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Sun. Mar. 19, 2023 2p.m.

Photo by Scott Suchman

Eisenhower Theater

  • Runtime

    2 hours and 15 minutes plus a 25-minute intermission

  • Presenting Sponsor

    General Dynamics

  • View Details

Post-Performance

A post-performance question and answer with the artists takes place on March 13,17, 19, 22, and 25.

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Timothy O'Leary, General Director

Francesca Zambello, Artistic Director

Presents

Blue

Music by Jeanine Tesori
Libretto by Tazewell Thompson

#BlueDC

In English with Projected English Titles

The scenery and costumes for this production of Blue are co-produced
by Glimmerglass Festival, Washington National Opera, and Lyric Opera of Chicago

Blue by Jeanine Tesori is presented under license from G. Schirmer Inc. and Associated Music Publishers, copyright owners.

Projected titles designed by Kelley Rourke originally for
The Glimmerglass Festival

Patrons are requested to silence cell phones and other electronic devices during performances.

The taking of photographs and the use of recording equipment are not allowed in this venue.
Program order and artists are subject to change.

Sponsors

Official Airline of the WNO Season

Major support for the Opening Night of "Blue" generously provided by Robert and Lynn Downing, This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, Lugano , Support for Briana Hunter generously provided by Jean and Gene Stark, Opening Night support for Kenneth Kellogg generously provided by Diane E. Tachmindji

Welcome Letter

Dear Friends:

We all remember that day: March 12, 2020. Here at the Kennedy Center, we were in final rehearsals for Blue as everything shut down due to the pandemic. It has been our goal ever since to get this award-winning opera and production back to you, our dedicated audiences. Blue was hailed as one of the “Best of 2019” by The New York Times, following its premiere at the Glimmerglass Festival, and we are thrilled to be able to bring it to D.C. audiences.

The world has changed in so many ways since that day in March 2020. As we try to untangle the many threads of life, we hope you will turn to opera as we do, as it allows us to explore emotions at the heart of human experience. How do we relate to one another? How do we respond to events that rock our worlds, for the better and for the worse? Can we see the moments of our lives in a larger context, and is that vision a source of despair, inspiration, or something else?

Blue asks many of these questions. It centers on a terrible and all-too familiar tragedy—the shooting of an unarmed black boy at a protest rally by a white police officer. As the opera unfolds, we are invited to witness the power of family and relationships—an expectant mother and her girlfriends, a new father and his buddies, a brand-new pair of parents, and a father and son. Any parent will be moved by this story, as we witness how a community can gather around a family in times of tragedy and healing.

During the pandemic and lockdown we did not put Blue away entirely. We used the time to make a recording with the scheduled cast under the baton of Roderick Cox that was released on the Pentatone label in March 2022, and is easily available online. But now we want to welcome you to the live event! We are so grateful that you have joined us at WNO, and we hope you will find Blue powerful and stimulating.

Warmly,

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Timothy O’Leary
General Director of WNO
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Francesca Zambello
Artistic Director of WNO
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Cast

Music by Jeanine Tesori
Libretto by Tazewell Thompson

The Father Kenneth Kellogg±

The Mother Briana Hunter

The Son Aaron Crouch*

The Reverend Joshua Conyers±

Girlfriend 1/Congregant 1/Nurse Ariana Wehr±

Girlfriend 2/Congregant 2 Katerina Burton‡

Girlfriend 3/Congregant 3 Rehanna Thelwell±

Policeman 1/Male Congregant 1 Camron Gray*

Policeman 2/Male Congregant 2 Jonathan Pierce Rhodes‡

Policeman 3/Male Congregant 3 Christian Simmons‡

Washington National Opera Orchestra

Creative Team

Conductors Joseph Young (March 11, 13, 17, & 19)*
Jonathan Taylor Rush (March 22 & 25)*

Director Tazewell Thompson

Associate Director Cindy C. Oxberry

Set Designer Donald Eastman

Costume Designer Jessica Jahn

Lighting Designer Robert Wierzel

Sound Designers Kai Harada, Haley Parcher*

Hair and Makeup Designer Anika Seitu

Surtitles Kelley Rourke

Cover Conductor Kevin Miller

Assistant Conductors Michael Baitzer, Nicole Cloutier‡

Assistant Director Joshua Horowitz

Stage Manager Diane Linâ–²

* Washington National Opera Debut
± Alumnus of the Cafritz Young Artist Program
‡ Current member of the Cafritz Young Artist Program
â–² Washington National Opera AGMA production staff member with 10 or more seasons of service

Synopsis

The Mother calls her Girlfriends together to her apartment in Harlem to tell them she is expecting a child. Their joy turns to concern when she tells them she is carrying a boy; they warn her that her son will not be welcomed in this country. When her hope and love—for the child she carries and for The Father, a policeman—will not be shaken, her Girlfriends relent, blessing her and the child. The Father’s police officer buddies, on the other hand, are immediately joyful—and a bit jealous—when they learn their fellow officer has fathered a son.

