THE BONESETTERS DAUGHTER!
Sep. 30th, 2008 12:33 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The Cast of San Francisco Opera's 'The Bonesetters Daughter': James Maddalena (Art Kamen), Rose Frazier (Fia Kamen), Zheng Cao (Ruth Young Kamen), Ning Liang (LuLing Liu Young), Madelaine Matej (Dory Kamen), Valery Portnov (Marty Kamen), Catherine Cook (Arlene Kamen), Qian Yi (Precious Auntie)
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From the San Francisco Opera's website:
Adapted from the best-selling novel by beloved Bay Area author Amy Tan, this world premiere tells a resonant story of belated intergenerational understanding that leads to emotional healing. A troubled Chinese-American woman learns the horrible secrets of her immigrant mother’s past in this touching and terrifying tale, set in both modern-day San Francisco and the Chinese countryside during the tumultuous events surrounding World War II.
Composer Stewart Wallace (Harvey Milk) incorporates the timbres and textures of Chinese music into his highly expressive and lyrical score—an American opera with roots in China. Mezzo-soprano Zheng Cao, the splendid Suzuki in San Francisco Opera’s recent Madama Butterfly, heads the cast of this deeply personal work. Star of the Lincoln Center Festival’s historic production of The Peony Pavilion, Kunju singer Qian Yi has been acclaimed by the The New York Times Magazine as “China’s reigning opera princess.”
This production has been given tremendous reviews. The San Francisco Chronicle said this after the opening night performance,
The Bonesetter's Daughter, which had its world premiere Saturday night at the San Francisco Opera, explodes onto the stage in a burst of circus extravagance: acrobats flying through the air, the nasal squawk of Chinese reed instruments from the balcony, elaborate visuals centered around elemental images of fire and water.
Those effects signal to the audience that something new and strange is afoot, and the resultant air of excitement never entirely subsides. With its restless energy and its canny melding of Chinese and American artistic traditions, "Bonesetter" is a far cry from many an operatic premiere.
But for all the spectacle on display, the deepest pleasures in this beautiful and richly affecting new work are far more intimate and more familiar. The piece draws on the reliable themes of musical theater - love, family, fate and death - and does it with almost unerring precision."
I am so damned excited! YAY!3