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SEEN
AND HEARD INTERVIEW
Elizabeth
Connell:
The world renowned dramatic soprano talks about the
job she loves in an interview with Jim
Pritchard (JPr)
South African born Elizabeth Connell has made London
her home since she first came to Britain in 1970.
Many of a younger generation of operagoers, who will
see her portrayal as the put-upon but caring mother,
Gertrud, in Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel at
Covent Garden will be unaware of her long career in
opera or that she remains one of the world’s leading
dramatic sopranos and an outstanding interpreter of
roles created by Wagner, Beethoven and Strauss. In a
career now verging on being forty years long, she has
recently added Turandot to her repertoire and is
still is looking for other new roles to sing. I first
saw Elizabeth Connell as Amneris and Sieglinde at the
London Coliseum in the late 1970s and have seen many
subsequent performances from this accomplished artist
both in the opera house and on the recital platform.
I interviewed her towards the end of the rehearsals
for the new production of Hansel and Gretel.
Elizabeth Connell - Picture ©
Clive Barda
I was
fascinated to learn that during the rehearsal time at Covent Garden
she has been going backwards and forward to Hamburg to sing Turandot.
Turandot is a
recent new role for you. How did this come about?
When I was
studying with Otakar Kraus he said, ’never touch Turandot as it is a
killer’ and in those days when I was in my early twenties I looked
at it and agreed with him. So I always had this in my mind, but a
few years ago I was in
Frau ohne
Schatten in Frankfurt and it was the uncut version and at the end
of Act II you have ‘Barak, ich habe es nicht getan!’ and you are
singing on the passagio exactly where Turandot sings and for longer
than she does. So I thought, let me have a look at Turandot again
because after this it should be a piece of cake. So I did and it
was. I immediately told my agent and said I had changed my mind and
would like to sing the role. I got a ‘thank you very much’ and
immediately had offers to sing Turandot and now it’s my pension role
(laughs). I first did it two years ago in Melbourne and I’m
glad I’ve found it because I am not struggling and know exactly what
I am doing now.
I reminded Ms
Connell of the early mezzo-soprano roles I had seen her in and
wanted to know how the move to being a dramatic soprano came about.
That was also
advice from my teacher Otakar Kraus. He told me I would eventually
be a dramatic soprano. In your early twenties if you want a short
sharp career then go for it but fortunately in those days people
were prepared to let me come to it in my own good time and in the
natural progression of my voice. Sadly this doesn’t happen now. I’d
sung Amneris in Australia and at the London Opera Centre before
singing it for English National Opera. Then there was Sieglinde
which is quite a low role anyway and this was after 3 or 4 years at
ENO. Having done it 2 years earlier in Australia they gave me
‘Zwischenfach’ roles (for high mezzos and low sopranos) like
Santuzza and then Elvira which is not the highest soprano role you
have in Mozart. I went slowly, slowly, slowly and I put my longevity
in singing down to not having sung too much that was not right for
me too soon.
Was Ms Connell
from a musical family and how did she become a singer.
There was
music in the family and they played various instruments and sang a
bit in choirs but I just had the need inside me to perform. I hadn’t
been allowed to sing until I was 17 when I went to University to do
a music degree. I did piano, which I had been studying before, and
singing – and then after one year it was singing primarily … and
still some piano
(more
laughing). My first role was Ludmila in The Bartered Bride.
I was 17 and never had a singing lesson in my life before. I then
taught school music, English and Geography for short periods and
after that I’d had enough. I thought I’d go and see the world as
politics being what they were at that time in South Africa, there
wasn’t much opportunity for a white English-speaking person to sing
as a career so I got a scholarship and came to Britain. My
professional debut was at the Wexford Festival as Varvara in
Janáček’s Katya Kabanova in 1972. By then I had learnt to
speak Italian, French and German – but now had to sing in Czech! I
went back there this year to see the new opera house and the
wonderful facilities they have now in Wexford.
I had those
two years in Australia after that when Edward Downes invited me out
there. If I had stayed here I would have done Opera for All, the
chorus in Glyndebourne and things like that but by going to
Australia I was thrown in at the deep end and learnt my craft far
away from anywhere. So when I came back I had the job to go to at
ENO and so that was fine.
I read
somewhere that in 1973 Ms Connell had ‘opened the Sydney Opera
House’ I assumed that there must be more to it than that surely?
It opened with
War
and Peace because they could practically use every single person
they had and I was in Scene 3 as Princess Marya Bolkonskaya another
role I sang at ENO when I came back. War and Peace was
in September but the Queen came in October for the official opening.
The Queen was told apparently that she couldn’t do the opening and
not go to an opera so she attended Act I of The Magic Flute.
I believe there are pictures of her getting on her plane in her
evening dress because that was her last night in Australia.
