NIXON IN CHINA

Auckland Town Hall, Auckland

17/03/2016 - 18/03/2016

Auckland Arts Festival 2016

Production Details



n a nutshell:
Celebration of contrasts / Operatic event of the year / History in the re-making

“Although we spoke quietly, the eyes and ears of history caught every gesture” Nixon in ‘Nixon in China’

An extraordinary international event, John Adams’ Nixon in China is one of the most celebrated operas of our generation. It’s an ambitious work on a grand scale.

With pulsating energy and soaring lyricism, and influences from big band to Wagner, the opera tells the story of the historic meeting of two of the 20th century’s most controversial political figures – Richard Nixon and Mao Zedong. This was the first time a US president had visited the People’s Republic of China, and it spelled the beginning of a new era in East-West relations.

Dubbed ‘provocative, edgy and audacious’ at its Met’ debut in 1987, Nixon in China is now regarded as a masterpiece.

Bringing together a stunning cast and an all-star creative team, this semi-staged NZ premiere will go down in history. Be part of the moment.

Great Hall, Auckland Town Hall 
Thu 17 & Sat 19 March 2016
7:30pm
Duration 3hrs 10mins
Price $45 – $135

Click here to find out why Simon O’Neill is excited about Nixon in China

Pre-show Talk: Thursday 17 March, 6:45pm
Pre-show Talk: Saturday 19 March, 6:45pm  


CAST
CHOU EN LAI - CHEN-YE YUAN
RICHARD NIXON - BARRY RYAN
PATRICIA NIXON - MADELEINE PIERARD
MAO ZEDONG (CHAIRMAN MAO) - SIMON O’NEILL
CHIANG CH’ING (MADAME MAO) - HYE JUNG LEE
HENRY KISSINGER - ANDREW COLLIS
FIRST SECRETARY - SALLY-ANNE RUSSELL
SECOND SECRETARY - DIMITY SHEPHERD
THIRD SECRETARY - EMILY BAUER-JONES

DANCERS
WU CHING HUA - AMELIA CHONG
HUNG CHANG CHING - CLINTON FUNG YIK

ENSEMBLE
VALENTINO MALIKO
BEN MITCHELL

MEDIA/RED ARMY GUARDS AND CITIZENS OF BEIJING
Mei Burns, Audrey Chan, Long Yue (Hamish) Chen, Xiu Yin Chen, Iris Cheng, Helena Fang, May Goldsworthy, Ji Hong
Lauren Karl, Helen Kim, Chen Xi Li, Dan Li, Othmar Lichtnecker, Sophie Lin, Susan Liu, Ryan Lu, Ju Fang Lu, Sandy Morris
Jinna Qian, Amelia Sirimanne, Heidi Tam, Minette Tan, Danny Jing, Rose To, Mariana Tsun, Challen Wilson, Rosita Wong
Connie Wong, An Jing Xuan, Lin Xiao Qin, Li Na Yang, Li Min Yang, Luna Zhang, Yi Feng Zhang, Carole Zhang, Bi Xue (Lucy) Zheng
Xiao Yan Zhu, Tian Bao Zhu

FREEMASONS NEW ZEALAND OPERA CHORUS
SOPRANOS: Chelsea Dolman, Fiona Li, Morag McDowell, Katherine McIndoe, Jessica Duirs, Emma Sloman
MEZZOS: Kayla Collingwood, Helen Kim, Glenn Meade, Catherine Reaburn, Jessica Wells, Vanessa Withy
TENORS: Ewen Griffiths, David Hwang, Arie Hoeflak, Patrick Kelly, Filipe Manu, Matthew Wilson
BARITONES: Callum Blackmore, Jarvis Dams, Clinton Fung, Rhys Hingston, Mark Rosser, John Rosser

AUCKLAND PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA

MUSIC DIRECTOR Giordano Bellincampi
CONCERTMASTER Andrew Beer
ASSOCIATE CONCERTMASTER Tee Khoon Tang
ASSISTANT CONCERTMASTER Miranda Adams

FIRST VIOLINS
# Artur Grabczewski
Mark Bennett
Elzbieta Grabczewska
Ainsley Murray
Alexander Shapkin
Satomi Suzuki
Lucy Qi Zhang
Caroline von Bismarck
Yuri Cho
Charmian Keay


