Tuesday, August 28, 2018

The Girl in the Flaming Dress

An excerpt from the novel
The Girl in the Flaming Dress
by Michael J. Vaughn



An Explanation

While writing this novel, I had a date to the opera (Die Fliegende Hollander, Opera San Jose). Arriving early, I took a walk around my date's neighborhood, the Palm Haven section of San Jose. The '40s style architecture, along with a spooky evening wind, reminded me of a Raymond Chandler novel, and I began to narrate to myself in that lovely, rhythmic noir style. (He slid from the curb like a shadow, his troubles weighing him down like a backpack filled with rocks.) When I finally picked up my date, she was wearing the most astounding dress, and there was my central theme. I decided, just for fun, to write a Chandleresque short story, then, much to my surprise, found that it fit rather nicely into my novel. Then I decided to use the title for the whole book. (I worried about the word Girl, which has gotten into far too many titles lately, but my secret advisor, La Diva, said, "What do you care? It's not like they're gonna be disappointed at the contents." Bless her.) As for my date, I never saw her again, but I'm eternally grateful. Here's looking at you, kid.


The Girl in the Flaming Dress

I’m due to beat the skins at FDR’s, but I’m running early. I’m always early. Manny hands me a flight of brews, but it just puts me to sleep. I wake at the glass, one eye on my Toyota. I lost a window to a smash-and-grabber and right now it’s as open as a library.

            The gig is special – rowdy crowd, good drinkers, chair dancers – but afterward my singer is putting me in a flummox. She up-and-downs me, leaving eyeprints all over my clothing. The thing is, she’s comparing me to my former self, Fat Johnny, and she’s dazzled by the results. No miracles, really, just joining a gym and not being a pig. Granted, I don’t pump iron to be ignored, but it’s still me inside and her ex-boyfriend is my lead guitarist, ten feet away. And, she’s still out of my league. My former flabby self can’t handle the attention.

            Of course, I’m an idiot. But Pamela is disrupting the natural balance of evolution. I bullet out of San Francisco in my Toyota, the plastic blowing over my window like the tarps at Candlestick Park. I try not to think about the way Pamela kept taking off her leather jacket during the gig, revealing her backless top. And then I open the other window.

            My antidote arrives at Frankie’s Lounge in the form of Cha-Cha Flores, my favorite drink of mocha and unofficial alcoholic niece. She’s got her hair all curled up around her teddy bear eyes and I swear I want to take her home and add her to my plush toy collection. She’s nervous about getting married (who wouldn’t be?) but I know her Jimmy and you can’t find better. I sing the Tender Trap regardless and I’m gone.

            I’m up the next morning far too early on accounta some blind date at my golf course. The actuality is a testimony to photographic weight-reduction techniques, but I’m willing to take one for the team. I deliver a bouquet of drugstore flowers and chew on a meatloaf as she talks about life in the big cubicle. But my mind is already on the range, where I will use my new driver to inscribe 300-yard parabolas against the green-blonde hills. The clouds chug by like trolleys and all is good.

            But yeah, something’s bugging me so here’s what it is. Stevie. Stevie who walks into Frankie’s on a Saturday night, strikes a pose and takes over the joint. And freezes my heart. She sent a response to my latest begnote that bamboozles me. You are so funny! Perhaps in another life…

            A simple no would have been so much better.

            This, this is from the Sphinx. What exactly is keeping us apart? Am I a Montague, she a Capulet? Am I under an ancient curse? Have I lost an extremity? Amongst a hundred women with their eyes on me, the one that bugs me the most is the one who’s not interested.

            So I report home to wash the regret from my skin, and I put on my best funeral clothes for a night at the opera.

            Yeah, I know. I surprise myself sometimes. But this one is a professorial type, mousy, brainy, irresistible, and you do what you gotta. She tells me not to arrive early, so naturally I arrive early, and I run out of stalls at her curbside so I take a hike around the block.

            Palm Haven looks like forties Los Angeles with the Craftsmans, bungalows and art decos shadowed by high palms. It’s the kind of neighborhood that’s so pretty it kinda scares you. I’m hoofing it around this triangular park, the shadows making me feel like Sam Spade on a junket. A cloud of blackbirds traces me, wearing little copper badges, peppering me with questions. Do you have business in this neighborhood, sir? Is there an address you were looking for? Have you been drinking this evening?

            I finish the loop, expecting cholos and junkies, but all I get are techies and Pekingese. I’m still five minutes early, but I’ve had it, so I step into the chamber of Donna’s porch and hit the knocker. It’s an adobe wth fine lines, mission-style. I think St. Francis lives here. I see polygons of sheetrock on the floor, a safe path for the mugs who just tiled her kitchen.

            She appears at the corner of the door, straight dark hair, vanilla skin, green eyes. Donna is no beauty queen, but her body has a personality all its own, a 50-year-old personal trainee from heaven.

            She opens the door and smiles. I’m not actually certain what I’m looking at. I wait for her to talk so she’ll walk away, so I’ll stop hallucinating.

            You are early. But not too. Let me get you some tequila.” She walks away. And yeah.

            Her dress rises in terraces. It starts out a smoky black, just over the knee, then graduates to red, to orange, and then to tangerine at the bust. She is a human flame. I’m finding it hard to breathe. She hands me a shot of PatrĂ³n, a slice of lemon. I shoot and suck, and when I resurface I have words.

            “This dress is amazing.”

            “Thanks! I wore it to a party this summer and it was so bright today I…” and keeps on talking like she has no idea that she has gone and turned herself into a goddess.

            I’m a wreck. I drive her away in my pathetic car. I follow her up the stairs of the parking garage, my eyes directly at her hips (I can’t say “ass” when referring to a goddess).

            In the outside world, I am my fake charming smile. We enter an opera house whose furnishings have been adjusted to complement her dress. A flaming golden sun rises over the proscenium. The show is about a mariner who’s been condemned to sail the seas for all eternity, unless he finds a true woman and I got news for him this might take a while. But there I am in the seventh row, reduced to puberty, afraid to take those white fingers in mine on accounta what it might imply. On the way to intermission, I place a hand on the back of her dress, her muscles firm underneath, and I want to touch her everywhere but she is on fire and I shouldn’t. It takes a post-opera martini to force the truth out of me.

            “I am walking around with this elegant creature on my arm, and I am feeling completely flummoxed.”

            Donna gives me a blank look, but I think she is giving me the polygraph. Apparently I pass the test, because later she tells me, “It was nice to be complimented on my dress. And more than once!”

            I hug her at the door and I leave. The stars are too bright, and I am afraid that when she takes off that dress she will return to mortal form. It reminds me of this other opera, where a warrior princess saves the whole operation by burning herself alive. She could fly, this one.

