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			The Glimmerglass Festival posted a photo:	Who would I have thought that I could try my hand at sports photographythis summer? I didn't, but the Festival participates in a softballleague against other businesses in the area. Yesterday, we won the game23 to 8 against the Better Batters team. Anyone who works at the theatercan participate, including management, technicians and the singersthemselves, such as Adam Diegel, who plays Don José in Carmen, is seenon top hitting a home run during the bottom of the forth inning. Belowhim is Mike, the Technical Director Intern, throwing the ball to firstbase, and on the bottom is the enthusiastic crowd cheering on our team.William Brown			The Glimmerglass Festival posted a photo:	No, aliens have not taken over the Glimmerglass campus. Today there wasa welding seminar held in the scene shop for people to learn how toweld. I had the honor of attending and trying my own hand at it. Thehelmets have tinted glass in them, many times more dark than yourordinary pair of sunglasses. This is used so you can look at the weldwithout damaging your eyesight. Here you see MIchael demonstrating someof the more advanced welding techniques for some of the stage ops.William Brown			The Glimmerglass Festival posted a photo:	Two weeks ago, our double billing of Later the Same Evening and A Blizzard On Marblehead Neck premiered during a heat wave hitting Central New York. The decision was made during intermission to keep our walls open during the performance of A Blizzard On Marblehead Neck. This rare occurrence  cooled off the audience, letting the gentle breeze waft through the space. The heat didn't seem to dampen the crowd during curtain call and the show seemed well received. I took advantage of this situation to photograph the show through the screens on the outside of the theater.			The Glimmerglass Festival posted a photo:				The Glimmerglass Festival posted a photo:				The Glimmerglass Festival posted a photo:	Before the show this afternoon, I spotted these boys practicing somesoccer moves in front of the theater. This is not an uncommon sight,with many picnickers bringing activities to enjoy the Festival groundsand the lovely summer weather. You can see some patrons gathering infront of the theater to browse our gift shop and pick up some snacks atthe concession stand.William Brown

Tolomeo Opens this Sunday

Tolomeo

Anthony Roth Costanzo as Tolomeo

Tonight is the final dress rehearsal for Handel’s Tolomeo before the production opens this Sunday. Here is some insight into the piece  from our company dramaturg, Kelley Rourke.

The operas of George Frideric Handel have enjoyed a tremendous resurgence in recent decades. Glimmerglass Opera’s intimate theater provides an unparalleled setting for the nuanced artistry required by these great eighteenth-century works. This season, Glimmerglass Opera is proud to present the U.S. professionally staged premiere of Handel’s Tolomeo.

“Tolomeo is very much like Giulio Cesare in that it has very little to do with the historical characters,” says stage director Chas Rader-Shieber. “I think of it as more of a profound romantic comedy.” At the opera’s outset, Tolomeo, by rights the joint ruler of Egypt, has been the victim of a conspiracy involving his mother, Cleopatra III, and his brother, Alessandro. The exiled Tolomeo is living secretly in Cyprus, disguised as a shepherd named Osmino. His wife, Seleuce, has been cast out of Egypt as well. Unbeknownst to Tolomeo, she is also in Cyprus, disguised as the shepherdess Delia. Although Tolomeo and Seleuce have been searching tirelessly for each other, they have been unsuccessful. To complicate matters, the morally suspect royals of Cyprus — Princess Elisa and her brother, King Araspe — are in love with Tolomeo/Osmino and Selefuce/Delia, respectively. Despite the machinations of Elisa and Araspe, Tolomeo and Seleuce display unwavering faithfulness, even in the face of uncertainty and death.

“Handel understood perfectly how to combine the bittersweet poignancy of real life with comedy,” says Rader-Shieber. “It’s a reality-based comedy that I just love. One wants to find a light touch in the heaviest moment, as well as an emotional truth in the lightest. That balancing act… that ‘conversation’… you know what I like to call that? Life. It’s exactly like life.”

Tolomeo opens July 18 at 2:00 p.m. and runs through August 23.

Claire McAdams (2)

Anthony Roth Costanzo as Tolomeo and Joélle Harvey as Seleuce

Comments

  1. Eileen on said:

    Wow…those two look fantastic. I can’t wait to see the show!

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