Jan 142012
 

Q&A

Rebecca Caine Rebecca Caine answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Singers’ EditionWhen did you start singing?
As a pro­fes­sional at 19 thanks to being chucked out of the Guild­hall. I always sang as a child.

Why did you start singing?
I simply loved it. I grew up with no tv and only clas­sical music played at home. My par­ents were won­der­ful at tak­ing us to opera. I saw Suth­er­land, Price, Gobbi and so on at a very young age. I decided to be a singer at age 6 after see­ing Tur­an­dot at the Met star­ring Nilson, Corelli and Freni.

Which singer inspired you most when you were young?
I heard a lot of Suth­er­land as my father was Aus­tralian, and of course I was entranced by Cal­las. I also adored Björling and Fischer-Dieskau.

Which singer do you most admire?
Stratas, Cal­las, so many. I’m lov­ing Kaufmann these days but aren’t we all?

What’s your favour­ite role?
Sev­eral for dif­fer­ent reas­ons. Lulu, because it was a break­through role for me. Gilda because it was heaven to sing. Vixen because my father died dur­ing it, I found her life enhan­cing and 20th cen­tury is where I live musically.

What role have you never played but would have liked to?
Maria in West Side Story. The role that took my focus off opera and onto music­als. I got the role in the West End but for vari­ous reason didn’t do it. Fate led me in another dir­ec­tion and instead I cre­ated the role of Cosette in Les Mis­ér­ables in the ori­ginal production.

What’s your favour­ite opera to watch?
I find opera hard to watch but I love One­gin, and operas by Brit­ten, Janáček, Puccini.

Who is your favour­ite com­poser?
Prokofiev, Tchaikovsky, Brit­ten, Puccini, Shostakovich..

Who is your favour­ite writer?
I don’t have one. I tend to read a lot of history

Who is your favour­ite dir­ector?
David Pount­ney, David McVicar.

Who is your favour­ite actor?
I don’t have a favourite.

Who is your favour­ite dan­cer?
 was hugely inspir­ing to me. Karen Kain. Anthony Dowell.

What is your favour­ite book?
I read mainly history.

What is your favour­ite film?
As a child Olivier’s Richard III. Toot­sie makes me laugh. I enjoy any­thing in long frocks.

Which is your favour­ite city?
Don’t have one.

What do you like most about your­self?
Humour. Imagination

What do you dis­like about your­self?
Not sure where to start!

What was your proudest moment?
Tak­ing two months off from Phantom of the Opera to make my North Amer­ican début as Lulu.

When and where were you hap­pi­est?
As an 8 year old in Italy I saw a glit­ter­ing beetle fly­ing and felt over­whelmed with hap­pi­ness. I was aware of the moment and remem­ber it so clearly even now

What or who is the greatest love of your life?
Cheese.

What is your greatest fear?
Being old, alone and frightened.

If you could change one thing about your­self, what would it be?
My depress­ive nature.

What do you con­sider your greatest achieve­ment?
Being a pro­fes­sional singer for 32 years.

What is your most treas­ured pos­ses­sion?
My animals.

What is your greatest extra­vag­ance?
The upkeep of face and body!

What do you con­sider the most over­rated vir­tue?
They are all over rated.

On what occa­sion do you lie?
Never. No wait, that’s a lie.

If you hadn’t been a singer what would you have liked to be?
His­tor­ian or Pope.

What is your most marked char­ac­ter­istic?
You’d have to ask someone else.

What qual­ity do you most value in a friend?
Humour, kind­ness, loyalty.

What qual­ity do you most value in a col­league?
The same.

Which his­tor­ical fig­ure do you most admire?
Too many to list.

Which liv­ing per­son do you most admire?
Mandela.

What do you most dis­like?
Cruelty. Abuse of animals.

What gift would you most like to have?
To fly and travel in time.

What’s your idea of per­fect hap­pi­ness?
I don’t know… Extraordinary.

How would you like to die?
In my sleep after a stonk­ing piece of cheese.

What is your motto?
Same as Churchill’s: Keep Bug­ger­ing on.

Rebecca Caine — a biography

Rebecca Caine was born in , Canada and stud­ied at the Guild­hall School of Music, London.

Uniquely, her career has been divided between Opera and Musical Theatre, mak­ing her West End debut at 19 in the role of Laurey in Oklahoma! She then sang the role of Eliza in  on the National tour. While mak­ing her debut at Glyn­de­bourne as Amor in L’Incoronazione di Pop­pea, she was asked to join the Royal Shakespeare Com­pany where she cre­ated the role of Cosette in Les Mis­ér­ables. After a suc­cess­ful West End run she joined the ori­ginal cast of Phantom of the Opera to play Christine oppos­ite Michael Craw­ford. She then returned to Toronto to repeat the role in the Cana­dian première of Phantom. Dur­ing her run in Toronto she joined the Cana­dian Opera Com­pany to make her highly praised North Amer­ican debut in the title role of Lulu.

