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Beverly Sills – Made in America see end of review for details
Beverly
Sills (soprano)
A Thirteen/WNET production, written by John Walker
rec. 1933-77. PCM stereo, NTSC DEUTSCHE
GRAMMOPHON 734299 [83:00
+ 29:00 bonus]
Belle
Silverman, the precocious Shirley Temple look-alike who went
on to become Beverly Sills, one of the great coloratura sopranos
of the last century, does indeed embody the American Dream.
Born
to immigrant parents from Brooklyn she made her debut at
the age of four. Even after she retired from the stage in
1980 she went on to become general director of the New York
City Opera, chairman of the Metropolitan Opera and a tireless
fund-raiser for the arts. In spite of her considerable achievements
she seems to have been most popular by far in America and,
as John Walker’s tribute reveals, she always stayed loyal
to her roots.
The
disc opens with Sills near the end of her career, singing
Massenet’s Manon at the New York City Opera in 1977.Instantly
one is captivated by the charisma of the woman, not to mention
the formidable vocal technique. The remaining items on the
first track set the stage for what is to follow, an entertaining
mix of Broadway melodies, opera excerpts and snippets from
the American TV talk-show circuit.
One
of the more surreal moments comes in the archive footage
of the self-assured seven year old singing Arditi’s ‘Il Bacio’ on
the one-reeler Uncle Sol Solves It (1936). For a moment
one is reminded of Robert Altman’s Gothic take on precocious
talent in Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? These frankly
toe-curling talent shows – no doubt the pushy mothers were
hovering in the wings – were de rigueur for the up
and coming stars of stage and screen and Belle Silverman’s
mother must have pushed with the best of them.
Even the limited dynamics
of these early clips hint at Sills’ vocal talents but it
is the sheer determination and drive of the young star that
comes across most forcefully. Despite her stratospheric soprano – heard
to great effect in the excerpts that follow – Sills has an
engagingly down to earth manner. Her relaxed, often amusing,
appearances on the TV chat shows of the day simply reinforce
the impression of a diva without the temperament to match.
Behind
the slightly goofy TV persona – and Sills really was a product
of the radio and TV age – lies an artist of considerable
talent. The brief excerpt from her 1971 Lucia does
not erase memories of Sutherland in that role but, goodness,
the vocal range and control are just astonishing. Ditto her
Queen of the Night from Mozart’s Zauberflöte, ‘Da
tempeste il legno infranto’ from Handel’s Giulio Cesare and ‘Je
suis Titania’ from Thomas’ Mignon.
Working
as a club singer the young Sills earned enough in tips to
take her mother to Paris for two months but it wasn’t until
1969 that she made the return trip to Europe and her debut
at La Scala, Milan. Her ‘Cielo! Che diverró?’ from this production
of Rossini’s L’Assedio di Corinto and the photographs
of the occasion suggest a commanding artist at the height
of her powers. The notoriously fickle and partisan Italian
press loved her but it seems that America was where she was
destined to make a lasting impact.
Which
is all the more surprising, given that Sills only made her
Met debut in April 1975. The reasons for this are not altogether
clear, although the Met’s general director at the time, Rudolf
Bing, was part of the equation. Sills reprised her La Scala
triumph with L’Assedio but remained loyal to her first
company, the New York City Opera, where she made her farewell
appearance in 1980. By diva standards it was a fairly restrained
occasion, capped by a touching rendition of ‘Time has come
for me to leave you’.
As
I suggested earlier Sills was no stranger to the TV chat
shows and was more than ready for a bit of self-parody when
required. Her tap-dancing, skirt-swishing Grand Ole Opry
sketch for The Muppet Show and her appearances with
comediennes Carol Burnett and Lily Tomlin are good examples
of this. And listen out for the Nebraska anecdote recounted
on The Dick Cavett Show – very funny indeed and a
wonderful example of Sills’ self-deprecating style.
