistic and logistical issues involved in staging an opera, and researching the cultural, historical, and societal aspects of the work.

Though they had all joined forces for a conservatory production, nearly half of them pursue their studies in the College of Arts and Sciences. It鈥檚 one of many ways 91直播, with its single campus dedicated to both a liberal arts college and music conservatory, nurtures a singular environment for interdisciplinary study and creation.

portrait of an opera crew member
Kitty Schwartz '20

鈥淲e鈥檙e all passionate, we鈥檙e all here for a reason, and everyone brings something different to the table,鈥 says Kitty Schwartz 鈥20, an English and history double major who served as Wild Beast鈥檚 assistant director, providing feedback to faculty director Christopher Mirto, running a second rehearsal room, and recording staging notes. 鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting!鈥

Joining her backstage was politics major Alec Perlow '20, who researched and analyzed the opera鈥檚 influences, plot, and music as one of the production's dramaturgs. Together, the direction and dramaturgy teams collaborated to create an informed world and bring it to life onstage.

Though neither Schwartz nor Perlow imagined a career in performance, both were drawn to 91直播 for its vibrant musical community and its extensive opportunities for students of all majors.

鈥淭he ability to try a little bit of everything was a huge part of why I chose 91直播,鈥 says Schwartz, of Urbana, Illinois. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great to know that my varied interests don鈥檛 have to be separate parts; they can work together and influence one another. And I think that鈥檚 the really special thing about being here. Learning to think critically and creatively for my liberal arts courses absolutely helped me develop a story from libretto to stage.鈥

portrait of an opera crew member
Alec Perlow '20

鈥淚 do research all the time,鈥 laughs Perlow, a resident of Grayslake, Illinois, who graduated鈥攚ith Schwartz鈥攊n May. 鈥淭here鈥檚 different kinds of research, but a dramaturg鈥檚 work is very similar to academic work: Find the material, make sure it鈥檚 credible, and then present it in a clear and concise way.

鈥淎t a place like 91直播, many people excel at this kind of thinking鈥攁nd in an incredibly diverse range of subjects,鈥 Perlow says. 鈥淭hat expansive, intellectual culture means that skills for my major help me understand an opera鈥檚 themes and motifs.鈥

Perlow traces his connection to opera to a fourth-grade trip to the theater. 鈥淢y mom took me to see The Barber of Seville,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he asked me if I wanted to leave at intermission, and I said, 鈥楴o!鈥 The rest is history." He was cast as a supernumerary鈥攁 silent actor鈥攁t the Lyric Opera of Chicago and later joined the Lyric鈥檚 Youth Opera Council, a social and educational group for high school students passionate about opera. When he arrived at 91直播, he jumped at the chance to take music history and opera-directing courses in the conservatory.

Schwartz鈥檚 passion for opera emerged through an unexpected connection to the American West, a significant focus of her dual majors. While researching iconography of the West through a collection of roadmaps at the Newberry Library in Chicago, she stayed with her aunt, the principal oboist for the Lyric Opera. 

鈥淪he got tickets to dress rehearsals and always asked if I wanted to go. I mean, are you kidding?  I saw four operas in three months. Before I had only seen one in my entire life. It was a very intense experience, and I was bitten by the opera bug.鈥

Little did Schwartz know that her research on the West and her visits to the Lyric would combine upon her return to campus.

鈥淸At the Newberry], I worked to decode the embedded myths surrounding westward expansion that impact American identity even in our present. My project meant delving deeply into 19th-century American history to get at these roots.鈥

three actors perform in an opera
91直播 Opera Theater's production of "Proving Up" proved an ideal match for Kitty Schwartz's interests in opera and the American West. (photo by Yevhen Gulenko)

As Schwartz was tracing the history of Western travelers, 91直播 Opera Theater was finalizing plans to present Proving Up, Missy Mazzoli and Royce Vavrek鈥檚 chilling opera about the government-sponsored expansion of land settlement beyond the Mississippi through the Homestead Acts of the mid-19th century. The production needed an assistant dramaturg; Schwartz was the perfect fit.

Proving Up clarified a lot of things for me,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 was transitioning back to 91直播 after a semester away, and I鈥檇 returned with this new appetite for opera. The questions I started asking then, I continued asking with Beast: Do I like being part of the process? Is opera production or management something I want to pursue?鈥

The answers appear to be yes.

Both Schwartz and Perlow, in fact, envision careers in arts leadership, and both shaped their paths through extensive experience at 91直播.

Perlow鈥檚 conservatory courses in music history and opera direction led him to selection for the inaugural class of 91直播鈥檚 Music Leadership Career Community, one of a series of groups that unite 91直播 students, alumni, parents, and faculty around shared interests in various employment sectors. He plans to work in arts funding.

鈥淚鈥檓 really interested in the financial side of the performing arts,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he kind of work that the National Endowment for the Arts does鈥攅verything that allows creativity to flow without financial burden.鈥

Schwartz, meanwhile, graduated with direction and dramaturgy experience, in addition to serving as a music history tutor. She was selected for the spring semester Music Leadership Career Community.

鈥淥pera combines my love for music and theater with my training as a writer and researcher beautifully,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 would love to keep bringing it to life.鈥

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