What was Ms
Connell’s first Wagner role and how did her career in Wagner
develop.
I did Venus
(Tannhäuser)
in concert in London for the Chelsea Opera Group at St John’s,
Smith Square, in early 1972 and in Australia. Later I did Elisabeth,
then there was Sieglinde and now over my career I have sung almost
every female role there is in Wagner for me, apart from Eva in
Die Meistersinger. In the early 1980s I sang for three years in
Bayreuth. When I was in Australia there was a wonderful tenor who
had given me some coaching, Clemens Kaiser-Breme and he said
I should audition at Bayreuth. When I did, they said they would
keep my name on file but I was a bit too young at the time. In 1978
I sang in Parsifal for Edo de Waart at the Holland Festival
and the next year he conducted Lohengrin at Bayreuth. In 1980
they wanted a new Ortrud and because he and I had such a good time
doing the Parsifal, he said he wanted me and so I sang there
for three years. I remember I did a jump-in of Brangäne and I was
also a cover for Kundry in Parsifal.
Actually it
was while I was singing one of the rehearsals for
Parsifal
that I realised that it was a bit too low and I was making false
sounds to try and sound mezzoish and it was time to make – as Otakar
Kraus called it – the ‘Fachwechsel’ as I was now too obviously a
soprano. When I hear any early recordings of mine it is definitely a
soprano voice singing mezzo roles with a strong soprano quality. I
had to change and thankfully it worked quite easily and soon I was
singing some wonderful roles in equally wonderful places and my new
career was made.
Of my Wagner
roles, Isolde is the most satisfying but I simply adore singing
Ortrud because she is such a wonderful baddie. I have sung Elsa in
concert but not on stage, I’ve done Elisabeth, I’ve done Venus and
once both on the same evening in Munich for one and a half fees and
not two … unfortunately
(laughs)!
I’ve been extremely lucky and have had the chance to do practically
every role in the Ring mezzo or soprano!
I remarked
that this was not the first time of course she has sung Gertrud in
Hansel and Gretel and asked how rehearsals were going.
Yes I first
sang it very early in my career when I came back from Australia and
the BBC did a studio production in English with Benjamin Luxon as
the Father and then again not long ago, in a semi-staged version at
the Proms.
This one is
going to be very good and the directors, Moshe Leiser and Patrice
Caurier, are just two of the most amusing people around and they are
creating a happy atmosphere for all our work. It is somehow quite
different from the way some of us had visualised we were going to do
it, but their reasoning is spot on.
This run of
performances is double cast and everyone has been working very hard
to get us all even time, but of course there has been illness and
we’ve had to chop and change a little bit. There’s been about a
month’s rehearsal so far but because they have used the other cast
we haven’t been working every day. The production is very true and
naturalistic and there are some splendid magical effects. I’ve never
sung the Witch but I’ve been watching Anja Silja and thinking that
when I’m ready for it I’d love to sing that role.
I wondered
whether if there had been a time in her career when Ms Connell had
had to go on without any rehearsal.
Yes, I once
jumped in for a Lady Macbeth in Rome and all there was time for was
a costume fitting. I asked about the production and was told not to
worry as there would be a spotlight following me. I asked who the
Macbeth was and was told it was Renato Bruson so that was alright:
I knew what he did as I had sung with him many times. I met the
conductor and he asked me ‘Elisabeth, do you know this opera?’ ‘Sì
Maestro,’ I said and he replied ‘So do I!’ He could tell from the
moment I started singing what my approach to the role was and it was
a musical love affair and a fantastic night. I just had to make sure
I didn’t get squashed by some pillars that were moved for some
reason. At one point three people came up to me and handed me
something. They were probably supposed to be witches’ familiars and
I looked in the bag – oh there’s dust in it possibly magic dust and
what do I do with it? Well I make a circle with the magic dust and
step inside it to sing the cabaletta. So I make it up as I go along
and the mind is working overtime but I actually quite like doing
things like that. The show must go on and maybe that is what was
supposed to happen anyway as why else would they give me some magic
dust?
London will be
fortunate to hear Ms Connell sing Leonore in Fidelio for
London Lyric Opera at the Cadogan Hall in February and I assumed she
was looking forward to that.
Yes, it is one
of my signature roles which I have done so many times that I cannot
remember my first one. Colin Davis is fantastic to work with now
again on
Hänsel
und Gretel and I did it with him conducting here at Covent Garden
in the late 1980s. It was the one with the Angels on stilts in the
final scene and when people talk about horrible productions they
always talk about that one. Its one role I’ve sung virtually
everywhere. Hats off to James Hancock and London Lyric Opera! It is
a marvellous thing he is trying to do in starting up that new opera
company.
I wondered how
Ms Connell coped with the travel.