            In the mariner opera, the woman is untruthful, so the captain goes back to his cursed ship. But then the woman hurls herself into the bay, comes out an angel, and she and the captain fly away together.

            But there’s your fix. You can’t worship a woman that much. She might catch fire, and she might have to jump into the ocean to put herself out.

            Tonight, I’m calling Pamela. What the hell.

Monday, August 27, 2018

The Girl in the Flaming Dress: An Excerpt

An Excerpt from the novel
The Girl in the Flaming Dress
a novel by Michael J. Vaughn



When Gerry Meets Karen


Twelve

 

They’ve got him to the side of the main floor,  so the traffic is pretty mellow. Phil hit up some of his vendors for props. The favorite is a six-foot trout that barely fits in the frame. Throw in some accessories from previous gigs – oversize sunglasses, feather boas, goofy hats – and the booth makes a nice little diversion. The automatic camera spits out triple-photo strips like the ones at amusement parks, and a few of the customers even take the time to drop a bill in his tip jar.

            Still, from an artistic point of view, Gerry is deadly bored. When ten o’clock arrives, he’s more than happy to hang the Back in 15 sign and head out to take some candids. He’s also excited to try out his new toy, a candy red Nikon that cuts an interesting mid-line between his old-style portrait cameras and the new digitals. The first adjustment is shooting using a screen. It feels weird, holding the camera away from his face, but in the long run this might be better for his eyes. The auto-focus is another thing. It creates a delay between the release of the shutter and the actual shot. It’s almost like he has to fire a little bit ahead of the action he’s looking for.

            By mid-morning, the convention is pretty active (fishermen being early risers), and there’s no shortage of subjects. The stage holds a shallow pool for fly fishing demos. The floor offers dozens of booths for gear and clothing, plus a trio of sleek-looking boats. The back of the theater is lined with food stands. Even this early, the favorite is a combination bratwurst/beer stand hosted by Von Scheidt, a Twin Falls brewery. Of course, the real draw might be the Bavarian dirndls worn by the servers, which offer plenty of cleavage. Gerry spots an old-timer with a hundred lures attached to his fishing hat and takes a shot. Sadly, it’s time to get back to his booth.


 

Thirteen

 

After too many days of thinking about how much she’s spending on her hotel room, Karen is delighted to be back at work. She and Brenda have only three ales to choose from – an oatmeal stout, a red ale and a brown porter – and Manuel and Rhaz do a good job of supplying them with bratwurst. Looking at her dirndl in the reflection from the taps, she realizes the lucky peach blouse was an excellent choice for her job interview.

            Her next customer is quite a character, an old dude whose fishing hat resembles a porcupine. As she hands him a porter he says, “Sorry I’m late, I had to get through the metal detector.” Which completely cracks her up.


 

Fourteen

 

Karen is somewhat surprised to find a body on her sofa, but then the previous night trickles into her brain. Faced with a sudden snowstorm, she offered her Twin Fallsian coworker refuge in her room (her room that she has got to give up). Karen sets up the coffeemaker, hits the switch and peers through the curtains. It’s no longer snowing, but the town is a complete whitewash. Past the trailer park, toward the desert, she sees a black dot moving at a rapid pace. It stops very suddenly, and then she sees a man walking after, with a pack on his back.

            “Whatcha lookin’ at?”

            Karen jumps. Brenda laughs.

            “Sorry. I’m kinda stealthy.”

            “There is a black critter running around in the snow, with some guy following it.”

            “You got some scintillating shit happening in this town. Well. May as well find out for sure.” She digs into her purse and pulls out a small pair of binoculars. “Hey, don’t judge. I am an avid birdwatcher.”

            “And what else?”

            “And what else. Here.”

            Karen manages to focus just as the man slides a stick from his bag. He places a tiny pink dot on the snow, sets his feet and swings. The pink dot disappears. The black circle, an extremely fluffy dog, stays in his spot. His owner says something, and the dog takes off like a shot.

            “How freaking adorable! He’s golfing with his dog.”

            “Adorable or insane,” says Brenda. “I’m gonna grab some coffee. My head is a circus.”

            “That’s what you get for drinking from the stock.”

            “Well someone had to.”


 

Fifteen

 

The encounters with Kerry are getting more and more awkward, but he simply can’t leave without slipping a twenty into her mailbox. And there she is at the door, made up and as fetching as ever. Her eyes have this little touch of green, and it bothers him that he notices such things. She invites him in for a hot chocolate, but he begs off, citing some made-up portrait session. Halfway home, he receives a solid thwack on his shoulder.

            “Asshole!”

            Angela wears a lemon-yellow raincoat. Her hair is blood red.

            “Yeah?” he says. “Tell me something I don’t know.”

            “That girl is sending more signals than AT&T! For the sake of women everywhere, go ravish her.”

            “Yeah, well maybe you should get a life.”

            “Ha ha. Very funny. Hi Sophie.”

            She reaches down to give the golf dog a head scratch. Sophie’s constant expression is joy, so it doesn’t really change much.

            “Can I make it up to you?” asks Gerry. “I’m doing a treasure hunt.”

            “Oh goody!”

            The treasure hunt is the first step in the editing process, when Gerry deletes unusable photos and save the good ones for later. The failure rate for candids is extremely high, since all kinds of random nonsense can venture in to muck things up. A blurred face on a fly caster. Bad shadows on a girl looking at landing nets. A man trying on a vest.

            “Why that one?” asks Angela. “Looks pretty clear.”

            “Yeah, but look at that expression. I’m selling a convention, not laxatives.”

            Angela liggles. It almost makes him cry when she does that. He hits the next image. It’s the old dude with the prickly hat. He’s smiling like crazy, showing off those gorgeous crow’s feet. The unexpected part is the server. She’s laughing, open-mouthed, an expression of sheer release. A tendril of brown hair dangles across her forehead. The lighting radiates her face, a button nose, sharp eyebrows, kittenish eyes, just enough cleavage for sexy, not so much to keep her out of a family brochure.

            “Angela, old girl, I hate to make the obvious comment, but – Jackpot.”

            “Oh… hoh,” she robots. “You… so… funny. But you’re right. It’s perfect.”


 

Sixteen

 

Karen takes Brenda to breakfast at Barton’s 93 and then sees her off. She spends the rest of the day watching free movies in her room (her room that she must get rid of). She fully intends to cross the street and see if the General Store is, in fact, a general store, but curiosity steers her in the direction of Cactus Pete’s Buffet. She’s beginning to see how addictive the casino lifestyle can be. With its plate glass walls and colorful artworks, the buffet is a little irresistible.

