Review: ‘The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs’: Zen and the art of opera

Edward Parks, as Steve Jobs, and Wei Wu, as Kōbun Chino Otogawa, in The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs. Courtesy Ken Howard/The Santa Fe Opera

If opera is going to grow as an art form in the 21st century, it’s going to need more than directors imposing quirky concepts onto familiar repertoire or composers retracing well-worn tracks of post-Romanticism. It’s going to need the kind of musical and dramatic persuasiveness that enthralled the Santa Fe Opera’s audience on Saturday night at the world premiere of The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs, a bracing opera by composer Mason Bates and librettist Mark Campbell.

This is an American tale told with American bravado. Steve Jobs was both adored and vilified as a person and as a corporate genius, but as the visionary behind the Apple computer empire he was ultimately responsible for the iGadgets (phone, pad, pod, …) that have become defining artifacts of modern life. The opera’s scenario extracts seminal chapters from his life story, casting him as both hero and villain, a man at war with himself. He develops his passion for engineering as a child, achieves technological breakthroughs in his family’s garage and gleans ideas from his educational experiences. He has a relationship (and a daughter) with a woman he treats terribly, and he searches for inner peace through Zen Buddhism. He establishes and oversees his mega-successful corporation, he marries a supportive woman who helps tame some of his demons, he gets sick, he dies. Librettist Campbell shuffles these episodes and arrives at a nonlinear narrative that, on the face of it, seems somewhat random; and yet it unrolls with a strong sense of theatrical momentum and is not at all confusing.

Review: ‘The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs’: Zen and the art of opera

Garrett Sorenson, as Woz, and Edward Parks, as Steve Jobs, in The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs. Courtesy Ken Howard/The Santa Fe Opera

Review: ‘The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs’: Zen and the art of opera

Edward Parks, as Steve Jobs, and Jessica Jones, as Chrisann Brennan, in The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs. Courtesy Ken Howard/The Santa Fe Opera



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