Performing Arts

The tidal power of ‘Porgy and Bess’

MET celebrates Gershwin with new production
The MET: Live in HD will stream “Porgy and Bess” on Saturday at Fort Lewis College.

Is “Porgy and Bess” an opera or a Broadway musical?

Does “Porgy and Bess” represent the African American community in a racist way?

Did composer George Gershwin and author DuBose Heyward appropriate material from an American subculture and exploit it in “Porgy and Bess?”

Really?

The above are three arguments that have haunted America’s greatest opera since its debut in 1935. Genre, racial stereotyping and appropriation. There you have it.

My advice: Set all that aside and see the new Metropolitan Opera production at 10:55 a.m. Saturday in the Vallecito Room of the Fort Lewis College Student Union. From all reports, the Met production, unlike the ones in 1985 and 1990, has been reconceived to tell a mythic tale with contemporary overtones. And as Anne Midgette of The Washington Post put it: “Met Opera offers a ‘Porgy’ of its time that speaks to ours.”

By that, she means that James Robinson’s production highlights the communal aspect of the DuBose Heyward story. The opera is based on “Porgy,” the 1925 best-selling book by Heyward, a privileged white South Carolinian. From that moment forth, the accusation of a white guy telling a story of black lives has stuck. And yet, two years after publication, Heyward and his wife capitalized on the novel’s popularity and crafted a play that also became a sensation.

The story is about a disabled but functioning member of Catfish Row, a small tidewater town in South Carolina. Porgy is not an outsider but very much part of his village. He falls hard for Bess, a troubled young woman who is enthralled by the town bully, Crown.

Gershwin’s monumental work opened on Broadway in 1935. He had read Heyward’s novel and suggested a collaboration. The Heywards agreed to write the libretto, closely following the book. It wasn’t a difficult decision, running on established popularity and by the ’30s, Gershwin was a celebrity, the most famous composer in America.

Gershwin visited the Heywards in South Carolina and spent time listening to the popular music of the place – street singing as well as Gullah church services. With his interest in American jazz, Gershwin had already integrated other styles of music into his own compositions, and that genius for fusion accounts for why “Porgy and Bess” has become canonical, even with the unwieldy issues of genre, stereotyping and appropriation.

In the new Met production, Porgy (the magnificent bass Eric Owens) offers Bess (soprano Angel Blue) protection and they find momentary respite expressed in the beautiful aria “I loves you Porgy.” Then three disasters intervene: a real hurricane and two powerful forms of temptation. Passion surfaces in the form of a resurgent Crown (baritone Alfred Walker) and addiction in the trickster figure of Sportin’ Life (the stunning tenor Frederick Ballentine), a drug dealer from the big city. He disrupts everything and triggers a surprising turn of events.

The opera turns 75 this year, and with each new production, it lifts its characters onto an evolving mythic platform. Whether it’s Thebes or Catfish Row, a community’s religious beliefs, rituals and human connections bind individuals together – until someone or something tears them apart.

Gershwin’s tidal wave of music brings all that mythic energy to life. Hopefully, FLC will have worked out the kinks in live streaming Encore Productions by now – see sidebar. Flaws, arguments and “issues” aside, if you miss this production, you’re missing a historical moment in American cultural history.

Judith Reynolds is an arts journalist and member of the American Theatre Critics Association.

Wozzeck and Porgy?

A surprisingly good crowd of die-hard opera lovers appeared for the Jan. 18 encore streaming of Alban Berg’s “Wozzeck.” One of the darkest early-20th-century operas, the new Metropolitan Opera production was heralded as a fresh take on an old story: the outcast versus society.

As fate would have it, technical difficulties sputtered off and on. Finally, the Fort Lewis College team called a misfire. Everyone was told to go home. Ticket costs would be refunded. But no one could say if “Wozzeck” would be rescheduled.

“We have resolved the issues, and we are looking for a date to present ‘Wozzeck’ in its entirety. Stand by,” Concert Hall Director Charles Leslie wrote in an email.

Of the many reasons to see Berg’s 1925 opera is a surprising connection between the German composer and Gershwin. In 1928, the two met in Vienna where Gershwin attended a performance of Berg’s Lyric Suite. Later, Gershwin attended the New York premiere of Berg’s “Wozzeck.” This was in the middle of Gershwin’s deliberations about a new opera based on Heyward’s novel, “Porgy.”

About “Wozzeck,” Gershwin remarked that it was the mix of musical styles and sounds that captivated him: “Old music and new music, bits of opera, Russian folk songs, rag-time ditties, combined in a mighty chorus in my inner ear.”

Wozzeck and Porgy? Little connects the two characters. The tragic German outsider descended into madness. The optimistic American cripple was an integral part of his community and his opera ends on a hopeful note.

One could compare the musical vitality and expressive range of Berg and Gershwin. Stand by.

Judith Reynolds

If you go

WHAT:

The MET: Live in HD presents George Gershwin’s “Porgy and Bess,” featuring Eric Owens, Angel Blue and Denyce Graves in the James Robinson production, conducted by David Robertson.

WHEN:

10:55 a.m. Saturday.

WHERE:

Vallecito Room, Student Union at Fort Lewis College, 1000 Rim Drive.

TICKETS:

$26 general, $23 seniors, students and MET members, $5 FLC students, available online at

www.durangoconcerts.com

, by phone at 247-7657, at the Welcome Center at Eighth Street and Main Avenue or at the door.

MORE INFORMATION:

Sung in German with English subtitles. Running time 1 hour 50 minutes.