            What’s worse is that the food is really good. Attendants offer freshly sliced cuts of turkey and roast beef. There are a dozen varieties of seafood, tasty vegetable sides, and an endless selection of pastries, pies and custards. Karen vows to stop at two platefuls, but then she sees a tray of white cheddar macaroni and has to give it a try. She sits at her table taking nibbles, feeling plump. She hopes that no one sees her, but then, of course, who would?

            “Hi!”

            It’s Dr. Al, looming over her table in a caramel-colored leather jacket. He holds out a beer as if he’s toasting her.

            “Karen, right?”

            “Yes. Have a seat. I’m making a pig of myself.”

            Al sits down and rubs his hands together. “Another victim of the buffet.”

            “It’s amazing!” she says. “You just don’t expect the food to be this good.”

            “Before Cactus Pete’s, I was the business manager at a culinary academy. When I arrived here, I decided that a casino could pull in extra business if the buffet food had the same quality as a fine restaurant. We built this one from scratch, and, I am happy to report, we have won quite a few awards.”

            “Fantastic! I’m a little concerned about my budget, however.”

            “Sure. Well, the general store is a legit grocery store, so you could save a little money there.”

            “I was wondering about that.”

            Dr. Al smiles as if he’s harboring a secret. Karen takes another bite of the mac and cheese. It’s impossibly good.

            “I hope I’m not being presumptuous, Dr. Al, but I feel like you’ve got something on your mind.”

            “Yes, I do. Sorry.” He fiddles with his phone and shows her the screen. It’s a picture of an elderly fisherman receiving a beer from a radiant young woman. It slowly occurs to Karen that the radiant young woman is her. And that she looks happy. Naturally, she begins to cry. Dr. Al watches her with a growing look of concern.

            “This is not really the… reaction I anticipated.”

            Karen wipes her eyes with a napkin and smiles. “I can’t believe… how beautiful… Who took this?”

            “Gerry Vincent. My regular photog. I asked him to shoot some candids at the convention. He’s got a tremendous eye. We’d like to use it for the brochure next year. If you come by my office tomorrow and sign a release, I’ll cut you a check for a hundred. A modeling fee.”

            Karen’s eyes go out of focus. “A modeling fee? Me? A modeling fee?”

            Al snickers. “Do I really have to tell you that you’re an attractive woman?”

            “Yes!”

            “Karen, you’re an attractive woman. Something more than that, too. You have this… girl-next-door quality.”

            Karen plants her chin on her palm. “Wow. Could I meet this photographer? I want to thank him.”

            Dr. Al thinks about it. Gerry is a creature of habit, and not fond of interruptions. But perhaps Gerry’s routine needs to be messed with.

            “You can meet him right now. Follow me.”


 

Seventeen

 

Gerry and Sophie are deep into a fetchathon when Sophie detours from her well-worn path to bark at the door. Gerry opens it to find Al ambling up the steps with a fetching brunette. There is no evading Al, he’s too much of a presence. Gerry puts on his best fake smile.

            “Dr. Al! What brings you here?”

            Al shakes his hand. “I wanted you to meet the young lady from your prize photo. Gerry, this is Karen.”

            Karen takes Gerry’s hand and he quickly puts the pieces together, the button nose, the perfect eyebrows, the smile that grows and grows until she’s hugging him. Gerry feels like a ripe fruit at the grocery store, having all the seeds squished out of him. Karen eventually lets him go and laughs, embarrassed. Gerry can see Al behind her, wearing a grin.

            “I’m sorry,” says Karen. “But you don’t know how much that photo means to me. You made me look so… happy.”

            “When I first showed it to her,” says Al, “she started crying. I never knew you had this effect on females.”

            “Neither did I.”

            The three of them stand there in silence. Sophie takes the opportunity to run at Karen’s feet and give her a thorough sniffing.

            “What an adorable dog!” she says.

            “Thanks.”

            “You know,” says Al. “I just got a great idea. Gerry, I’d like you to take Karen out sometime this week and take some photos of her. Around the casino and around town. Just charge me for your time. And Karen, too. How’s thirty an hour?”

            “Sure!”

            “Well, I gotta get back to the casino. Karen, you want a ride?”

            “No. I’ll walk.”

            Al drives away in his golf cart. Karen and Gerry stand out front to exchange numbers and set up their shoot. Karen fidgets, not certain what will happen if she goes for another handshake.

            “Thanks again for… making me a star.”

            “Hey, you made the shot. I was just in the right place.”

            Karen smiles, and yes, there’s something about that smile. A little embarrassed, in a most fetching way.

            “I’ll see you Thursday.”

            “Good night.”

            She walks toward the casino, which looms like a friendly monster over the low-lying neighborhood. She smokes her breath like a cigarette, feeling playful. Feeling young.


 


Tuesday, July 24, 2018

A Wedding Intro: Cecily and James, June 29, 2018



Photo by Jackie Williams.
Suddenly, in this my 56th year, I am a wedding officiant, an idea first presented by my niece Kendra, who asked me to perform her wedding this coming September. When my friend Cecily heard about this, she became my second client, but my first wedding. For several reasons, this all makes sense. After ten bands and a few thousand karaoke songs, I'm good with a mic. As an author, I'm used to doing readings and coming up with material. Lastly, there's a trend toward secular weddings, and weddings performed by friends or relatives. It's nice when the officiant has an actual personal relationship with the bride and groom. For one thing, they can include stories like the ones in the following intro I wrote for Cecily and James:
 
Hello! My name is Michael Vaughn, and I will be serving as today’s officiant. We are gathered here to initiate and celebrate the marriage of Cecily Rose Flores and James Christian.

Those who know me will be surprised to learn that I ascribe the meeting of James and Cecily to a great universal force. And that force is karaoke.

It was in a karaoke bar that I met Cecily’s mother, Michelle. A couple years later, when Cecily returned from Texas and found out that her mother was dating some dude, she stormed into another karaoke bar – this one called Effie’s Lounge – and declared, “I’m looking for Michael J. Vaughn!” It was nice of her to use my middle initial.

Needless to say, Cecily makes an impression. And I soon learned that Cecily Rose Flores is an extraordinary woman. She has this smile that will stop you dead in your tracks. She sings like an angel, and her standup routines on the Effie’s patio are the stuff of legend. But her most outstanding quality is that people just love Cecily. I’ve never seen someone that just draws in people like she does. She could have started a cult.

There’s a problem with being extraordinary, of course. Extra ordinary also means out of the ordinary, and it’s often not easy for someone like Cecily to find someone who gets her. But one night, in that same karaoke bar, I saw a young man hanging around Cecily’s perimeter, and  he had that look in his eye. As Cecily’s foster karaoke uncle, I had to investigate, so I struck up a casual conversation with him, this James guy, and I got an immediate impression: James is a calm person, in the best way. And I thought, This might just work. This James could be the eye to Hurricane Cecily. Considering where we are today, I think I was right.