Sixteen years later, The Son, a student artist and activist, frequently finds himself at odds with the law for his involvement with non-violent political protests. The Father confronts The Son, who pushes back, accusing his police officer Father of upholding an oppressive system. Despite The Son’s bitter words, The Father tells him he will always love him and hold him close.

After The Son is shot by a police officer at a protest, the heartbroken Father meets with The Reverend, who attempts to comfort him and encourages him to forgive. The Father, adopting the attitude of The Son, lashes out angrily. As the funeral for The Son approaches, The Girlfriends return to Harlem to support the grief-stricken Mother as she prepares to lay her son to rest.

At the funeral, Father and Mother pray with the congregation, asking God to welcome their son to Heaven. The Father briefly becomes lost in a fog of emotion, guilt, regret, and memory, then finds his way back to the community gathered around him in church.

Additional Reading

Words of The Father

Bass Kenneth Kellogg created the role of The Father in Blue for its premiere at the Glimmerglass Festival in 2019, and has since been the only performer of the part, for productions in Detroit, Seattle, Pittsburgh, Toledo, and the Dutch National Opera, in the European premiere last October. For the Washington, D.C. native, the connection to Blue that continues at WNO has been life-changing.

Doing The Work: Opera As Conversation

Opera is an Italian word meaning work, and the workers are many—those who write, who interpret, who perform, who build, who witness and respond. In such an intensively collaborative art form, one task is shared by all: conversation. What story do we need, at this time, in this place? And what does each person—what craft, what personal experience, what pain and hope and fear and joy—bring to the project? How does each person make space for other individuals’ skills and wisdom while breathing a new story into being?

A personal postscript, from Francesca Zambello:

“When I commissioned this work in 2019, I had no idea that America would face civilization-shifting events that included a pandemic and an insurrection or that the Black Lives Matter movement would galvanize change around the globe. We must harness the power of great art to foster empathy, fuel progress, and bring healing. I believe that America needs Blue’s message of hope and humanity now more than ever.”

In The Words Of The Librettist

In 2020, Tazewell Thompson penned an article in The New York Times about his experience writing the libretto for Blue. Thompson recalled that the idea of an opera about race in America was brought up by WNO Artistic Director Francesca Zambello, who asked for his thoughts on potential librettists. Reflecting on his own experiences growing up and living in Harlem, responded, “Why not me?”

Staging Justice In A Three-Dimensional Humanity

There is something almost magical about the opera Blue. This work straddles many edges around genre, style, and form. It is a dramatic theatrical piece that works with the expansiveness of opera as well as conveying the immediacy of musical theater. Blue connects to a rooted moment in time—the present time of its composition in 2019. In many ways, this story about family and the undisputed horror of losing a child to a violent death gets to the root of our worst fears, uniting our experiences across nation, race, ethnicity, and time period. Yet, very specifically, this story captures the essence of past conflicts involving Black people in the United States. Blue delineates a space where modern policing extends back to patrolling enslaved bodies, the legacy of Emmett Till, and the highly visible police killings of many unarmed Black people since Trayvon Martin in 2012. Presciently, this opera preceded the murder of George Floyd by a year. The specifics of this 21st-century story encompass what has become a transcending universal truth of oppression for Black people in America. The intimacy of this family’s situation presents both a private as well as an epic portrayal of life in operatic dimensions.

Selected Readings

“Something happened in this world, has happened in this country, to shape this man to do what he did...” —Blue

Meet Artists

Meet the Creative Team

Staff

WNO Production Staff

Assistant Stage Managers Sean Corcoranâ–², Leslie Sears

Assistant Lighting Designer Paul Callahan

Projected English Titles Coordinator Corinne M. Hayes

Projected English Titles Operator Isabel Martin

Wardrobe Supervisor Amy Carr

â–² Washington National Opera production staff member with 10 or more seasons of service

Washington National Opera Staff

General DirectorTimothy O’Leary

Artistic DirectorFrancesca Zambello

Administration and Governance

Director of Administration and GovernanceKathleen Dean

Constituent Relations and Audience Development ManagerShiyana Valentine

Strategy and Operations CoordinatorKeely Fravel

Artistic Planning and Operations

Director of Artistic Planning and OperationsSamuel Gelber

Senior Manager of Artistic Planning and Operations Giuliana Zanoni

Assistant Manager of Artistic Planning and OperationsSophie Dolamore

Music Staff

Head of Music StaffMichael Baitzer

Chorus MasterSteven Gathman

Music AdministratorKen Weiss

Music Librarian Shelley Friedman

WNO Orchestra Staff

Director of Orchestra Personnel and Operations, KCOHO/WNOOAshley Stonebraker

Orchestra Personnel Manager, KCOHO/WNOOMolly Jackson

Orchestra Operations Assistant, KCOHO/WNOOElyse Ridder-Roe

Cafritz Young Artist Program & The American Opera Initiative

Director of the Cafritz Young Artists Program and the American Opera Initiative Christopher Cano