SECOND VIOLINS
β Dianna Cochrane
+Xin (James) Jin
# William Hanfling
= Rae Crossley-Croft
Sarah Hart
Jocelyn Healy
Rachel Moody
Milena Parobczy
Ewa Sadag
Katherine Walshe VIOLAS β Robert Ashworth + David Samuel #Christine Bowie # Anne Draffin Helen Bevin Ping Tong Chan Gregory McGarity Susan Wedde

VIOLAS
β Robert Ashworth + David Samuel
#Christine Bowie
# Anne Draffin
Helen Bevin
Ping Tong Chan
Gregory McGarity
Susan Wedde

 

 

CELLOS
β Eliah Sakakushev-von Bismarck
+ David Garner
# James sang-oh Yoo
Liliya Arefyeva
Katherine Hebley
You Lee
˜Jacky Siu

BASSES
β Gordon Hill
+ Annabella Zilber
# Evgueny Lanchtchikov
Matthias Erdrich
Michael Steer

FLUTES
β Emma Gerstein
+ Kathryn Moorhead

PICCOLO
* Jennifer Seddon-Mori

OBOES
β Bede Hanley
+Camille Wells

COR ANGLAIS
*Martin Lee

CLARINETS
+ Bridget Miles (Bass Clarinet)
+ James Fry (Eb Clarinet)

BASSOONS
β Ingrid Hagan
β Alexandra Eastley
+ Yang Rachel Guan Ebbett

CONTRABASSOON
* Ruth Brinkman

HORNS
β Nicola Baker
* Emma Eden
# Carl Wells
# Simon Williams
David Kay

TRUMPETS
β Huw Dann
+ Norman McFarlane

TROMBONES
β Douglas Cross
# Mark Close

BASS TROMBONE
* Timothy Sutton

TUBA
* Tak Chun Lai

TIMPANI
Curt Armbruster

PERCUSSION
β Eric Renick
# Jennifer Raven
Shane Currey

HARP
Rebecca Harris

GUEST MUSICIANS
Naomi Lee – Violi
Abby Oliver – Violin
Emma Dann – Viola
Paul Mitchell – Cello
Donald Nichols – Clarinet
Robert Sims – Trumpet
Michael Jamieson – Saxophone
Hayden Sinclair – Saxophone
Mark Hobson – Saxophone
Martin Kay – Saxophone
David Kelly – Piano
John Wells – Piano
Samuel Jury – Synth

 

 


Theatre , Opera ,


3hrs 10mins, including interval

Ingenuity within restrictions

Review by William Dart 19th Mar 2016

Auckland Arts Festival’s Nixon in China, co-produced with Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra and New Zealand Opera, cements why John Adams has created an operatic survivor.

Setting Alice Goodman’s superlative libretto, the composer has achieved an extraordinary feat of theatrical reconciliation. There’s much muscle-flexing grandeur here, worthy of a minimalist Meyerbeer.

Wagnerian climaxes suit on-stage political ceremony; thrills are visceral when the music is taken on rushing streams of hypnotically cross-hatched rhythms. Yet the Nixons, Mao Zedong and his wife Chou En Lai and Henry Kissinger emerge from history as human beings. [More

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Triumphantly directed

Review by Raewyn Whyte 18th Mar 2016

United States President Richard Nixon’s visit to China in 1972 to meet with Premier Chou En Lai and Chairman Mao Zedong was a momentous occasion, far-reaching in its consequences for East-West relationships, the future political economy of Communist Russia and the course of the Vietnam War.  Although there were no specific negotiated outcomes from Nixon’s visit, those who watched from afar on television recognised the cultural exchange as inherently high drama. 

The narrative arc of Nixon In China, the opera which follows this brief Chinese foray by Nixon, stretches from the arrival in China of the President and his wife Patricia aboard Air Force One, accompanied by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and a number of functionaries, to their subsequent departure to return to America a few days later. We accompany the Nixons as if we are flies on the wall, overhearing bits of public and private speech as they meet and greet, attend rallies, are taken walkabout with an ever-present security entourage, dine at a grand banquet, and retire for the night.

The opera was first performed in 1987 in Houston, Texas and has subsequently been presented throughout the world. This two-night season in Auckland Town Hall is the New Zealand premiere, presented by Auckland Festival in association with the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra and New Zealand Opera, triumphantly directed by Sara Brodie.

The musical score by composer John Adams is something of a hybrid. Throughout the almost three hours of the performance, there is an underlying bed of circling, cycling, mutating minimalism reminiscent of Philip Glass. Rising up and over this bed, and at times eclipsing it altogether, is a richly dense symphonic mix of musical styles from many periods.  