We make a lot of jokes about karaoke – and certainly, a lot of those jokes are well-deserved. But there’s a serious side, as well. When you sing to people, you open yourself up to them in a way that just doesn’t happen in everyday life. Which is why, when James and Cecily and I thought about what they wanted to say today, about life and love, we landed on song lyrics. I will read you some excerpts from songs that Cecily has sung over the years, and I think you’ll notice that they tell a kind of story about their relationship – or, for that matter, just about any relationship. And I will start with a song that she sings with James.

 

I wanted to be with you alone
and talk about the weather
But traditions I can trace against the child in your face
won’t escape my attention

Your keep your distance with a system of touch
and gentle persuasion.
I’m lost in admiration, could I need you this much?
Something happens and I’m head over heels
I never find out till I’m head over heels

I don’t know what you do
but you do it well
I’m under your spell

Happiness hit her like a train on a track

I want your drama, the touch of your hand
I want your leather studded kiss in the sand

You have suffered enough, and warred with yourself
it’s time that you won

And I’ve always lived like this
keeping a comfortable distance
And up until now, I had sworn to myself
that I’m content with loneliness
Because none of it was ever worth the risk
But you are the only exception

I wanna touch the earth
I wanna break it in my hands
I wanna grow something wild and unruly
I wanna sleep on the hard ground
in the comfort of your arms
on a pillow of blue bonnets
in a blanket made of stars

We’re a thousand miles from comfort
we have traveled land and sea
But as long as you are with me
there’s no place I’d rather be

When the rain is blowing in your face
and the whole world is on your case
I could offer you a warm embrace, to make you feel my love

When the evening shadows and the stars appear
and there is no one there to dry your tears
I could hold you for a million years
to make you feel my love

Monday, June 18, 2018

Moon the Loon


Keith Moon: The Real Me
monodrama by Mick Berry
3Below Theaters

Frankly, the whole “insane genius” thing pisses me off. History holds far too many great sane artists to support this idea that lunacy somehow opens the gates to creativity. That said, I can see how mentally ill artists make better stories, and therefore get better “press” when it comes to furthering their legacies.

Keith Moon, the addiction-crippled, mentally unbalanced drummer for The Who, certainly fits the bill, especially in the late-‘60s/early-‘70s Golden Age of rock, when destructive energy matched up with an unstable world to create nihilistic music.

Mick Berry’s wildly energetic one-man biodrama wrestles with this myth in a couple of ways. One, our host, Moon the Loon himself, pulls no punches, blaming himself for courting insanity, at the cost of his family and (in one truly horrific chapter) the life of his driver. Two, Berry’s performance actually addresses the music, the true reason for Moon’s genius, and the manic art of playing drums.

I’ll admit a certain bias. As a semi-pro drummer and singer, I demand a certain level of technical know-how when it comes to my musical novels, and find it infuriating that most music-based stories (Ann Patchett’s supposed opera novel Bel Canto, and just about every article ever published in The Rolling Stone) are about image and nothing else.

The way Berry addresses this problem is to play an impressively large drum kit to several Who songs during his performance. This is difficult enough (a recording has none of the give-and-take of a live band), but he also continues to talk during the songs, which, considering Moon’s highly involved style of play,  is a horribly difficult thing to do.

What we learn about Moon’s approach is deliciously, geekily satisfying. Founded in lessons from rock drummer Carlo Little (who once turned down a gig from an unknown band called The Rolling Stones), Moon learned to depend on a heavy bass beat, freeing himself from the standard 2-and-4 snare backbeat and allowing the production of cascading fills on toms and cymbals, riffing back and forth with Pete Townshend in an almost jazz sensibility. After seeing this show, you’ll better understand how Moon’s thundering, ever-talking presence led to the sense that The Who was simply bigger and louder than all the other bands.

The most impressive passage comes near the end of the evening, as Berry narrates what goes through a drummer’s mind during a song, in this case “Won’t Get Fooled Again.” Having been on that throne, I can tell you it really rings true. By performance time, a drummer has worked out all the technical stuff and  goes about “feeling” the song in a much more visceral fashion. Berry leads us through the sections with phrases like “lay out,” “build the tension,” “lead into the second verse,” “Oh God, I’m playing the same damn beat over and over, I’ve run out of ideas. No! How about this?”

The speaking side of Berry’s show provides quite a few entertaining tidbits about the band: the guitar smashing, groupies, booze, pills – how they made Tommy all about pinball mostly to make sure it got a good review from London’s most powerful rock critic, who was really into pinball. And some of the elaborate jokes Moon plays on strangers are worthy of Candid Camera’s best. But it’s this incredibly demanding combination of simultaneous acting and drumming that makes The Real Me such a treat, especially if you’re a fan of The Who.

Through June 25, 3Below Theaters, 288 S. Second Street, San Jose, 408/404-7711, 3belowtheaters.com.

Michael J. Vaughn is the author of twenty novels, including the rock novel Slow Children, and the drummer for San Francisco’s Exit Wonderland.

Sunday, April 29, 2018

A Meeting with the Diva

An excerpt from the novel Operaville, available at amazon.com.

Author's Note: Thanks to my work as an opera critic and journalist, I've had the chance to meet several bona fide divas - Deborah Voigt, Frederica von Stade, Irene Dalis, Licia Albanese - and, for the most part, have found them to be extremely down-to-earth, far from the spoiled prima donna stereotype. I determined to make my fictional diva, Maddalena Hart, similarly earthy, which is what makes this first meeting with a catatonically star-struck opera blogger, Mickey Siskel, so much fun. My apologies to Samuel Ramey for the fart joke.
 

