Lizzie Borden opera at Ozawa Hall Tanglewood
Article by Dave Read
Lizzie Borden, A Chamber Version in Seven Scenes was performed in Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood, in a presentation by the Boston Lyric Opera Orchestra that brought the house down. Maybe this opera gives the lie to the maxim that the US, in comparison to European countries, is a cultural wasteland. How could that be when the whole audience could sing along with the choral epilogue?
Lizzie Borden from schoolyard to opera stage
Lizzie Borden took an axe
And gave her mother forty whacks.
When she saw what she had done,
She gave her father forty-one.
Plant, author of the scenario, began work on the opera with composer Jack Beeson in 1954, convincing the composer that this retelling of the Electra myth would revolve around why Lizzie Borden did it, rather than if she did it. Plant eventually had to call on Kenward Elmsie to finish the libretto, and Beeson finally cpompleted the music in 1965.
Even though sung in English, we found it helpful to scan the texts projected on either side of the stage. Something about the operatic singing inhibits discernment of literal sense, but this libretto is laconic enough that reading along didn’t diminish the the beauty of this performance.
Music by Jack Beeson; libretto by Kenward Elmslie
Based on a scenario by Richard Plant
Realized by Todd Bashore (orchestration) and John Conklin (dramaturgy)