Other work with the Cana­dian Opera Com­pany includes Vixen ( Dora Mavor Moore Award),  Pam­ina, Despina and Micaëla. Else­where, roles include Pam­ina (Glim­mer­glass); Pam­ina, Musetta, Susanna (Eng­lish National Opera); Ophelia in Ham­let, Aminta in Il re pastore, Anna 1 in Seven Deadly Sins (Opera North), Bal­kis in L’incontro improv­viso (Nice); Vixen (Spo­leto); Viol­etta (Opera North­ern Ire­land), Clo­miri in Ime­neo (Han­del Opera Soci­ety) Mary Turner in Of Thee I Sing, Leila in The Pearlfish­ers (Atlanta Opera) Mar­guer­ite in Faust (Opera Fest­ival of New Jer­sey), Musetta ( De Vlaamse Opera) Hanna in The Merry Widow (Opera Hol­land Park), Mrs Coyle in Owen Win­grave (Chicago Opera Theater), Susanna (Scot­tish Opera), Despina (De Vlaamse Opera, Scot­tish Opera) Juli­etta ( of Prague), Adina (New Zea­l­and Opera).

World premières include: the title role in Jezebel with the Toronto Sym­phony, an Ora­torio by Robertson Dav­ies and Derek Hol­man; L.A. Lola in Opera North’s Play­ing Away,  by Howard Brenton and Bene­dict Mason; Fotis in the Cana­dian Opera Company’s The Golden Ass, by Robertsonn Dav­ies and Ran­dolph Peters; 6 female roles in  Psappha’s pro­duc­tion of Mr Emmett Takes a Walk, by David Pount­ney and Peter Max­well Dav­ies; Math­ilde at the Edin­burgh Fest­ival, by Conor Mitchell; and Intol­er­ance, a one woman opera, writ­ten for her by Conor Mitchell and Mark Raven­hill, at the Tête à Tête Fest­ival, London.

Miss Caine’s broad­casts for Radio 3 include Can­dideOne Touch of VenusTrouble in TahitiThe Tele­phone, Fri­day Night is Music Night and con­certs of Bern­stein, Porter and Kern.

Her extens­ive cab­aret career has included Jermyn Street, Laud­er­dale House, Sydmon­ton, (New­bury Spring Fest­ival), Exeter Fest­ival, Cliveden, Theatre Barn, Bux­ton Fest­ival. She recently made her US cab­aret début at the Halsted Centre in Chicago and gave the first per­form­ance at the new Telus recital hall at the Royal Col­lege of Music in Toronto.

Rebecca has sung with the Orquesta Sin­fonia de Bar­celona, The Hague Phil­har­monic (Lulu Suite under Daniel Hard­ing), Toronto Sym­phony, Scot­tish Cham­ber Orches­tra , Liv­er­pool Phil­har­monic and the BBC Con­cert Orchestra.

Her record­ings include Les Mis­ér­ables (ori­ginal Brit­ish cast), The Phantom of The Opera (Cana­dian album), Any­thing Goes, the track Every­one is Doing Some­thing Without Me on Future Sound of London’s album Dead Cit­ies, Babes in Toy­land and Mr Emmett Takes A Walk. Her own solo album is called Lead­ing Ladies.

After appear­ing with the ori­ginal cast of Les Mis­ér­ables 25th Anniversary con­cert, Rebecca  appeared in Tête à Tête’s acclaimed pro­duc­tion of Salad Days at The River­side Stu­dios as Lady Rae­burn fol­lowed by Three Phantoms con­certs with John Owen Jones and Earl Car­penter nation­wide. Recent work includes  the role of Ottavia in Mark Ravenhill’s con­tro­ver­sial Baroque/Jazz ver­sion of The Coron­a­tion of Pop­pea at The Kings Head. Con­certs in the UK with John Owen Jones and in Canada with Michael Bur­gess and her own Cana­dian recital tour with Robert Kortgaard.

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  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Rebecca Caine answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Singers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Rebecca Caine answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Singers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Rebecca Caine answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Singers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Rebecca Caine answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Singers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Rebecca Caine answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Singers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Rebecca Caine answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Singers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Rebecca Caine answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Singers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Rebecca Caine answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Singers’ Edition
Oct 262011
 

Anthony Neilson, dir­ector of the much dis­cussed rivival of Marat/Sade, voices his opin­ion in The ’s theatre blog:

If a reviewer should deem a pro­duc­tion a fail­ure, so be it. But at least start from the pre­sump­tion of pur­pose; dis­cuss the ideas. And this has been the rev­el­a­tion for me, as a rel­at­ive lud­dite, from this small fuss. There is now more insight to be had, in aggreg­ate, from than from our print media; and indis­put­ably more depth to be found in blogs writ­ten from pas­sion, and in reflec­tion. It is a small cul­tural revolu­tion and – like all revolu­tions – it looks like a good thing. For now.

via The Guard­ian[con­tinue reading]

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Oct 252011
 

Everyone’s been excitedly writ­ing about the rush to the exits dur­ing the cur­rent revival of Peter Weiss’s Marat/Sade. The say that about 30 people a per­form­ance are leav­ing, dis­gus­ted with scenes of tor­ture and sim­u­lated sod­omy with a sex toy.