For once, my opera-day schedule is devoid of adventure. A half-day pressure wash above the Lexington Reservoir, top of a freakin’ mountain, it’s hard to believe that places like this exist. Much as I hate driving that dirt road to my cabin, I cannot resist the chance to get myself clean. So I take my clawfoot bath, sunlight ticking in through the madrones, doll myself up in the usual black suit, then pick out a striped burgundy tie that Katie gave me.
            So I’m all moussed up and back on Interstate 280. It’s pretty hot outside, so I’ve got the AC blasting away like a Wagnerian tenor. I slip in a Foo Fighters cassette to give myself some audio contrast, and I’m feeling good.
The luxury of time allows me to scout the curbside parking spaces, and I nab one just outside the Civic Center garage, with a meter that stops nicely at 7 p.m. I arrive at the press room a half hour before curtain, and I relish the chance to sit on a couch with a coffee as I scour the program. This one’s got a vastly entertaining piece on the life of Alexander Pushkin, although the language drifts into that neo-Dickens that opera writers feel obligated to adopt.
Just across from me is a television monitor showing the stage. They’ve given the production a full-size title screen, a Russian village in the style of Chagall, Yevgeny and Tatyana drifting overhead, accompanied by a flying cow and a violin. I’ve always wondered if they use this monitor just to track the show, or if they force late-arriving critics to sit here and watch the first act on TV. Fortunately, I have yet to test the system.
I finish my coffee and article and head for the refreshment table, where Delores has arrayed a fine selection of crackers and spreadable cheeses. It’s good to be a critic. Delores is occupied with her twenty-some guests, so I finish my munchies and slither into the hall.
Tchaikovsky is such a mixed blessing he’s almost a frappĂ©. The orchestrations are lush, the vocal lines soaring and graceful, but he’s certainly in no hurry to tell a story, and not overly fond of quick tempos or jaunty rhythms. I saw Joan of Arc last year, and it literally put me to sleep. “How could you possibly make Joan of Arc boring?” you ask. Mostly by following that brilliant Russian tradition of keeping all the action strictly offstage. That way, all the characters can gather to discuss it after-the-fact. It’s like skipping the football game so you can get to the exciting post-game wrapup.
Pushkin was hardly innocent of this himself ; his works are more dependent on social commentary and descriptive details than plot. But somehow his verse novel inspired Tchaikovsky’s most entertaining opera. Perhaps because the composer and his co-librettist, Shilovsky, preserved much of Pushkin’s language and were happy just to skim the cream from his story. They didn’t even call it an opera, opting for the phrase “lyric scenes” and trusting that their audience had already memorized the original novel.
The cast is certainly promising. The title singer is Jesus Cortez, a Venezuelan baritone who came up through SFO’s residency programs and is threatening to become the company’s biggest find since Anna Netrebko. Playing Lensky, Yevgeny’s best pal, is Ramon Vargas, a tenor who utterly knocked me out in last year’s Elixir of Love. That pure, lyric – dast I say Pavarottian – tone, delivered with such ease, and a remarkable level of comfort on stage. With the two of them, the papers are calling it “the world’s first Latino Tchaikovsky,” but of course at the opera it’s just another night.
The most preposterous role is Tatyana, a teenager who is rarely played by anyone under 30. It takes at least that long just to develop the required vocal skills. But for once it’s not Maddalena’s singing that’s impressing me so much as her acting. I’ll save the details for later, but her handling of the Letter Scene is a revelation.
It’s a traditional production, sometime in early 19th-century Russia. They’ve outfitted her in a white country dress with floral patterns in blue. Her honey-blonde hair hangs long down her back. She’s gorgeous, as usual.
At the end of the act, I’m entirely wired on the performance. I’m loitering between the lobby and the south hall when I find a woman in a beaded silver-blue dress advancing my way. It’s Delores.
“Mickey! I’m so glad I found you.” She hands me a blue envelope. “Sorry, have to run. Ta!”
She heads off to the lobby, leaving me feeling like the straight man in a Neil Simon play. I open the envelope to find a photographic note card portraying a collection of pineapples, mangos and bananas in Mozartean gowns and waistcoats. The caption reads Cosi fan tutti-frutti. Inside is a handwritten note in a smooth cursive.

Would love to talk with you about your writing. Please meet me at Jardiniere one hour after curtain.
Grazie – Maddie

I scan the walls, looking for hidden cameras.


