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Opera at the Baseball Park with friends and family: Thumbs up

Opera at the Baseball Park means a celebration of friends and family.  The couple follow opera and have been married over fifty years.    Delighting 25,000 other visitors at the home of the Giants on Saturday evening, world class opera singers hit notes out of the park.  Voices probably projected all the way to Howard Street. 

Opera at the Ballpark/San Francisco Opera/Il Trovatore/Photo:  Pat Johnson

It felt like a good old fashioned drive-in even with Verdi’s tale of vengeance, Il Trovatore, on the screen.   "Die Fledermaus would have been a good choice" said Dad, probably referring to the festive environment.

Friends and Family. That’s just where I sat for Il Trovatore.   It’s a new section for the simulcast at the club level, between the regular stands and the box level.   We took a picture of Wendy and Prasanna in turn, who were good enough sports to share the chairs.

Opera at the Baseball Park/Wendy/Prasanna/Photo:  Cindy Warner

By the end of the evening friends and family left the park happy and full of garlic fries and then some. Next year Dad says he will bring a cushion. Next year I will be bolder with my camera and get a picture of Mom & Dad waving an orange opera foam finger. We’re number one!

The evening started out with a friend saying he thought this was going to be like Stern Grove or Opera in the Park with live performers on stage. I said no it’s a simulcast and if it had live performers in a venue this huge the performers would probably need to have microphones. Mom said that would distort or ruin the quality of the voices the singers spend their lives developing.

A friend commented on how the bells sounding from the ships blended in to the opera. Or how the opera simulcast could probably be heard for blocks away onto Howard Street. For some reason in the cooler air the seagulls were nowhere to be seen, no masts from passing sailboats either, just a majestic cruise ship lit up like a casino.

 Re the big HD screen

Dad says the opera in the ballpark simulcast is far superior technologically to the Met simulcasts. The Met simulcasts have glitches, SF Opera and AT & T Park went smoothly.   A friend expressed how excellent the HD quality looked and I agreed, things did look three dimensional.  He likes having the subtitles right on the screen instead of having to look up.

Mom and Dad re the choice of opera

Dad also commented on the choice of opera to simulcast. He said Die Fledermaus would have been a good choice. I agreed. Maybe Abduction from the Seraglio. Mom had commented Il Trovatore has one of the most convoluted plots in all of opera.

I agree with Mom & Dad that with the ballpark or drive-in movie atmosphere the more raucous the production, the better suited it is to the attention span and venue. Moreover. One child even got under the ropes around the diamond during Il Trovatore. The child’s father had to chase the child down and when almost caught the child lay down on the ground like a hippie in a protest going limp when the police try to carry him away. The crowd appreciated the child’s spirit and applauded. I imagine it’s on Youtube via somebody’s camera phone.

Such shenanigans never could have happened at the opera house even on family days. It’s just this good sportsmanship, this All American spirit that I love about opera in the baseball park. Friends and family and beer and a run around the infield. Similarly when the Il Trovatore cast finished it’s spectacular tale of vengeance, they took their bows wearing baseball caps, while waving their Giants orange foam fingers or a baseball bat. A friend laughed and laughed, it was such a joy to see.

Ready for our close-up

I also loved the bigtime audience reaction inside the park, the feet stomping and cheering to the exponential degree you just don’t get inside an opera house. Sondra Radvanovsky as Leonora then continued with her song about “their prayers of death” and being scarcely able to breathe. The scene had started with a close-up of her hand clenched around the bars over a tower window on a dark night. Earlier I could see via close-ups the sweat on Leonora’s temple. I could make out the faces of my old time favorite choristers like Fred Matthews, Siggy Siegel and Bill Pickersgill.

Mingling with the VIPS, talks beer and Oktoberfest with conductor Cornelius Meister

Back to shenanigans and a sense of adventure and independence at the park.   Little did I know he would soon interview a young new conductor from Heidelberg, one on one, pictured below. 

Generalmusikdirektor der Stadt Heidelberg
Theater und Philharmonisches Orchester der Stadt Heidelberg

Opera at the Ballpark/Cornelius Meister/The Abduction from the Seraglio/Cindy Warner/Photo:  Carter Krizman

The first face I recognize is Adler Fellow Kenneth Kellogg, who listed all his covers and scheduled performances for the season including Salome.

Opera at the Ballpark/Kenneth Kellogg/Photo:  Cindy Warner

Base baritone Andrea Silvestrelli loomed large and I had just seem him as a giant in the Ring Cycle in Seattle.

I also spied my old supervisor Eric Colby out of his tuxedo.  He's the long time house manager.  He's standing with Kelly Montevago, director of corporate giving.

Opera at the Basebal Park/Eric Colby, house manager at SFO/Photo: Cindy Warner

I identified Cornelius Meister, the young conductor making his US opera debut in Mozart’s The Abduction from the Seraglio. Carter pulled both the young German and myself outside onto the deck for a chat about Oktoberfest and why in Germany it’s in September.

Cornelius told us how Germany is from the 16th century and each little town has it’s own beer. When you go to that town you have that town’s beer.

I asked him what he has gotten to do in California. I asked him if he liked the food and the German food in particular. He doesn’t eat the German food in California he said. For Labor Day he did get to hike from the Cliff House to the Golden Gate. Cornelius will have his wife in California from Heidelberg soon along with their two year old twin boys. She doesn’t sing as much these days.

Beer & Baroque Thursday October 29 at the BooM BooM Room

We ran into Michael Colbruno of Philharmonia Baroque, who just started Beer & Baroque. He almost called it Baroquetoberfest. It’s select PBO musicians appearing in local venues like Pyramid Ale brewery in Berkeley.  The BooM BooM Room is at 1601 Fillmore at Geary.  www.Philharmonia.org.

I made my way to the catering at the ballpark. We picked up beef on skewers; tiny Chinese take-out boxes with chicken; chop sticks which Carter used to conduct later; and two trays full of Anchor Steam in plastic bottles that looked just like glass. We headed back to Mom & Dad in the club section. They had garlic fries.

Photos: Cindy Warner

Ballpark photo by Pat Johnson, SF Opera

For more info:  www.SFOpera.com, www.Philharmonia.org

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, SF Opera Examiner

Cindy Warner is a San Francisco Bay Area native who has covered SF theater and opera for Examiner.com via her bicycle since January 2009.

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