Sunday, December 20, 2015

Target reached!

With 24 hours to go, Wanderlust met their fundraising goal - what an amazing Christmas present for the hard-working cast and crew.

THANK YOU to all those who contributed to the Boosted Campaign. We had 28 donors and 14 chose to remain anonymous. If we knew who you were there would be hugs and kisses for all.

We're now looking forward to a wee break over Christmas and New Year and we begin with the first music rehearsals on January 10th.

But first, our wee blonde mascot, Raphael (you can catch him at the end of the boosted video) is turning two and we've got to get the candles on the tractor cake...


Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Boosted Campaign

The Arts Foundation runs this excellent crowd-funding initiative supporting artists and performers with their projects.

We are hoping to raise $3000 to help with the costs of the tour.

Click on the link if you are able to donate - even a small amount makes a huge difference. There's also a great video on here where you can meet the cast and crew of Cosi, plus a cameo from our mascot and youngest supporter, 2-year-old Raf!

Check out our Boosted Campaign.



Monday, December 7, 2015

Costumes Arrive!

Costume designer for the Opera Otago production of Cosi, Brenda Rendell, organised the delivery (in person no less) of the costumes to the Wanderlust office today. Here's director Jacqueline Coats with the original Dorabella and Ferrando costumes, still in perfect condition.


Georgia Jamieson Emms wonders if she can still get into the Fiordiligi costume that she wore in 2008. Great news, the dressing gown fits perfectly!


Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Creative Communities Funding




The Creative Communities Scheme is a relationship between Creative NZ and local authorities and supports opportunities for New Zealanders to participate in the arts in their local community.

The Carterton Community Arts Council administers this scheme on behalf of the Carterton District. 

Wanderlust Opera is grateful to the Carterton District Council for their support of Cosi Fan Tutte.



Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Wanderlust Opera Announces Tour

In an interview with NZ Opera News, Wanderlust director Georgia Jamieson Emms announced it's first fully staged opera, Mozart's Cosi Fan Tutte, with a touring production that was first produced by Opera Otago as part of the Dunedin Arts Festival in 2008.

Jacqueline Coats will once again direct, Bruce Greenfield has come on board as musical director with designs by Brian King of Toi Whakaari and costumes by Brenda Rendell. Jamieson Emms and Matthew Landreth from the original cast will reprise their roles as Fiordiligi and Don Alfonso. Joining the cast are mezzo-soprano Brigitte Heuser as Dorabella, Cameron Barclay as Ferrando, Imogen Thirlwall as Despina and Stuart Coats as Guglielmo.

The Cosi tour will take place in late Feb/early March 2016 and will be visiting smaller towns in the lower North Island, places that traditionally do not see a lot of opera, if any.

Jamieson Emms said: "Seeing what wonderful, quirky, accessible things the small German companies do to bring in new audiences inspired me to start this company and take opera into opera-starved towns. Like the Wairarapa! I should know!"

The opera will be performed in English with a fun new translation, and will be performed in smaller venues and centres because opera really should be for everyone, for people of all ages.

CAST/CREW:

Director: Jacqueline Coats
Musical director: Bruce Greenfield
Set design: Brian King
Costume design: Brenda Rendell
Producer: Georgia Jamieson Emms

Fiordiligi: Georgia Jamieson Emms
Dorabella: Brigitte Heuser
Ferrando: Cameron Barclay
Guglielmo: Stuart Coats
Despina: Imogen Thirlwall
Don Alfonso: Matthew Landreth

TOUR DATES:

NEW PLYMOUTH Tuesday 23rd & Wednesday 24th Feb, 4th Wall Theatre
CARTERTON Friday 26th & Saturday 27th Feb, Carterton Events Centre
LOWER HUTT Sunday 28th Feb (matinee performance), Little Theatre
PALMERSTON NORTH Tuesday 1st March, Globe Theatre
KAPITI COAST Wednesday 2nd March, Southwards Theatre Paraparaumu

Monday, August 31, 2015

Review of "Cosi In Concert"

Delightful, witty Così fan tutte from Wanderlust Opera

By , 15/08/2015
Così fan tutte (Mozart) in concert
Wanderlust Opera: produced by Georgia Jamieson Emms
Musical director: Bruce Greenfield (piano)
Narrator: Kate Mead
With: Georgia Jamieson Emms (Fiordiligi); Bianca Andrew (Dorabella); Imogen Thirlwall (Despina); Cameron Barclay (Ferrando); Robert Tucker (Guglielmo); Matthew Landreth (Don Alfonso)
English translation by John Drummond, Ruth and Thomas Martin and Georgia Jamieson Emms
St Andrew’s on The Terrace