The rest of my evening is its own rather enjoyable brand of hell. I need to take in enough to support a reasonably intelligent review, but how is one bit of it going to penetrate my brain when I know that I will soon be talking to Tatyana herself? (She turns down Onegin, standing in her regal scarlet ball gown, nicely married to royalty, every woman’s dream revenge for a first love scorned. And yet, she is heartbroken.)
The worst part is that post-performance hour. I understand all the cleanup, undressing, meetings with friends and fans, but it leaves me with sixty absolutely unkillable minutes. The ushers are eager to clear everybody out, so all I’m allowed is my visit with Miss Tebaldi and the adjacent men’s room. Five minutes. After that, I figure it’s a good idea to fetch my car and re-park it nearer to my final destination. Ten minutes. Then I take a stroll around City Hall, but it’s getting cold. I am downright euphoric to find a copy of the Bay Guardian, sitting alone in its box, and I make my way to the bar to sit and read.
Jardiniere is like the most elegant retro-‘60s Eichler living room you’ve ever seen. Entering the double glass doors, you encounter a wide curve of staircase to your left. Straight ahead is a horseshoe bar with cut-glass ornaments, and along a brick wall to your far left you’ll find a series of long, straight couches with square leather cushions, the seating enclaves marked off with armchairs and glass-topped coffee tables.
The hostess, a young brunette dressed in black pants and shirt, leads me to one of these couches, nicely sheltered by the bottom of the staircase. Looking up, you can see dining-room tables next to the upstairs railing, patrons peering over as if there’s some kind of a show down here. A nice-looking redhead in the same black uniform perches on an ottoman and takes my order, a lemon-drop martini. But no appetizer. I’m hungry as hell, but I don’t think my stomach would be able to handle it.
The place is pretty full, but not packed. It’s hard to figure the demographics – locals? business types? tourists? – but the clothing and hairstyles project a general air of wealth. I open my paper and pretend to read, but the final fifteen minutes are horrible. Every voice that jumps out of a conversation, every opening of a door yanks on my strings. I feel like an actor doing his first Hamlet. I can’t pull this off! They’ll never buy it. What’s my first line? Oh shit. Why couldn’t Maddalena Hart remain in the comfortable realm of mythic figure? What the hell does she think she’s doing, fraternizing with commoners?
She’s wearing blue jeans. Black pumps, a gray suit jacket over a black blouse. And a gray fedora with a silver band. She stands in the open area, looking around, and her gaze settles on me. She smiles. Why the hell would Maddalena Hart know my face? Perhaps I’m mistaken, perhaps I’ve got myself thinking that every woman who comes through that door is a diva. But here she comes, and those enormous green eyes cannot possibly belong to anyone else. I rise from the couch and I manage not to fall on my ass. She smiles and takes my hand. I hope I’m not sweating. I hope my breath doesn’t stink.
“Mickey!”
“Hi.” One word, two letters. That’s all I’m going to venture.
“Excuse the film-noir hat. I don’t exactly have a Britney Spears paparazzi problem, but we are near the opera house, and for some reason the hat seems to throw them off.”
“Oh. Yes. I…” Three words. I’m useless.
She nods toward the armchair. “May I?”
Silly question. She can sit wherever she wants. She can set fire to my hair. What am I, the armchair police?
“Yes,” I say. “Please.” Okay. That was pretty good.
She sits down and crosses her legs. Her face is very large. That sounds odd, but I have heard that it’s advantageous for performers to have large heads. I’m sitting across from an album cover. Cripes. The waitress arrives and asks about a drink. Maddalena is wearing pink fingernail polish. She dangles a hand over her knee. Her hand is very white.
“Whatever he’s having.”
“Lemon-drop martini?”
“Ooh! Yes.”
The waitress leaves. Maddalena studies me, as if I’m supposed to say something. She has heavy eyelids, a sleepy look. Bedroom eyes. Lauren Bacall.
“Lemon-drop, Mickey? Isn’t that a little gay?”
“Well, I’m… I guess… Sweet tooth.” I’m pathetic.
She runs her left ring finger along her lips, done up in a subtle pink, almost mauve. Her lips are almost as pillowy as on the album covers, with those little crinkles at the edges. Her speaking voice is husky, tired from the night’s work, though clearly soprano, her accent that enunciated American that verges on European. No trace of her native New York.
God, Mickey. How do we get you past this celebrity thing? I know there’s a real person in there, and I want to talk to him. But you’re all decoupaged into place, like I’m talking to a Rodin. Would it help if I farted?”
“I’m… sorry?”
She leans forward and lowers her voice. “Opera singers have tremendous control. It’s all in the diaphragm. Backstage at the Met, we have competitions. Watch out for that Samuel Ramey. If he’s had cabbage or Brussels sprouts, he has been known to fart the overture to Giovanni.”
It’s that last image that gets me. I chuckle.
“That’s it?” she says. “A little snort? This is some pretty top-notch material, buddy.”
I attempt to sip from the lemon-drop, and I realize what a precarious vessel is a martini glass. But the sweet and the cold of it does me well.
“I’m sorry. It’s just… you’re stupendous. You’re everything I…”
Maddalena places two fingers to my lips. “No! Don’t even start. I know exactly what you think of me, so… just… No!”
Maddalena Hart’s fingers on my lips. I’m going to pass out. She sits back and gives me a sly smile, a little wider on the right. She flicks her tongue along her front teeth. I’ve heard that singers do this, always adjusting the equipment.
“I get more flattery than a person should. There’s a certain pressure, having to answer to all that admiration. As for tonight’s performance, I’d rather read about it on your blog.”
The waitress arrives. Maddie gives her lemon-drop an appraising sip.
“Mmm. The citrus feels good on the throat. And, where was I? The blog! The level of understanding, so much more important than flattery. It’s like this: I’ve been reworking Fiordiligi with my voice coach, Luigi Corazonne. I do this every few years; it keeps my performances fresh. So I asked the staff at SFO to gather all the reviews for me. I wanted to see what kind of impression I was making.
“Most of them? Garbage. Either critical for all the wrong reasons or favorable for all the wrong reasons. Drives me insane. But way down at the bottom I find a printout of your blog, and I am mesmerized. This historical/critical hybrid, I’ve never seen anything like it. And all these connections between Adriana and the role. We all know the basic story, especially the loony tessitura, but I have never seen all the threads drawn together like that. The affair with da Ponte. The custom-composing by Mozart, Adriana’s lesser-known shortcomings.
“I felt like I had never fully understood why the part was written that way. And your description of the drops – the hang-glider, the toe-dipping. That was so affirming, because that’s the flaw in almost every Fiordiligi I’ve ever seen. I was so determined not to stomp those notes. Visualization is drastically important to me, and now I have this lovely image to help me whenever I sing the part.
“I’ll tell you, Mickey, most of the critics out there are so damn sure that they know everything about opera, and never do they land on something like that. It’s all bluster. When did they all give up on learning? I didn’t. You didn’t. And no offense, but I get the feeling that your operatic knowledge is anything but encyclopedic. But maybe it’s the humility, the not knowing, that opens the way to discovery. Where did you come from, Mickey, and how do you come up with this stuff?”
Maddie Hart the opera star is tapping her finger into my chest. I cannot force a word past my mouth. I’m an imposter. She immediately makes matters worse by taking off the fedora and unpinning her hair. She shakes it out with a hand and lets it settle along her shoulders, revealing subtle gradations of platinum, straw and sand. An elderly woman in a black sequin gown creeps up from behind, program in hand.
“Ms. Hart? I hate to interrupt, but you were fabulous tonight! Could I trouble you…?”
She hands Maddie the program and a pen and waits as she signs the cover.
“Thank you so much!”
“Thank you for coming to the show.” The woman walks away, and Maddie turns to me with a smile.
“You see what I mean about the hat? It’s like an invisibility cloak. But opera singers have the most well-behaved fans in the world. I would hate to put up with those obnoxious movie fans. I asked you a question, young man!”
She slaps me on the knee, another injury to my sense of reality. In doing so she leans forward, allowing me a generous view of her cleavage.
“I’m sorry. What was the question?”
She gives me a broad stage laugh. I can see the little wrinkles at the corners of her eyes.
“Let me rephrase it. How did you arrive at this unique approach to critiquing opera?”
“Oh. Well… I…” Hell. I was just going to have to tell her the whole mediocre truth. It has to be some sort of felony to perjure yourself to a diva. I take a deep breath.
“Absolute ignorance. I came to opera late in life, with little musical knowledge. So I listened to everything I could get my hands on, and I read everything I could. But still, it wasn’t enough. I had to see it firsthand, but I couldn’t afford the tickets. I have this friend who works at a community newspaper, and she said the local performing groups were always offering her free tickets, whether she wrote about them or not. With print media dying off, and arts coverage being hacked to pieces, they’re desperate for any recognition they can dig up.
“So she told me I should start a blog about opera, and request comps from the regional companies: Opera San Jose, West Bay Opera, Mission Opera. If they gave me any trouble, she could vouch for me. But they gave me no trouble at all. Fortysomething guy, corporate demeanor, no problem.
“After that, however, came the real puzzle: how was I supposed to write about these operas? I didn’t have enough expertise to offer much of an opinion about the singers. Or the production values, or the directing. So I covered my tracks with research, and I discovered that almost every opera ever created has some fascinating backstage story. So I connected that to my reviews, and I came up with something that was, at the least, entertaining.
“The rest is in the details. I had my newspaper friend hack up my stories until I became a decent writer. I learned to upload photos, and made sure I got the credits right. I double-checked the calendar and ticket info. Then I sent an email to the opera to make sure they read it.
“A year later, I began to find my reviews being quoted on singers’ websites, and on the season brochure for West Bay Opera. I sent a query off to San Francisco Opera and was absolutely shocked when they gave me tickets for the entire fall season. The second production was Figaro, with Maddalena Hart as the Countess. But that’s the story. I’m an imposter. I snuck in through the back door. And now I’m sitting here talking to my favorite singer.”
“Favorite singer?” she says. “Or most famous singer?”
“Absolute favorite.” I’m about to tell her the car story, but I decide that it would be too much. “How far back in my blog did you read?”
She gives me an embarrassed smile that takes off twenty years. (Perhaps embarrassment is a youthful endeavor.)
“Okay. You got me. I searched your blog for every reference to me, and I didn’t read about any other singer. But I was pressed for time! Honestly!”
I raise an accusing finger. “Aha! So you are a soprano.”
Now that our flaws are on the table, the conversation rambles freely, and it’s easier to forget the golden identity of the person with whom I am speaking. And I have always found this to be true: find two people with a passion for opera, and the time melts away. In this way, Maddalena Hart is everything I have wished for: an intensely focused performer with a need to constantly poke and prod at the secret meanings and nuances of her craft, to do anything to increase her understanding and sharpen her skill. I try my best not to sound like I’m interviewing her, but I do pick up some tidbits that are bound to pop up in my review.
Maddie and I close down the bar, and we find that my car is parked directly behind hers. She opens her door, tosses her bag and fedora inside, and turns to receive whatever farewell I might offer. The lights of City Hall strike the low overcast and fall over her in a soft mist, spelling out the brighter tresses of her hair, glimmering in the corners of her eyes. Even if she were not Maddalena Hart, I would be in love with her. I take her hand and bring it to my lips. Being a diva, she knows how to accept this, with a smile and the subtlest dip of her knees.
“I can’t even tell you,” I say. “So I won’t. Thank you for appreciating my appreciations.”
“Thank you, Mickey. I can’t wait to read your…”
Maddie stops and looks down, rubbing her eye as if a piece of dust has landed there. She looks up with tears on her cheeks.
“Don’t ever stop writing, Mickey. You do lovely work.”
She kisses me on the lips. Then she gets in her car, gives me a wave and drives off. I wave back. Maybe five minutes later, I remember to get in my car and start it up. I doubt very much if I will have a problem staying awake.
On the lips. I wait until I can see the Stanford dish, and then I play “Song to the Moon.”