From time to time there’s a snatch of melody, such as Gershwin amongst a collage of American jazz, and some Strauss, but mostly we are immersed in full-on surround sound. The time signatures are extremely complex, especially when the layers start to accumulate, and conductor Joseph Mechavich seems deceptively relaxed, given the immensity of the task he is handling.

The APO is in brilliant form, definitely a force to be reckoned with. There are a dozen guest musicians added to the usual complement, and the brass section has been boosted to thirty for this event, with saxophones a particular feature. The musicians are exultant in what I think of as ‘full onslaught mode’ when everyone seems to be playing at the loudest, fastest possible pace. They are quietly intent in minimalist interludes built around the extended plucking of strings, and there are occasional exquisite solos; of particular note, Robert Ashworth’s viola and Andrew Beer’s violin.

Poet Alice Goodman’s English language libretto was developed through painstaking research, and reading it is a rewarding follow-up to experiencing the opera. The text involves everyday asides, conversation between the parties, and questions of clarification as often as it does political pronouncements or poetic musings from the Chinese leaders.

On the choral side of things, despite their powerful voices, the nine singers in principal and supporting roles wear microphones: logical given that they are often singing over onslaught mode music. However, even with amplification, the words tend to get smudged, and in quieter moments, the amplification seems distinctly unnecessary.

Chou En Lai (Chen-Ye Yuan) is a quietly watching statesman, now confined to China, and he expresses his concerns for the best future for his country.  He seems to fulfill a kind of meta-narrator role here, and his quietly assured singing always rivets attention on him. 

The aged and now faltering Mao Zedong (Simon O’Neill) is at times a roaring bombast, but mostly an old man recalling his past glories. He has some intriguing exchanges with Nixon about the particular qualities of Kissinger, of whom he comments from his Red Book, “In the dark all diplomats are grey”.  

Chiang Ch’ing, aka Madam Mao (Hye Jung Lee), is a prowling tiger, her own power still ascendant. The range and force of her voice in her electrifying solos rousing the supporters to her cause are a dramatic highpoint. 

Richard Nixon (Barry Ryan) is an excellent communicator, his delivery sure, his diction legible, crisp and clear, and though wife Pat (Madeleine Pierard) has a powerful voice, she seems a very uncertain woman most of the time, and is almost wistful about her own life while on her walkabout meeting factory workers and children.

In the room where Mao is cared for by nurses, there is a feeling of conflicted affection between him and his estranged wife; when the Nixons are together, there is a sense that his life matters more than hers.

The principals are supported by 24 performers of the Freemasons New Zealand Opera Chorus, in fine voice. They set the opening scene for us, entering down the centre aisle of the Town Hall and clustering at the front of the auditorium, quietly singing ‘The Three Main Rules of Discipline and the Eight Points of Attention’ while waiting for Air Force One. After welcoming the American dignitaries, they pass through the orchestra and climb up into the choir stalls where they merge into the background unless required to be visibly present.  

A large number of extras supplement the chorus, though only visually, as Media, Red Army Guards, and citizens of Beijing, clustering at the sides of the choir stalls or sitting in the Dress Circle blocks nearby.

With the orchestra and chorus in place, there is very little room for the actions of the cast, other than a narrow promenade at the front of the stage, which becomes by turns the podium for delivery of official speeches, the Nixon’s hotel room, the banquet table where Nixon and Chou En Lai sit, the various Beijing locations where Pat Nixon visits, and so on. A large video screen above the choir loft is used, however, to provide an additional illusion of spaciousness, with projected imagery – clouds, flags, symbols, landscapes, portraits, posters, building facades, falling snow, and animated silhouettes – adding a layer of significance to important events and giving a sense of life going on beyond the podium (design and execution by Louise Potiki Bryant).

The production falters only in the last part of Act 2 with a somewhat incoherent sequence of events in which a dancer in pointe shoes (Amelia Chong), dressed as if she is a member of the cast of the Chinese revolutionary ballet The Red Detachment of Women, is subjected to abuse and a whipping from a large florid man in a blue smoking jacket and his beefy henchman. She flees and hides amongst the chorus, only to be found again, and abused again, to Pat Nixon’s horror, but is subsequently given a rifle and a pistol by a male soldier (Clinton Fung Yik), and ends by wildly shooting the pistol before being arrested.  This replaces the original version where the Nixons et al attended a performance of the ballet in question, which would be impossible to present in the space available here.

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