I love the
travel. I’ve sung in China in the Beijing Music Festival, in Japan,
in Macao, Hong Kong, in Brazil, Argentina and Chile, in Australia of
course where I have special relationship with Opera Australia and in
all the major opera houses throughout the world including the Met,
in San Francisco, Paris, Milan, Salzburg, Vienna, Munich, Berlin and
of course here at Covent Garden. I wouldn’t normally have gone to
many of these places. When you go backwards and forwards into things
of course you just know the route from the airport to the hotel. But
sometimes there will be a little time afterwards, for a little
holiday to see the country.
I asked what
it was like singing in Verona and at the Met.
I sang Norma
in Verona and first I sat in the audience to see what the production
was like. The acoustics are fine but when on stage you think ‘my
voice is not moving at all’ I barely thought it had gone past my
teeth. You just have to believe it is going out because you get no
bounce back and your ears cannot tell where the sound is going. In
‘Casta Diva’ Norma sings to the new moon but for me there was a full
moon and what a fantastic background to a performance that was.
I first went
to the Met when James Levine asked me to sing Vitellia in La
clemenza di Tito in 1985. Interestingly, I had been asked before
to sing Kundry there but cancelled when I decided to give that role
up because I was presenting myself incorrectly. It took a bit of
time for them to get over my cancelling before ever getting back to
the Met but it all worked out fine in the end. I was never on the
stage until the first performance, it is a very deep one and I was
singing recitative and worried about how a I was going to do it. So
I really projected and – unlike Verona – heard the voice coming back
and knew there would be no problem.
In 2000 Ms
Connell sang Mahler’s Eighth Symphony (‘Symphony of a Thousand’) at
the Olympic Games and this is another piece of music she has had a
long association with.
In
Sydney it was with Edo de Waart again and I decided to sing the
second soprano because I quite like that part. It was great with the
organ being broadcast in from the Sydney Town Hall and when the
cymbals crashed there were four instead of one.
One of the
last Mahler Eights I sang was in Warsaw and for the last rehearsal
the others were either ill or did not want to sing, so I sang every
single female part and had the time of my life
(laughs). During my career I have actually sung the three soprano
roles and two alto ones. I’ve recorded it with Tennstedt and I
believe I have done it with almost everyone who’s ever conducted it.
Song recitals
have been another recurring feature in Ms Connell’s career I asked
which of these she remembered most.
It was Graham
Johnson who introduced me to doing programmes with themes and one
our first was a ‘Mother Earth’ one that evolved into the fifth in
the series of Schubert recordings for Hyperion. I’ve got a full
Spanish one and a programme that I call ‘Brahms and Liszt and the
consequences thereof’ – drinking songs!
Had Ms Connell
any opportunity to sing in South Africa recently?
I went back to
mark the tenth anniversary of democracy and the end of apartheid in
2004 and sang in
Fidelio on
Robben Island. Over the years I have done masterclasses and given
recitals there too and I’m glad to say that this was for a bursary
that carries my name given by the South African Music Rights
Organisation and my former University of Witwatersrand.
I wondered
whether there were any roles she has not done that she might have
wanted, and how she views the future for herself and the world of
opera.
A couple of
roles have passed me by like the Marschallin which because of my age
I will not now be asked to do, and I never sang Tosca though I
don’t know why. I have more Elektras to do and more Turandots, there
is Leonore in February of course and more recitals and I am happy to
say I am very, very, busy. I particularly like singing Elektra
because you can really let your hair down
(laughs)
and any issues you had with your mother you can work out on stage …
and get paid for it (more laughs). It’s rare that somebody
has a job they really can love doing.
As for opera
itself, every generation thinks that it is not the same as it was
before and no it isn’t. Like most things it evolves and I think its
very elasticity is the beauty of opera; it just fits the new
generations how they want it to fit. So it might go in a different
direction but that is perfectly valid.
Jim Pritchard
Elizabeth
Connell sings in Hänsel
und Gretel on 9th, 12th, 14th, 16th, 18th, 21st
and 29th December with further Hänsel
und Gretel performances
on 11th, 28th, 30th December and 1st January 2009 with another cast.
A review by Mark Berry of the performance on
December 9th is
here.
BBC Radio
3 will broadcast Hänsel und Gretel on Thursday 16th
December at 7.30pm and BBC 2 TV will
show it on Thursday 25th
December at 3pm.
Hänsel und Gretel will also
be relayed live into cinemas on Thursday 16th
December at 7.30pm. For more information please see
www.artsalliancemedia.com/RoyalOperaHouseschedule.htm
To book
online visit
www.roh.org.uk. The performance by London Lyric Opera of
Fidelio with Elizabeth Connell as Leonore is on 17th February 2009
at the Cadogan Hall – box office 020 7730 4500.
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