Photo: Isabella Ivy.

Friday, April 27, 2018

Holocaust Musical!

The People in the Picture
Guggenheim Entertainment
April 26, 2018

You don't really go to a Holocaust musical expecting a fun time, but with The People in the Picture, you get it: laughs, hutzpah, lively music and dance. If it weren't for the damn Nazis it would be a merry evening all around. Guggenheim Entertainment's production of Iris Rainer Dart's 2011 Broadway musical (she of Beaches fame), is tightly performed, strong-voiced, raucous, and touching in all the right ways.

The setup is everything, and here Dart wisely sets her focus narrowly: on Raisel, a Warsaw vaudevillean who survived the Nazis and lives in 1970s New York with her daughter and granddaughters, Red and Jenny Martin. Musically speaking, Raisel's old troupe, the Warsaw Gang, provides an excellent excuse for some lively jazz/klezmer numbers, like the opening "Bread and Theatre." This by legendary hit-writer Mike Stoller, who co-wrote the music with Artie Butler. Another fun device is the time gap. Nothing like a klezmer band performing Stevie Wonder funk vamps to signal a return to the '70s.

Not that bittersweetness is out of the question - it is, in fact, the lingua franca of the story - but humor is a constant companion. The true meat of the story comes not in the familiar fascist dangers, but in an intriguing question: what happens after you do whatever's needed to survive? Where other narratives focus on the horrors of WWII, this one centers on the disruption of families and culture. The second act brings a situation that is astounding in its sheer dilemmic tension. Everybody's right, and there is absolutely no good solution.

Natalie Schroeder, Susan Gundunas, Stephen Guggenheim,
Iris Rainer Dart, Emma Berman and Julia Wade.
A unique aspect of this production is the presence of many former and current opera singers. There's something very reassuring about this, knowing that the performers have all the notes they need, and a high level of understanding about crafting a song. Stephen Guggenheim, who sang tenor roles with the San Jose and San Francisco operas, plays the nice guys: Moishe, a gay performer who marries Raisel to save her the stigma of an illegitimate pregnancy, and fellow '70s TV writer Marvin, Red's colleague and boyfriend. Guggenheim projects a palpable mensch quality, and uses that ringing tenor to accentuate moments both dramatic and comedic. (He's also the musical director.)

Playing Red is Julia Wade, a former Opera San Jose soprano who went on to New York and a recording career in inspirational music. With a mere thirty-year gap between reviews of her singing (!), I can say that her instrument has developed a divine richness, from wine to sherry. In Stoller's "Now and Then," her phrasing is thoughtful and heart-rending, in a way that perhaps only a classically trained singer can execute. I also enjoyed her '70s wardrobe, which costume designer Julie Engelbrecht apparently stole from the Mary Tyler Moore show.

The straight line-punch line duo of Krinsky and Pinsker (Jim Ambler and Brian Watson) is priceless, as are their harmonies on Butler's "Remember Who You Are." And Natalie Schroeder plays Jenny with a swagger and energy equal to her adult cohorts.

This all leads to Susan Gundunas, who as Raisel is just brilliant. Gundunas was with Opera San Jose in the '90s, and I distinctly remember a heartbreaking performance of Tosca's "Vissi d'arte" that left me thinking, This woman can act! Perhaps the most amazing moments in the show are when she ages herself, from the '40s to the '70s, merely by changing the set of her face, the stiffness of her movements, and adding a Polish accent. It's downright Houdinian. She also demonstrates a unique ability to ditch the opera voice completely when it comes to the vaudeville numbers. Her performance of the Dybbuk number, in which she is possessed by a Jewish demon, is a glorious bit of physical/vocal humor. Later, she interrupts Butler's "Ich, Uch, Feh," a tribute to guttural communication, with screams of anguish, creating a moment that epitomizes the stark contrast of humor and horror everpresent in the show.

The six-piece klezmer band is awesome (and if you're going to get the klezmer groupies, clearly you need to play clarinet, Asaf Ophir). The choreography, created by Shannon Guggenheim, is delivered by the cast with great energy (I love the offbeat stomps of "Bread and Theater"), but also with the impression that they've all been dancing together for years. The new 3Below space - formerly the Camera 3 Cinemas - is warm and intimate, with a couple of unique advantages. You can park upstairs in the garage and never even leave the building, and you can eat popcorn during the show!

Through May 13 at 3Below Theaters, 288 S. Second Street, San Jose. $45-$58. 3belowtheaters.com, 408/404-7711.