An
equally refreshing aspect of this tribute is that it isn’t
an endless loop of fawning praise - with the mercifully brief
exception of The Boston Globe’s Mike Steinberg. There
is no vanity here either – how could there be, given Sills’ parade
of weird and wonderful hairdos and frightful frocks – and
one senses that it is indeed much easier to take the girl
out of Brooklyn than it is to take Brooklyn out of the girl.
John
Walker has managed to achieve a good balance between Beverly
Sills the diva and Belle Silverman the talented little Jewish
girl from New York. The operatic excerpts – from a rather
awkward Violetta in the 1955 Opera Cameos to Zerbinetta’s
aria from Ariadne auf Naxos (1969) and her fizzing ‘Una
voce poco fa’ from Rossini’s Barber (New York City
Opera, 1976) – give a good indication of her vocal and dramatic
range but anyone interested in hearing Sills in complete
operas should definitely sample her hard-to-find Lucia
di Lammermoor (Westminster Legacy 4712502). Sills’ recorded
legacy is more extensive than one might expect and there
are a number of recital discs available as well.
The DVD booklet has detailed
track and performance information, plus some striking photographs,
an essay entitled ‘Beverly Sills: A Musical Retrospective’ and
a short biography. Picture and sound quality on the DVD are
variable to say the least but this hardly matters.
This is a uniquely American
story, deftly edited and engagingly told. There is only a
hint of personal unhappiness – Sills’ daughter was born deaf,
her son mentally retarded – but the film never descends into
mawkishness. Opera buffs may feel a little short-changed
by the number of ‘showbiz tunes’ included on the disc but
there is enough of the ‘serious stuff’ to keep them watching
anyway. All in all a well-rounded portrait of a marvellous
talent and a truly down-to-earth diva.
Dan Morgan
Full track listing George Frideric HANDEL (1685-1759)
‘Non disperar, chi sa?’ and ‘Da tempeste il legno infranto’ – Giulio Cesare Wolfgang Amadeus
MOZART (1756-1791)
‘The vengeance of hell seethes in my heart’ – The Magic Flute, K620 (sung
in English) Gioacchino ROSSINI (1792-1868) ’Una voce poco fa’ – Il barbiere di Siviglia
‘So anch’io la virtu magica – Don Pasquale
‘Cielo! Che diverro?’ – L’Assedio di Corinto Gaetano DONIZETTI (1797-1848)
Mad Scene – Lucia di Lammermoor
‘Ecco l’indegno – Roberto Devereux Ambroise THOMAS (1811-1896)
‘Je suis Titania’ – Mignon Giuseppe VERDI ‘Sempre libera’ – La Traviata
‘Caro nome’– Rigoletto Luigi ARDITI (1822-1903)
‘Il Bacio’ Jules MASSENET (1842-1912) ‘Obéissons, quand leur voix appelle, aux tendres amours’ and ‘Adieu, notre
petite table’ – Manon Franz LEHÁR(1870-1948) ’Every Movement’ – The Merry Widow Richard STRAUSS (1864-1949) ‘Großmächtige Prinzessin’ – Ariadne auf Naxos, Op.
60 Douglas MOORE (1893-1969)
‘Willow where we met together’ – The Ballad of Baby Doe Jerome KERN (1885-1945)/Oscar HAMMERSTEIN II (1895-1960)
‘All the Things You Are’ Sigmund ROMBERG (1887-1951)/Dorothy
FIELDS (1905-1974)
‘Close as Pages in a Book’ Victor HERBERT (1859-1924)/Harry
B. SMITH (1860-1936)
‘Art is Calling For Me’ Nat VINCENT (1889-1979)/Fred
HOWARD
‘When the Bloom Is On the Sage’ Sigmund ROMBERG (1887-1951)
‘Wanting You’ Fats WALLER (1904-1943) Andy
RAZAF (1895-1973)
‘Find Out What They Like’
Medley – Pot-pourri (with Danny Kaye)
Medley with Carol Burnett
Beverly Sills on Our Gal Sunday (CBS weekday serial)
‘Time Has Come For me To Leave You’ (arrangement of Portuguese folksong)
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