C-VILLE Weekly | July 20 - 26, 2022

Page 21

CULTURE THE WORKS

music Berto and Matt. Brazilian and Latin guitar night. Free, 7pm. The Bebedero, 225 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thebebedero.com Matthew O’Donnell. Traditional folk music, peace advocacy, and wholesome kookiness. Free, 5:30pm. The Pub at Lake Monticello, 51 Bunker Blvd., Palmyra. lakemonticello golf.org The Wavelength. A mid-week music boost. Free, 6:30pm. The Whiskey Jar, 227 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thewhiskeyjarcville.com Vincent Zorn. Performing live on the patio. Free, 6:30pm. Red Pump Kitchen, 401 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. redpump kitchen.com

stage Little Women. The Virginia Theatre Festival presents Little Women by Kate Hamill, adapted from the novel by Louisa May Alcott, and directed by Aubrey Snowden. $15-50, 7:30pm. Ruth Caplin Theatre, 109 Culbreth Rd. virginiatheatrefestival.org

classes Blue Ridge PRISM presents: Simply Stiltgrass. Learn how to manage Japanese stiltgrass on your property. Free, 11:30am. Online. blueridgeprism.org

outside Farmers in the Park. Local farmers with seasonal produce and meats, cut and potted flowers, baked goods, hot meals, value-added products, prepared food, and crafts. Free, 3pm. Farmers in the Park, 300 Meade Ave. charlottesville.gov Wind Down Wednesday. Acoustic music, food trucks, and a stunning Charlottesville sunset. $5, 6pm. Carter Mountain Orchard, 1435 Carters Mountain Trl. chilesfamily orchards.com

Family Film Series: Paddington 2. Featuring perennial favorites alongside modern classics. Free, 11am. Violet Crown Cinema, 200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. violet crown.com Trivia in the Orchard. Hosted by Katalin Magyar, who will test your knowledge of history, pop culture, holidays past, and, of course, cider. Free, 6:30pm. Albemarle CiderWorks, 2545 Rural Ridge Ln., North Garden. albemarleciderworks.com

Thursday 7/21 music

Lenny Burridge. Enjoy live music and sip on wine. Free, 5pm. Eastwood Farm and Winery, 2531 Scottsville Rd. eastwoodfarmand winery.com

stage

Shakespeare at the Ruins: As You Like It. Four County Players bring to life Shakespeare’s play about mistaken identities, love at first sight, amorous shepherds, impossible coincidences, and multiple marriages. $2325, 7pm. Barboursville Ruins, Mansion Rd., Barboursville. fourcp.org C O NT I N U E D ON PAGE 2 2

I

n the winter of 2019, Dr. Caroline Worra was in Hong Kong playing the role of wealthy widow Hanna Glawari, opposite Richard Troxell as her ex-lover Count Danilo, in a performance of Franz Lehár’s 1905 operetta The Merry Widow. Three years and 8,000 miles later, Worra and Troxell are preparing to reprise their roles with the Charlottesville Opera. Accompanied by a cast of 127 people who have traveled from all corners of the United States, the group will perform two shows in Charlottesville, a city Troxell says talks opera “like New Yorkers talk baseball.” “A lot of times when you’re in New York, at The Met, a lot of people who are going to see that opera are going to impress everybody else,” says Troxell. “In smaller towns, especially, I’ve noticed, in the South, people go because they love the opera.” The Merry Widow is the story of Hanna, who has suitors vying for her fortune, and Count Danilo, her true love who is too proud to marry her for money. Drama, intrigue, and comical misunderstandings ensue. “I think on the surface, the operetta can be ridiculous, as if it doesn’t fit in this time period,” says Troxell. “But if you go to the ‘true love’ part of it, we all do really ridiculous and stupid things for true love.” A few aspects of The Merry Widow make it what director Stephanie Havey describes as “a great first opera.” It is an operetta, which moves along at a pace similar to a modern musical and relies heavily on spoken dialogue. It also features plenty of toe-tapping music, including a catchy crowd-pleaser in “The Merry Widow Waltz.” The production’s original German lyrics have been translated to English. Combined with English supertitles above the stage, newbies can laugh along with the slapstick humor as bumbling side characters attempt to figure out who will win Hanna’s money. “Especially for comedy, it’s nice to be in English, because then the audience is hearing the funny things right away instead of reading ahead,” Worra says. “It’s always a little strange when you haven’t said the punchline yet, and they’ve already started laughing.” Like most things written by men over a century ago, The Merry Widow does not always lift its female characters. At one point, a number about how difficult it is to understand women escalates into a celebratory kickline. But these over-the-top moments fade into silliness behind the heartfelt love story, Havey says, allowing the operetta to resonate with a 21st-century audience. “It’s pointing out the misogyny that would have existed in that time, and it’s making fun of it,” Havey explains. “In the end, Hanna really is the smartest character on stage,

The Merry Widow will take the Paramount stage for two shows on July 22 and July 24. More info can be found at charlottesvilleopera.org.

“In smaller towns, especially, I’ve noticed, in the South, people go because they love the opera.” RICHARD TROXELL

and she has complete autonomy. She chooses her future. She chooses the man that she wants to marry for love.” In order to connect the audience with the operetta’s tongue-in-cheek humor, Havey works with the merry widow herself. Worra serves as both the show’s lead and the artistic director of the opera company, overlapping roles at times distinguished only by whether or not she’s wearing her artistic director name tag. These intersecting roles offer Havey the rare opportunity to work alongside an artistic director with an insider’s perspective. “Being a singer, performer, and artistic director, you’re able to see all of it,” Troxell says. “She’s been doing this for a long time, and she knows how it all could work, and should work, and does a better job of it than some people who have only worn one hat the whole time.”

In 2021, Charlottesville Opera broke from operatic tradition when it performed the first-ever theatrical production at the Ting Pavilion. Because of the space their voices needed to fill, the singers were fitted with microphones, an audio aid almost never used in opera. The boom of La Bohème from enormous speakers on the Downtown Mall gave the most visibility to opera Charlottesville had ever seen. “We had a lot of first-time operagoers come to the Ting Pavilion, because you could just be walking around right in town and hear it,” Havey says. “We had 100 people standing at the back wall, which was great, we love that.” The opera capitalized on this visibility, and its return to The Paramount Theater, by beginning its 2022 season with The Sound of Music. The program drew in Charlottesville families and children, many of whom had never experienced opera before. Worra hopes they join Downtown Mall passersby in returning for The Merry Widow. “To actually see an opera live, there’s something that’s just so special about that,” Worra says. “To hear the powerful voices that are not amplified, carrying over and touching these people in the audience. It touches them right in the heart.”

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Little Women. See listing for Wednesday, July 20. $15-50, 7:30pm. Ruth Caplin Theatre, 109 Culbreth Rd. virginiatheatrefestival.org

By Julia Stumbaugh

@cville_culture

Berto and Vincent. Performing wild gypsy rumba. Free, 7pm. The Bebedero, 225 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thebebedero.com

Slapstick meets operetta in Charlottesville Opera’s new season

July 20 ­­– 26, 2022 c-ville.com

etc.

For the love of it

TRISTAN WILLIAMS

Wednesday 7/20

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