Opera Reviews
12 May 2024
Untitled Document

A unique insight into a real-life incident



by Steve Cohen

Venables: Denis & Katya
Opera Philadelphia / O19 Festival
September 2019

Theo Hoffman, Siena Licht Miller

This world premiere has prompted strongly divisive reactions.

Some viewers say it’s the future of opera. Others say it shouldn’t be called an opera at all. 

Experimental, and short in length, Denis & Katya actually is just what I want in a festival. It complements other works that are longer and which have contrasting styles. It uses an unusual group of performers to produce an intense emotional reaction.

It is unproductive to predict that this is the future of opera. Certainly it’s different than the norm. So were Pelléas et Mélisande and Wozzeck, but neither initiated a movement of similar works. Denis & Katya is unique, and it’s worth embracing for that singularity.

Denis & Katya is based on a real-life incident from 2016. Two Russian 15-year-olds ran away from home, occupied a cabin owned by her father, and live-streamed the tragedy that followed. Because her father was a member of Russia’s Special Forces, there was a supply of weapons. And there was alcohol. And their cellphones. The idea of Romeo and Juliet holding guns recalled Shakespearean drama, and is relevant to way that today’s young people lead their lives.

During their adventure the children uploaded pictures of themselves to Instagram and live-streamed themselves on Periscope. They posted a farewell message about being misunderstood by adults.

The actuality of these teenagers, however, induces some antipathy. To many of us, they seemed like indulgent, drunken, punks rather than romantic figures. Cleverly, the creators of the opera chose to not show them on stage. The two singing performers play the multiple roles of journalist, teacher, nurse and friends of the couple, talking and singing about what transpired.

This, then, is a documentary — an investigation into what caused the face-off and what attracted so much worldwide attention. Composer Philip Venables and librettist/director Ted Huffman delve into voyeurism, and the issue of “fake news.”

The two singers are accompanied by only four cellists who sit in the four corners of the mostly-bare stage. Think of how Villa Lobos scored his Bachianas Brasileiras. In an especially beautiful part near the end, one of the cellists strums her instrument like a guitar while the others accompany.

Baritone Theo Hoffman and mezzo-soprano Siena Licht Miller sing and act superbly. One impressive element is how Hoffman and Licht resemble the doomed couple, even though they specifically are not playing those characters.

There’s no conductor and no prompter. All six musicians depend on a click track in their ears which provides the timing and gives pitch cues, similar to the way conductors record the soundtracks of movies. Except this is live, in the moment, with no re-do possibility.

As the drama plays out, we see the creators asking themselves how to tell the story. Their typed messages appear in print on an on-stage screen. Shall we show the actual video here? they ask each other. Or save it for the end? Or not use it at all? We start the day expecting to see how the teenagers died and, instead, become engrossed in what the performers are going to show us, and how they’re going to show us. The performers appear to interact with the audience, voicing the questions that we are thinking in the moment.

Other typed letters scroll across the stage, actual messages from Periscope viewers as they watched in 2016. Such as “Katya, show us your tits.” This opera is an exploration of how today’s voyeuristic society reacts to events. We see that any audio recording of the opera would be incomplete. One has to experience the un-voiced text that’s being projected, and to hear the perspective of music coming from four corners of a stage. This demonstrates the power of live, in-person music.
 
Venables' haunting music is elliptical, eccentrically shifting as the story unfolds in bits and pieces. It is modern, with subtlety rather than harshness. The cellists are Rose Bart, Jean Kim, Jennie Lorenzo, and Brandon Yeast, playing exceptionally well under the musical direction of Emily Senturia.

The starkly dramatic scenic and video design are by Andrew Lieberman and Pierre Martin.

Text © Steve Cohen
Photo © Opera Philadelphia
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