Current:Home > Contact'Champion' is not your grandmother's Metropolitan Opera -Dynamic Wealth Solutions
'Champion' is not your grandmother's Metropolitan Opera
View
Date:2025-04-26 04:39:24
In a hangar-like wood-paneled room at the Metropolitan Opera House, more than 60 artists-- actors, dancers, musicians, directors and stagehands —are arriving for a rehearsal for Terence Blanchard's Champion. Last season, Blanchard made history when his Fire Shut Up in My Bones was the first opera by a Black composer staged by the Metropolitan Opera.
"Walking around this building, it's still like a dream," says Blanchard. "And then, this time it seems like things have ratcheted up to another level. Because the singers are amazing, and the production, as you see, is just awesome. And that's just half of the people."
Along with its huge cast, the production includes a full-sized boxing ring on the Met stage. Champion tells the story of Emile Griffith, a closeted gay boxer --in an era when gay people were outcasts --who rises from obscurity to become world champion and, in one of the great tragedies in sports history, kills his homophobic archrival in the ring.
Blanchard says his best friend, former Heavyweight Champion Michael Bentt, told him Griffith's story.
"And I think what got me about the story was the fact that when I won my first Grammy, you know, I celebrated with my wife by turning and getting a hug. Giving her a hug and giving her a kiss, brought her up on stage. And to think that this guy became Welterweight Champion and couldn't celebrate that with somebody openly –somebody that he loved—seemed awkward and silly to me."
The lead role of Emile Griffith is played by Bass-Baritone Ryan Speedo Green.
"I came from a trailer park in the middle of nowhere, Virginia. And I'm singing at the grandest opera house arguably in the world. Anything is possible. And now I told myself that I want to break opera goers preconceptions of what Opera can be."
At lunch in the Met cafe between two three-hour rehearsals, the 37-year-old singer said Champion will defy operagoers' expectations, "Because this is the most action-packed opera I've ever seen onstage."
At the end of Act One, the opera reenacts a pivotal moment in Emile Griffith's career. At the weigh-in for a 1962 championship bout at Madison Square Garden, Griffith's Cuban opponent, Benny Paret, taunted him with an anti-gay slur. Hours later in the ring, an enraged Griffith caught Paret on the ropes and unleashed a torrent of blows. Paret slumped to the canvas in a coma that he never came out of.
Speedo Green trained for the role for more than a year. The 6-foot-four bass baritone says he lost 100 pounds –from 340 down to 240-- so he would look like a professional boxer. And he worked with a trainer and a professional boxer to learn how to move and think like a boxer.
"I'd never thrown a punch in my life. So I had to learn all the defensive moves, all the slipping and weaving, even realizing that boxing is the most physical version of Chess that exists in sports." Green says now he knows what it felt like to box that round. "But now we make it bigger, we make it broader. We make it more theater, 'Raging Bull.''
Along with scenes of boxing, Champion is energized by dynamic dancing. Blanchard's jazz-inflected score — with its shifting rhythms and time signatures-- presented a challenge to choreographer Camille Brown.
"Terence's music is so beautiful and challenging in the best ways because it always keeps you on the edge of your seat," says Brown. "As a choreographer, I have to be right there. He's ten steps ahead. I have to catch up to him. It's really been a treat, and it's definitely been hard work in the best ways."
The story of Champion is told in flashbacks. As an older Emile Griffith --suffering from dementia—looks back at his career, he is filled with regret for the death he caused in the ring. Terence Blanchard says his opera is ultimately about redemption and forgiveness.
"What he said in his autobiography really blew me away. He said, 'I killed a man and the world forgave me, but yet I loved a man and the world wants to kill me.' And to me, everything I've written for this opera is centered around that moment. Because we have to get past all of this. It's time for us to grow up as a society."
veryGood! (91441)
Related
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- How grown-ups can help kids transition to 'post-pandemic' school life
- Harvard Medical School morgue manager accused of selling body parts as part of stolen human remains criminal network
- High-Stakes Wind Farm Drama in Minnesota Enters Final Act
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- How financial counseling at the pediatrician's office can help families thrive
- 3 abortion bans in Texas leave doctors 'talking in code' to pregnant patients
- Dear Life Kit: My husband is living under COVID lockdown. I'm ready to move on
- Small twin
- Southern Baptists expel California megachurch for having female pastors
Ranking
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Nathan Carman, man charged with killing mother in 2016 at sea, dies in New Hampshire while awaiting trial
- Global Warming Is Hitting Ocean Species Hardest, Including Fish Relied on for Food
- The number of mothers who die due to pregnancy or childbirth is 'unacceptable'
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Philadelphia woman killed by debris while driving on I-95 day after highway collapse
- Medicare announces plan to recoup billions from drug companies
- InsideClimate News Wins SABEW Awards for Business Journalism for Agriculture, Military Series
Recommendation
Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
Amid Boom, U.S. Solar Industry Fears End of Government Incentives
RHONJ: Melissa Gorga & Teresa Giudice's Feud Comes to an Explosive Conclusion Over Cheating Rumor
Why Lizzo Says She's Not Trying to Escape Fatness in Body Positivity Message
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
West Coast dockworkers, ports reach tentative labor deal
Actor Bruce Willis has frontotemporal dementia. Here's what to know about the disease
Global Warming Was Already Fueling Droughts in Early 1900s, Study Shows