Saturday 15 August, 7:30 pm

Though it was not a fully staged performance, there were many other features that contributed to a sparking, highly entertaining show; the mere absence of sets and costumes of the era didn’t deny the singers plenty of histrionic scope. Recitatives were replaced by a ‘performance’ by Kate Mead, named ‘narrator’. She was much more than that; in a flamboyant black and silver costume, she entered arm-in-arm with Bruce Greenfield, took her place on a platform on the right while Greenfield went to the piano, which served very well as orchestra.
He launched impulsively into the overture, hitting the keys with staccato ferocity. But after only a minute the overture was cut short and Kate took over to set the scene, with detail rich in witty hyperbole, insight, oxymoron, cynicism and meticulous Neapolitan geography. (If you’re interested, Piazza Carolina is close to the great San Carlo Theatre; their five-storey house is on the corner of Via Gennaro Serra – check it out next time you’re in Naples).
Kate’s dramatic elan ran the risk of upstaging more than one of the real performers. Like the singers, she spoke in English, which, in theory, negated the need for surtitles; but as usual, they’d often have been a help, as voices vary in clarity and carrying ability. (I have to confess a very strong preference, always, for the original language, with surtitles of course). So the scene was promptly set for a comedy in which there was no hope of rational intelligibility.
The other most important actor was the one-man-orchestra, the piano, which did get in the way sometimes, and made it hard to catch some of the Italian-inflected English. But it was always worth paying attention to the sheer brilliance of Greenfield’s playing of the delicious score.
However, the more important thing is the singing.
The three men, in dinner suits, established their characters at once, voices very distinct, though Cameron Barclay’s self-confident Ferrando was at first a little better projected than the Guglielmo of Robert Tucker whose well-grounded baritone slowly distinguished itself. The sisters’ several duets were nicely differentiated in timbre, and models of emotional excess. Bianca Andrew as Dorabella, the more susceptible of the sisters, used her fine penetrating mezzo wonderfully; Georgia Jamieson Emms benefitted as a result of the different character of her voice and personality, easily capturing the nature of Fiordiligi. They both wore glamorous, timeless, ball dresses.
Matthew Landreth as Don Alfonso did not, early on, quite command the nonchalant, Figaro-factotum character that Da Ponte and Mozart envisaged, but by the advent of the quintet, ‘Sento, o dio’, he was fitting comfortably into the texture of the performance.
It’s true that quite a lot was left out (there were 17 numbers listed in the programme from a total of 31 usually numbered in the score), though none of the well-known arias and ensembles was missing, like the divine trio ‘Soave sia il vento’, Fiordiligi’s ‘Come scoglio’ with a conspicuously splendid piano accompaniment; or tenor Ferrando’s touching ‘Un’ aura amorosa’. As an opera without a chorus, it is famous for its beautiful duets, trios and quintets, and they were often more beguiling than the solo arias.
With Alfonso’s pecuniary persuasion, Despina (Imogen Thirlwall) has entered the fray; her performance is vivacious and her initial hesitation to be complicit in Alfonso’s scheme quickly falls away.
The implementation of Alfonso’s plot is followed by a big sextet, as the two Albanians are introduced, and offer the most taxing of all suspensions of disbelief with the most improbable of disguises in all theatre, sporting moustaches and with unstable fezes (plural?), still wearing dinner suits, but with loosened ties.
Despina assumes great importance in Act II, starting with her perky ‘Una donna a quindici anni’, in her attempt to modify the girls’ self-denying virtue. With a few cuts in the score, we miss the agonising vicissitudes of the four as Despina’s principled counsel slowly takes root, especially in the Fiordiligi, the more virtuous of the two, leading precipitately to a double wedding officiated by Despina the notary.
To be sure, one missed the often hilarious, accelerating marital climax that a well-staged performance can offer, but the combination of fine singing and nearly believable acting was not a bad substitute. The outcome from the collapse of earlier assumptions about human behaviour is often left obscure; though I feel that an enigmatic outcome makes better dramatic, psychological sense, here the return to the original pairing was clear (perhaps it would be more acceptable in the provinces).
This splendid, entertaining, Wanderlust Opera enterprise is a serious attempt to find a way to bring opera to wider audiences. Georgia Jamieson Emms and her co-conspirators are to be congratulated on their courage and success which, given some financial support, has the potential to relieve operatic starvation in parts of the country.
The plan is for this performance to become fully staged under director Jacqui Coats and to travel next year to Wanganui, the Kapiti Coast, New Plymouth and Carterton. What is clearly needed is a change of attitude by Creative New Zealand which has a wretched history over many decades of rejecting applications for assistance by admirable, small opera groups.