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人生一定要有的八個朋友: 推手(Builder)、 支柱(Champion)、 同好(Collaborator)、 夥伴(Companion)、 中介(Connector)、 開心果(Energizer)、 開路者(Mind Opener)、 導師(Navigator)。 chutze@bostonorange.com ******************* All rights of articles and photos on this website are reserved.
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Committee of 100 Publishes New Research on the Status of K-12 AAPI Curriculum Adoption Across the United States
AN ENGLISH-LANGUAGE ROMEO AND JULIET FREE ON THE
BOSTON COMMON LAUNCHES AN EXPANDED
BOSTON LYRIC OPERA SEASON AUGUST 11 and 13
Partnership with Commonwealth Shakespeare Company (CSC)
and the City of Boston yields a production accessible to everyone.
Charles Gounod’s operatic setting of the Shakespeare classic features
artists making company debuts, and Boston-trained singers.
Ricardo Garcia and Vanessa Becerra play the young lovers; CSC’s Steven Maler directs.
Production marks 20 years since BLO’s last Common appearance, 2002’s “Carmen.”
BOSTON, Mass. – June 29, 2022 – A free, public opera adaptation of
Romeo & Juliet on the historic Boston Common opens
Boston Lyric Opera’s 2022/23 Season with two performances August 11
and 13 at 8 PM. Based on Charles Gounod’s 1867 musical setting of the
classic drama with a libretto by Jules Barbier and Michel Carré, and an
English translation by Edmund Tracey, the production is co-presented
in partnership with Commonwealth Shakespeare Company (CSC) and the
City of Boston. Ricardo Garcia (l.) makes his BLO company debut as
Romeo; Boston Conservatory at Berklee alumna Vanessa Becerra
(r., photo by Coco Jourdana) is Juliet. CSC Artistic Director Steven Maler
will direct the production and BLO Music Director David Angus will lead
the BLO Orchestra and Chorus. The performance, sung in English with
surtitles, coincides with the 20-year anniversary of BLO’s last free
Boston Common show, “Carmen.”
Considered alongside Giuseppi Verdi’s Otello and Falstaff, and more
recently Brett Dean’s Hamlet as among the most successful opera
adaptations of Shakespeare, Gounod’s Romeo & Juliet highlights the
story’s most operatic plot points: young lovers forbidden to be together and finding love against
the odds, only to perish at their own hands. The story inspired more than two dozen
opera treatments but Gounod’s lush music – in love duets like the one sung the morning after
the young lovers’ first night together, arias like Juliet’s well-known waltz and Romeo’s passionate
Act II declaration of love, and the scene-setting orchestral interludes and dramatic choral
moments – ensures his version a place of continued prominence.
THE PRODUCTION
The libretto compresses Shakespeare’s storyline and cuts the number of roles nearly in half. The result is a brisk tale that moves from the rivalry between the Capulets and Montagues to the masked ball where the title characters meet and fall in love, through the lovers’ surreptitious courting and marriage, the street fight that sheds both families’ blood, and the tragic finale in Juliet’s tomb.
BLO Acting Stanford Calderwood General and Artistic Director Bradley Vernatter says the production draws distinctively on the strengths of both artistic institutions, and results in a unique version that blends the talents and storytelling of each. This opera production, for example, adds two actors to the staging who perform spoken text from the original play and add some of Shakespeare’s sonnets for context and texture.
“This bold interpretation of the classic tale of star-crossed lovers, told under a starry New England sky, celebrates the rich legacy of this opera in a modern context,” Vernatter says. “In collaboration with our friends at CSC, we are creating something completely unique for our city, something neither company could make on its own. These performances demonstrate the creative power of the performing arts in Boston and the importance of coming together as a community.”
Stage Director Steven Maler says the production is inspired by busker culture – and comprises a gathering of street musicians, singers and actors whose desire to entertain in public makes for surprising and spontaneous moments of joy. Performers play on three stage levels, with the full 47-piece orchestra in view and a 20-plus-member chorus enhancing scenes like the masked ball, the town plaza and others.
“CSC’s vision has always been to bring performances to the people’s park, the Boston Common, this shared public space and the nation’s oldest park,” Maler says. “Democratizing art is central to our mission. Early opera, like Shakespeare’s work, was populist in its time…vital and vibrant parts of the culture. I am happy we can do artistic collaborations with partners like BLO, which continues to democratize their artform and make it more accessible.”
CASTING AND ARTISTIC TEAM
The casting for Romeo & Juliet mixes company debuts with returning artists and artists whose musical training took place in Boston. Boston Conservatory at Berklee (BC@B) alumna and soprano Vanessa Becerra stars as Juliet, BC@B alum mezzo-soprano Mack Wolz (BLO’s 2022 operabox.tv film, “Svadba”) portrays Stéphano, tenor Ricardo Garcia is Romeo, BLO Emerging Artist alumnus and tenor Omar Najmi sings Tybalt, incoming Emerging Artist and tenor Fred C. VanNess Jr. portrays Paris, Rhode Island-born mezzo-soprano and BLO Chorus member Arielle Rogers-Wilkey sings Gertrude, and bass Joshua Conyers (seen recently in Odyssey Opera’s Malcolm X at the Strand Theater) is Lord Capulet. Emerging Artist Nicholas LaGesse (2022’s Champion) sings Mercutio, BLO Chorus member and incoming Emerging Artist baritone Junhan Choi is Gregorio, Berklee College of Music instructor and bass Philip Lima sings the role of Friar Laurence. Some singing roles have been changed or cut to accommodate a two-hour runtime. Additional casting will be announced later.
