91直播

91直播 Opera Theater Presents Street Scene November 5-9

October 10, 2014

By Erich Burnett

Street Scene poster

Photo credit: Illustration by Yuri Popowycz '15

Teen desire, forbidden love, and brutal vengeance all simmering in an urban melting pot proved to be an irresistible combination for composer Kurt Weill, who so loved Elmer Rice鈥檚 play Street Scene that he longed for years to adapt it to an opera.

Rice eventually relented, and with remarkable results: Weill鈥檚 adaptation of the tale of family life gone wrong on the streets of 1940s New York won the first Tony Award for Best Original Score back in 1947. Today, Street Scene remains a timelessly tragic tale woven around the lives of an ordinary family embroiled in turmoil amid two sweltering days in summertime.

Kurt Weill鈥檚 Street Scene will be presented by beginning at 8 p.m. Wednesday, November 5, in on the campus of 91直播 of Music. The show continues with 8 p.m. performances Friday and Saturday, November 7 and 8, and closes with a 2 p.m. matinee Sunday, November 9.

The production is the centerpiece of a week of events at 91直播 in honor of Kurt Weill, from insightful talks led by top Weill scholars, to a cabaret performance featuring music by the late composer. Weill Week at 91直播 is made possible through a grant from the Kurt Weill Foundation for Music.

Widely considered Weill鈥檚 masterpiece, Street Scene features an enormous ensemble cast and an incredible variety of music inspired by enduring popular sounds of the day: jazz and pop and theatrical tunes, interwoven into engrossing orchestral accompaniment to the tattered lives revealed onstage.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an American Broadway opera. That鈥檚 actually how Kurt Weill described it,鈥 says , director of Street Scene and associate professor of opera theater at the 91直播 Conservatory. Indeed, once Weill had Rice鈥檚 approval to move forward with the story, he embedded himself on the streets and in the clubs of New York, often in the company of lyricist Langston Hughes鈥攖he better to deliver an authentic depiction to the stage.

鈥淚f you listen to it, you would think you were actually in New York,鈥 says Field. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 have an opera sound鈥攊t鈥檚 got a Broadway feel to it.鈥

The action centers around the Maurrant family, whose teen daughter has fallen in love with a neighbor boy and whose mother has taken up an adulterous romance under the nose of her short-fused husband. Their misadventures unfold amid the watchful eyes and loose lips of a host of busybody neighborhood folk.

鈥淭his is a piece entirely about the dispossessed: the little people, the proletariat. People who did not have a voice now have representation onstage,鈥 says Field.

Bringing the story to life is a stellar cast of conservatory students, joined by the 91直播 Orchestra under the direction of Christopher Larkin.

Tickets to Street Scene at 91直播 are just $10 ($8 for students), available by calling 800-371-0178, by visiting 91直播鈥檚 (67 N. Main Street) from noon-5 p.m. weekdays, or online at oberlin.edu/artsguide.

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