Michael J. Vaughn is a thirty-year opera critic, author and painter. His books Operaville and Gabriella's Voice are available at amazon.com. He sang in the San Jose State Concert Choir with Julia Wade and Stephen Guggenheim.

Monday, April 16, 2018

Power Voices at San Jose's Traviata


Pene Pati as Alfredo, Amanda Kingston as Violetta.
Opera San Jose
Verdi’s La Traviata
April 14, 2018

There were some resounding voices coming from the California Theatre Saturday as Opera San Jose gave The Lady of the Camellias the royal treatment. The most startling of these belonged to Pene Pati, the New Zealand tenor who has already become an Adler Fellow at San Francisco Opera and performed for that company in Rigoletto as the Duke of Mantua.

Pati announced his presence right away, in the opening scene’s “Di quell’amor,” delivering a tone that was (dare we say it?) Lucianoan, gorgeously clear and fluid, with careful attention to phrasing and rolled r’s (an art form in itself).The countryside monologues of the second act were a delight, as Alfredo exulted in his new love. In the Act 2 party scene, he showed that lyric can still be fierce, adding searing top notes to an already tense situation.

Amanda Kingston is no surprise at all – we’ve been enjoying her voice for a while now – but what really comes out here is her emotive abilities.The vocal work of the “Sempre libera” scene, in which she ping-pongs between love and freedom, is challenging enough, but she really makes us feel her dilemma. Over the course of the opera, the quality of her acting makes one really understand the particular tortures that Violetta goes through. After the death scene, I felt completely wrung out.

Flora (Christina Pezzarossi), Violetta (Amanda Kingston) and
Dr. Grenvil (Colin Ramsey)
A distinctive magic emanated from the duets. Pati and Kingston showed a rare ability to take intimate moments and project them to the balconies. The a capella sections of “Di quell’amor” were particularly sexy. Alfredo held on to the folds of Violetta’s dress as the two of them sang with their faces inches apart, their voices seeming to mix there before flying beyond the stage. This moment seemed to repeat itself in the final-act duet, ”Parigi, o cara,” the last time that Alfredo and Violetta believe they might have a future together.

After the listener has already been wowed by these two, in walks Malcolm McKenzie, whose baritone is stunningly powerful.His character, Giorgio Germont, Alfredo’s father, is problematic in that he performs terrible misdeeds but is later supposed to elicit a certain forgiveness from the audience. Given the raw materials at hand, McKenzie and stage director Shawna Lucey wisely play Giorgio big and authoritarian. They signal his bad attitude by having him abuse a servant on the way in. It could be that same power that lends a certain weight to his deathbed mea culpas. (I’m still not buying it, but that’s the story’s fault, not the performers.)

The OSJ cast demonstrates impressive strength in the supporting roles. Soprano Erin O’Meally is lovely as Violetta’s maid, Annina, lending authentic feeling to her concerns over her beleaguered mistress. Colin Ramsey displays his fathoms-deep bass in the rather brief role of Dr. Grenvil. Babatunde Akinboboye has entirely too much fun with Marchese D’Obigny, who spends Flora’s party delving into domination, foot fetishes and cross-dressing. Philip Skinner gives the Baron Douphol a delicious sense of entitlement (Skinner has the perfect face for an opera aristocrat). And I was disappointed that Mason Gates didn’t have more singing to do as Gastone.

Lucey’s direction inspired a lot of energy in the party scenes. The Act I fest is a barely controlled chaos, and I appreciate the attention given to chorus members, who are not just milling about but having their own little dramas (games of musical chairs, beating each other over the head). At one point, a wayward couple walks right between Violetta and Germont during their sung conversation, which is such a party thing. Flora’s Act 2 Spanish party is even wilder, and the chorus women’s gypsy dances are amateur in the best sense of the word.

This sense of attentiveness came out, also, in the pivotal moments. The Cash Throw, in which the spurned Alfredo tosses a wad of bills at Violetta, is one of the more deliciously rude moments in opera. Pati delivers this with a bit of a backswing, like a bowler in a cricket match (and yes, I had to look that up). Kingston reacted by dropping to her knees with a crazy smile (as if to say, “How much worse can this get?”) and collapsing into the arms of her friends. The whole scene is incredibly tense. From there, the women reject their men one by one; my companion, Lady Platinum, disliked the sameness of the motion, as it negates the snowflake variation of relationships. The men line up in a tuxedoed squadron against the interloper (not knowing that he’s not really at fault, either).

Violetta (Amanda Kingston) and Giorgio Germont (Malcolm McKenzie)
Then there’s the Sudden Death, Violetta’s surge of energy just before she passes. In this case, she embraces Alfredo and then suddenly goes limp in his arms. This is another case of Lucey directing to the traits of her singers. Pati is a large, powerful man, so lifting Kingston as the curtain falls is a doable feat, and a striking image.

I am still trying to figure out how conductor Joseph Marcheso began the overture without the standard conductor’s applause. Very sneaky! I always enjoy his direction, but there were a couple of nits to pick. Kingston’s “Sempre libera” cadenzas felt a little rushed, and a bit later he cut off an applause. A particular highlight came in the haunting strings of the Act 3 prelude. Veronika Agranov-Dafoe’s rehearsal work was, as always, impeccable. The unexpected standout among Elizabeth Poindexter’s costumes was Annina’s brown traveling outfit, quite the smart number. Eric Flatmo’s set design was particularly nimble, like a mannequin wearing different clothing for each act. The country scene featured an especially attractive stone hearth.

The dance of the Gypsy ladies.
I was telling my date about the $75 million renovation to the California Theatre when there was a mixup with my tickets. An oddly friendly older patron immediately adopted my case and took me to the box office to straighten things out. I was just thinking, Who the hell is this guy? when he introduced himself as David Packard, the man who renovated the theater! (Also, yes, heir to the Hewlett-Packard techno-dynasty.) I was thrilled to offer him a very tardy thank you for the California and Palo Alto’s Stanford Theater, and eventually, to get my tickets. Perhaps next season I’ll run into Wozniak.

Through April 29 at California Theatre, 345 S. First Street, San Jose. 408/437-4450, www.operasj.org. Alternating performers: Dane Suarez as Alfredo and Trevor Neal as Giorgio Germont (4/15, 4/27). OSJ's 2018-19 season will feature Mozart's The Abduction from the Seraglio (Sept. 15-30), Leoncavallo's Pagliacci (Nov. 18-Dec. 2), Heggie's Moby Dick (Feb. 9-24) and Puccini's Madama Butterfly (April 13-28).
 
Michael J. Vaughn is a thirty-year opera critic, novelist and painter. Look for his titles Operaville and Gabriella's Voice at amazon.com.