Artistic Advisor, American Opera InitiativeKelley Rourke

Assistant Manager, Cafritz Young Artist ProgramCaitlin Oldham

Development

Vice President of Corporate EngagementEllen Palmer

Director of Foundation RelationsMaryvonne Neptune

Director, Individual Giving and OperationsNicole Woods

Manager of StewardshipHeather Whitpan

Major Gifts OfficerPhoebe Gor

Major Gifts OfficerKate Sainer

Major Gifts OfficerHannah Sparrow

Assistant Manager, StewardshipZoë Jones

Assistant Manager, Individual GivingKaty Crabill

Development Operations CoordinatorSimran Kaur

Education

Director of EducationWarren Williams

Manager, Music and WNO EducationAshi Day

Marketing and Advertising

Marketing

Vice President of MarketingDerek A. Johnson

Senior Marketing ManagerBritney Brewington

Advertising

Director, Creative and Brand StrategyScott Bushnell

Director, Advertising and ProductionSuanne Hall

Senior Manager, Advertising CommunicationsRebecca Kraybill

Manager, Advertising DesignFreeman Robinson

Senior Graphic DesignerDana Cohen

Advertising CoordinatorLizzie Stoltz

Office of the General Director

Executive Assistant to the General DirectorMelanie Leinbach

Production

Director of ProductionChelsea Antrim Dennis

Production Operations ManagerCayley Carroll

Senior Manager, Rehearsal DepartmentElizabeth Ventura

Production Stage ManagerDiane Lin

Assistant Manager Rehearsal: Studio OperationLee Cromwell

Assistant Manager Rehearsal: Artist ServicesCharlotte Cugnini

Rehearsal Department AssistantLiam Hurley

Intern, Cafritz Young Artist Program and Rehearsal DepartmentNicole Caracost

Production Office AssistantsRebecca Silva, Leigh DeWitte, Margaret Warner, Allison Bailey, Elle Sullivan, Esme Pierzchala, Mia Athey, Isabel McLane, Gabby Cramer, Sophia Symonowicz, Sommer Schaap, Miranda Lee, Mel Mader

Costumes

Costume DirectorMark Hamberger

Costume Design ManagerTimm Burrow

Costume Workroom ManagerAnaMarie Nelson

Assistant Costume CoordinatorMegan Repetski

Wig MasterSamantha M. Wootten

Costume CoordinatorKathleen Geldard

Costume Stock CoordinatorKatherine Blobner

DraperWilliam Nelson

First HandStella Pivnik

First HandStacey Thomann

StitcherAngela Marie McLean

StitcherAriana Peck

StitcherRose Peele

StitcherAutumn Rekus

StitcherLilliana Valentin

StitcherAmy VanderStaay

Crafts ArtisanJoshua Kelley

Technical

Technical DirectorPaul Taylor

Associate Technical DirectorChristy Blackham

Assistant Technical DirectorSean Miller

Lighting DirectorA.J. Guban

Properties Assistant ManagerRachel Witt

Public Relations

Senior Press Representative, ClassicalDavid Hsieh

Public Relations Coordinator, ClassicalKate Wyman

Program Book Editor-in-ChiefRebecca Winzenried

Kennedy Center Executive Leadership

President, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing ArtsDeborah F. Rutter

Vice President, Public RelationsEileen Andrews

Chief Information Officer Ralph Bellandi

Interim Vice President of Human Resources LaTa'sha M. Bowens

Senior Vice President, MarketingKimberly J. Cooper

Executive Director, National Symphony OrchestraJean Davidson

Senior Vice President, Artistic PlanningMonica Holt

Chief Financial OfficerStacey Johnson

Vice President, EducationJordan LaSalle

Vice President, Government Relations and ProtocolLaurie McKay

Senior Vice President, DevelopmentLeslie Miller

General Director, Washington National OperaTimothy O’Leary

Vice President, FacilitiesMatt Floca

Executive Vice President & General CounselAsh Zachariah

Staff for the Eisenhower Theater

  • Theater Manager
    J. Bret Burzio, Sr.*
  • Production Operations Director
    Melissa Santiago
  • Box Office Treasurer
    Ronald Payne
  • Head Carpenter
    Thomas M. Hewitt
  • Assistant Carpenter-Flies
    John P. Green
  • Head Electrician
    Thomas A. Benya
  • Assistant Electrician
    Michael Cassidy, Jr.
  • Head Usher
    Carol Anderson
  • Head Sound
    Matthew P. Snyder
  • Head Properties
    Matthew L. Roether
  • Head Wardrobe
    Rebecca A. Gessert
  • Assistant Property Manager
    Matthew M. Wooden

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*Represented by ATPAM, the Association of Theatrical Press Agents and Managers.

Steinway Piano Gallery is the exclusive area representative of Steinway & Sons and Boston pianos, the official pianos of the Kennedy Center.

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The box office at the Kennedy Center is represented by I.A.T.S.E, Local #868.

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The technicians at the Kennedy Center are represented by Local #22, Local #772,  and Local #798 I.A.T.S.E., AFL-CIO-CLC, the professional union of theatrical technicians.