The Guard­ian asked their crit­ics about when they could stand it no longer and had to head for the pave­ment. Crit­ics are, in the­ory, are required to sit through to the bit­ter end, but we’re all human. Here are a couple of extracts:

Alexis Pet­ridis, pop

When I’m a pay­ing punter, I’m very much in favour of walk­ing out of some­thing you’re not enjoy­ing. Some­times, in the early hours, I wake up with a jolt and real­ise that I’ve been dream­ing about the awful night I sat through the insult­ingly shoddy Queen musical We Will Rock You to the bit­ter end.… [con­tinue reading]

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Jul 072011
 

More than two years ago, the esteemed earned rave reviews for its pro­duc­tion of “As You Like It,” which included a scene where a dead rab­bit is skinned and beheaded on stage. The moment was meant to under­score Shakespeare’s descrip­tion of the no-nonsense nature of coun­try life.

Appar­ently, New York audi­ences are a bit more squeam­ish than their Brit­ish coun­ter­parts. The company’s pro­duc­tion, which will open Wed­nes­day in the city as part of the Fest­ival, has switched course at the last minute and cut that vis­ceral moment from the comedy.

The decision to remove the dead rab­bit from “As You Like It”—one of five RSC pro­duc­tions in rep­er­tory this sum­mer at the Park Avenue Armory—was made after the fest­ival received com­plaints from people who had read about the scene in a story in The Wall Street Journal on Fri­day, said fest­ival spokes­wo­man Eileen McMa­hon.… [con­tinue reading]

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May 182011
 

piaf poster Playwright Pam Gems dies at 85Pam Gems, who died on May 13 aged 85, was known as a fem­in­ist play­wright and in par­tic­u­lar for her racy drama Piaf (1978), about the Parisian chanteuse; staged by the with Jane Lapotaire as the art­less, husky-voiced enter­tainer, it was an unsen­ti­mental por­trayal which presen­ted Edith Piaf as a sym­bol of female emancipation.

Many of Pam Gems’s plays attemp­ted to describe what it was like to be a woman in a man’s world; and because she wrote from long exper­i­ence as a house­wife and mother — she did not turn to the theatre until she was in her mid-forties — her work had a cer­tain author­ity. And at a time when few dram­at­ists wrote good parts for women, Pam Gems’ work often filled a gap.… [con­tinue reading]

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Jan 212011
 

Hats, shoes and accessor­ies, includ­ing Tennant’s socks, from the RSC Cos­tume Depart­ment, go on sale next month, at their rehearsal rooms, in Stratford-upon-Avon.

Some of the fair­ies’ out­fits designed in news­pa­per print from Gregory Doran’s , which was set in a rub­bish tip and Alex­an­dra Gilbreath’s romantic cream dress, with orange and peach flowers and green sprig, worn as Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, are up for grabs.

300px David Tennant 1 by sheep purple1 The RSC puts 10,000 costumes on sale   including David Tennants socks
Image via Wiki­pe­dia

A selec­tion of cream linen shirts worn in The Seagull and Tennant’s slip­pers, that he wore back­stage, will be sold. As well as the sol­diers’ light­weight knit­ted chain mail, sprayed sil­ver, from the RSC’s 1984 pro­duc­tion of Henry V with and later seen in ’s film Brave­heart. … [con­tinue reading]

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Jan 192011
 

nureyev fonteyn 482x600 Zoë Dominic, one of the greatest theatre and dance photographers, has died aged 90Dominic was one of the out­stand­ing group of dance and theatre photo– graph­ers – includ­ing Lord Snow­don, Angus McBean and Anthony Crick­may – who flour­ished in the post­war renewal of the Brit­ish per­form­ing arts in the 1950s and 60s. She was a pion­eer in a man’s world and her tal­ent for cap­tur­ing the essence of a per­former endeared her to some of the greatest stars of the age.

Dominic was the “chosen” phở­to­grapher of , Rudolf Nureyev, , and Mag­gie Smith. Her career, which star­ted around 1957, coin­cided with the launch of the Eng­lish Stage Com­pany at the in Lon­don, which she doc­u­mented, and, a few years later, the com­ing of the and the National Theatre.… [con­tinue reading]

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