The Romeo & Juliet artistic and creative team includes conductor David Angus, stage director Steven Maler, dramaturg John Conklin, production and lighting designer Eric Southern, and costume designer Nancy Leary. Additional artistic team members will be announced later.
SEATING AND ACCESS
Romeo & Juliet will be performed on the Commonwealth Shakespeare Company stage, located north of the Parkman Bandstand in the Boston Common. MBTA access is at the Green Line Boylston Street stop, and the Red Line Park Street stop.
Audience members may bring blankets and chairs, or can rent chairs on site for $10. Picnics are permitted at the show. The Romeo & Juliet runtime is 2 hours.
The Boston Common is accessible. For help with special seating or mobility and access needs, BLO Audience Services can be reached at 617.542.6772 or boxoffice@blo.org.
Digital programs will be available in advance at blo.org. Weather alerts and other updates about Romeo & Juliet are available by signing up here.
A limited number of reserved seats are available in the Friends Section with a donation of $100 per seat to Boston Lyric Opera. Visit blo.org for details.
SPONSORS
Community events for this season, including this free presentation of Romeo and Juliet, are sponsored, in part, by the Cabot Family Charitable Trust. The 2022/23 Season is supported by the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency, and by the Boston Cultural Council/Reopen Creative Boston Fund administered by the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture. David Angus is sponsored this season by Linda Cabot Black.Boston Chamber of Commerce Announces Ronald P. O’Hanley,
Chairman & CEO of State Street, as incoming Chair of Board of Directors
BOSTON, MA –The Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce (the “Chamber”) is proud to announce the new Chair of the Board of Directors, Ronald P. O’Hanley, Chairman & CEO of State Street, who will begin his term on July 1, 2022. O’Hanley follows Micho F. Spring, Chief Reputation Officer at Weber Shandwick, who served as Chair of the Board of Directors from 2020 to 2022. The Chamber celebrates and applauds the extensive leadership of Spring, who envisioned and successfully established the Chamber’s Higher Education Leadership Council, a public call to action for Board Diversity, and served as the leading business community voice during the City of Boston’s mayoral transition.
The Board Chair, in partnership with James E. Rooney, the Chamber’s President & CEO, convenes and leads the region’s most influential leaders that are committed to the Chamber’s mission to make Greater Boston the best place for all businesses and all people to thrive.
In addition to the incoming Board Chair, the Chamber is proud to announce the Vice Chairs and Treasurer of the Board:
“It is an honor to begin my term as Board Chair at the Chamber. We will continue the great work of the previous Board Chairs, including my predecessor Micho Spring. In partnership with Jim, Micho not only launched a new leadership council and prioritized equity, she also elevated the reputation of the Chamber, further solidifying the Chamber as the voice of the business community. I applaud her robust efforts and transformative leadership. I also applaud, Jim Rooney, and his continued success in elevating business leadership at the local and national level. I look forward to working with Jim and the Board to influence and define the future of the Commonwealth,“ said Ronald O’Hanley, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of State Street.
“During a time of immense challenges, including the height of the pandemic, economic shifts, the most recent racial reckoning, international conflicts, and challenges to gender equity, the Board quickly responded, pivoted and found opportunities to lead and support businesses and people throughout the Commonwealth. Together, the Board, the Chamber team, and the business community worked purposefully to ensure a more equitable future for the people and families that are living and working in Massachusetts. Now is the perfect time for a leader of Ron O’Hanley’s stature to take the reigns,“ said Micho F. Spring, Chief Reputation Officer, Weber Shandwick.
“Thank you to Micho Spring, my friend and colleague, for her vision and leadership of the Board during the challenges of the pandemic, the most recent racial reckoning, and the economic shifts that followed. With Micho’s vision, the Chamber and the business community are ready to tackle the next chapter as a united business voice,” said James E. Rooney, President and CEO of the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce. “I am grateful that Ron has agreed to serve as our next Chair – his expertise will be invaluable for the future of the Chamber. The future of commerce and our competitiveness as a state, the future of our downtowns, and the future of the office are critical issues that demand solutions, and I know that Ron will be an excellent partner as the Chamber delivers solutions.”
Ron brings to the role of Board Chair expertise and a demonstrated track record, including efforts to advance climate, corporate governance, and diversity, equity, and inclusion. He holds national and international leadership roles at Unum Corp., the International Business Council, Institute for International Finance, Focusing Capital on the Long Term, the Council for Inclusive Capitalism, and the Vatican Summit on the Just Transition with Notre Dame University. He also serves on the Federal Reserve’s Federal Advisory Council.
To learn more about the Chamber’s Board of Directors, visit the website for the Board of Directors.
AG
HEALEY ISSUES STATEMENT ON U.S. SUPREME COURT DECISION IN ‘REMAIN IN MEXICO’
CASE
BOSTON –
Attorney General Maura Healey issued the
following statement in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in the Biden
v. Texas case, ultimately ruling in favor of the Biden Administration’s
decision to end the Trump-era “Remain in Mexico” policy which had effectively halted the asylum process at the
southern border.
“Many immigrants turn to this country for refuge, safety, and the chance to seek a better life for themselves and their families. Today’s decision is a win for all of us, and in particular for our refugee and immigrant communities who deserve, at the very least, the opportunity to make their claims for asylum and be treated with fairness and dignity.”