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Opera
From the Rubble
September/October 2008
by Christopher Arnott
Christopher Arnott is a freelance arts journalist in New
Haven.
The tragedies of 9/11 were Wagnerian in scope. But Wickham
Boyle '81MBA saw her small piece of the turmoil as strong material for a
different sort of opera—about the down-to-earth qualities of humanity and
perseverance rather than sensational vengeance from the skies.
On that tragic day, Boyle—whose family lived less than a
dozen blocks from the World Trade Center—heard the news, struggled to absorb
it, then rushed to her son’s elementary school, bringing him and a cluster of
classmates home to some degree of safety. Much of the family’s distress,
including wondering whether they should leave their home (just outside the area
from which the city required all residents to evacuate), came in the anxious
weeks afterwards.
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Wickham Boyle insists it “is definitely not September 11—The Musical!” |
Calling: An Opera of Forgiveness, which premieres in New York in
September, takes one woman’s viewpoint, anchored by the themes of family, home,
and community, and gives it a multigenerational, multicultural, and
multidisciplinary resonance. Boyle’s 9/11 experiences have already led to a
memoir, From Ground Zero: A Mother’s Essays, published in 2001. To turn it into
an opera, she collaborated with electro-acoustic composer Doug Geers.
For Calling, Boyle adapted her essays so that the other members of her
family have their own voices—expressions that are magnified, she says, by
having a rainbow of ethnicities in those leading roles. What Boyle began as a
personal project she now likens to "Our Town for a small group of people living
at Ground Zero.”
After the opening scene—a flurry of troubled
voices—subsequent scenes tell the story after the World Trade Center has been
hit by planes. The parents fret; then the mother character, based on Boyle,
heads to the school. The towers fall. The family joins the community in
cleaning up the rubble and helping survivors. The steady work triggers a sense
that a return to a predictable, everyday existence is imaginable; scene six is
titled "Playing at Normalcy." The opera ends in a universal post-traumatic
expression of grief and despair, but with a harmony-filled coda:
All there is: Air, Water, Time Space and Belief.
For those
of us with more hope than hate.
Boyle says Calling is more accessible than the esoterica often
associated with La MaMa E.T.C., the experimental performance space where it is
being staged. (Boyle was La MaMa’s executive director from the late 1980s through
the '90s; she’s now a freelance writer for the New York Times and several national magazines.)
The layered score brings its protagonists "from dissonance to harmony. I told
Doug I didn’t want the music to be difficult." But she also insists it "is definitely
not September 11—The Musical!”
Following a low-key preview performance and fund-raiser on
September 11, Calling will run through September 28 at La MaMa. Boyle says she wants to keep
the tale in context vis-à-vis the world-changing event that begat it: "There's
an honesty to saying, This is my tiny story, of a mother running to get her
kids." Being too close to the material or losing perspective, she says, isn’t a
problem, since "I have this wonderful son who says, at every point in the
process, 'It’s not the Wicki Boyle Show, Mom.'" Still, it’s the intensely
personal aspects of Calling that may call out most strongly to audiences still
cautious about how our culture should treat the most devastating event in
recent U.S. history.  |