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Present Production

Our second production was Amahl and the Night Visitors by Gian-Carlo Menotti.

Below are the details.

Amahl and the Night Visitors by Gian-Carlo Menotti

Dr. Krzysztof Biernacki—Director
Dr. Cara Tasher—Conductor

UNF Andrew Robinson Theater
December 7, 8, 9, 2007 @ 8 PM

Amahl and the Night Visitors

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cast

 

 

 

Character

Cast A

Cast B

 

 

 

Amahl (a crippled boy of about 12)    

Jamie Houck

Emily Sharrett

Amahl’s Mother

Angelique Perretta

Lindsey Tuller

King Kaspar (slightly deaf) 

Luke Hopper

Joey Fitzpatrick

King Melchior 

Brandon Thornhill

Terrence Joseph

King Balthazar

Tyler Hott

Tyler Hott

The Page

Terrence Joseph

Luke Hopper

 

 

 

Chorus of Shepherds, Villagers, and Dancers.

 

 

 

 

Casting Subject to change.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Synopsis

 

 

 

Amahl and the Night Visitors is the story of the crippled boy Amahl and the miracle that cures him.

One night when Amahl notices an unusually bright star in the sky, three kings arrive at his home requesting lodging for the night. Even though they are poor, Amahl’s mother lets them stay. The kings explain that they have come searching for the Child and bring with them their most valuable treasures to present to Him at the end of their journey.

After the kings have finally gone to sleep for the night, Amahl's mother decides that she must take some of the kings’ gold that they have brought with them for the Child in order to help her own child. She is caught in this act of stealing, but the kings forgive her and tell her to keep the gold; she returns it to them anyway.

As the kings prepare to leave Amahl and his mother and continue on their journey, Amahl offers them his walking stick to give to the Child. At this gesture of kindness, he is suddenly cured of his impairment and no longer needs it. The kings invite Amahl to make the rest of the journey with them in order to bring his gift to the Child, and he accepts.

 

 

 

 

Bio

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gian Carlo Menotti was born on 7 July 1911, in Cadegliano, Italy. At the age of 7, under the guidance of his mother, he began to compose songs, and four years later he wrote the words and music of his first opera, The Death of Pierrot. In 1923 he began his formal musical training at the Verdi Conservatory in Milan. Following the death of his father, his mother took him to the United States, where he was enrolled at Philadelphia's Curtis Institute of Music. There he completed his musical studies, working in composition under Rosario Scalero.

His first mature work, the one-act opera buffa, Amelia Goes to the Ball, was premiered in 1937, a success that led to a commission from the National Broadcasting Company to write an opera especially for radio, The Old Maid and the Thief, the first such commission ever given. His first ballet, Sebastian, followed in 1944, and for this he wrote the scenario as well as the score. After the premiere of his Piano Concerto in 1945, Menotti returned to opera with The Medium, shortly joined by The Telephone, both enjoying international success.

The Consul, Menotti's first full-length work, won the Pulitzer Prize and the New York Drama Critics Circle award as the best musical play of the year in 1954. By far Menotti's best-known work is the Christmas classic Amahl and
the Night Visitors
, composed for NBC-TV in 1951. This beloved opera celebrated the 50th anniversary of its premiere in 2001, and continues to receive hundreds of performances annually.

Menotti writes the text to all his operas, the original language being English in every case, with the exception of Amelia Goes to the Ball, The Island God, and The Last Savage, which were first set to Italian words. Recent operas include The Singing Child (1993) and Goya (1986), written for Plácido Domingo and given its premiere by The Washington Opera. In the summer of 2004 Domingo reprised the role at Vienna's Theater an der Wien.Menotti's most recent vocal works are Jacob's Prayer (1997), a commission from the American Choral Directors Association, Gloria, written as part of a composite Mass celebrating the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize, For the Death of Orpheus, with a premiere by the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra led by Robert Shaw in November 1990, and Llama de Amor Viva, premiered in April 1991. A trio for the Verdehr Trio received its world premiere at the Spoleto
Festival on Menotti's 85th birthday in July 1996.

In addition to the numerous operatic works, Menotti has enriched the artistic world with ballets, including Errand into the Maze (in the 2005 repertory of the Martha Graham Dance Company), and The Unicorn, the Gorgon,
and the Manticore; Pastorale for Piano and Strings (1934); Poemetti, a suite of piano pieces for children (1937); The Hero (1952), a song on a text by Robert Horan; and Canti della Lontananza, a cycle of seven songs (1967). He
also wrote the libretti to Samuel Barber's operas Vanessa and A Hand of Bridge.

1958 saw the opening of Menotti's own festival, the Festival of Two Worlds, in Spoleto, Italy. Devoted to the cultural collaboration of Europe and America in a program embracing all the arts, the Spoleto Festival has gone on to be one of the most popular festivals in Europe. The festival literally became "of two worlds" in 1977 with the founding of Spoleto USA in Charleston, South Carolina, which he led until 1993 when he became Director of the Rome Opera. Well into his 90s he continued to direct opera at Spoleto and elsewhere. His 1996 Spoleto production of Amahl was filmed for commercial release. During the 2005-06 season The Consul will be produced at Teatro Regio in Italy; performances in the 2004-05 season included productions at the Arizona Opera and in Zurich, Switzerland.

In 1984 Menotti was awarded the Kennedy Center Honor for lifetime achievement in the arts. He was chosen the 1991 "Musician of the Year" by Musical America, inaugurating worldwide tributes to the composer in honor of his 80th birthday. His music has been published by G. Schirmer since 1946.

NY Times Article Discussing Menotti's Death in 2007

BBC Article Regarding Death


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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