Ghostly Inheritance

Inheritance
University of California, San Diego
October 26, 2018

On the Friday before Halloween, we went to see the second performance of a new chamber opera, Inheritance. It was timely for the season and the political debates of the day — the story revolves around Sarah Winchester, the widow of a scion of the Winchester Arms’ Winchesters, who MAY have been haunted in her life by the ghosts of those killed by Winchester rifles, or perhaps the spirit of the baby daughter whose death she mourned. The focal point of the piece, the “inheritance,” is the famous Winchester Mystery House, in San Jose, California. The house is an oddity, with a “door to nowhere,” useless staircases, and other weird spaces. Mrs. Winchester kept building for years, and the question arose as to what was she doing: seeking to atone, distracting herself, or trying her hand as an architect in a time that did not allow that of women? The opera explores a couple of these ideas.

Neither of us approaches modern art with a lot of enthusiasm; we love to quote Charles Ryder’s dictum that Modern Art is “great bosh.” We were pleasantly surprised that we enjoyed the music as much as we did. We had just seen a preview piece about the world premiere of the opera in the San Diego Union Tribune the Sunday before. We thought we would take a chance on it.

The composer is Lei Liang, a professor at the University of California, San Diego. The production was staged in the Experimental Theater space in the Conrad Prebys Music Center on the campus by ArtPower, an organization that promotes the arts at UCSD. The producer of the show also sang the lead role. Susan Narucki teaches at UCSD. She gave a fine performance in a role that called for strong singing and declaiming—the monologue at the end of the opera was movingly presented.

The other singers were also very good. They played roles that drifted back and forth from the real world to the ghostly, as modern day humans leading or taking tours of the house and as spirits confronting or communing with Sarah. The “tour guide” was strongly portrayed by Josué Cerón , who also did a nice job interpolating some cliché “guide humor” in his tour. The two supporting role female vocalists, Kirsten Ashley Wiest and Hillary Jean Young, who are both graduate students working with Narucki, were very good in their roles as well, as tourists, ghosts of the slain, or at one point the dead child of Sarah.

The rest of the production was also gripping and interesting. Visually, there was great reliance on scrims. Bob has not liked scrims very much when we have seen them used at San Diego Opera in the past, but here they were quite effective. The singers moved them from time to time, to frame the story or redefine the space. They were also used as backdrops for projected images. Almost all of the lyrics were projected on the scrims, which is helpful even in English language opera. Bob particularly liked the textile-like wallpapers that appeared on a couple of occasions. We also saw the Mystery House and lots of falling objects, particularly chairs. That aspect had an air of the Terry Gilliam Monty Python’s Flying Circus animation about it, but it emphasized Sarah’s potential motivation, of the piling up of guilt over the death of gun victims. Aurally, the musicians did a terrific job with a complicated and somewhat improvised piece. The percussionists under the stage were quite busy, shouting the numbers of the dead as well as playing the many instruments called for by the composer. The wind players alternated clarinets and bass clarinets, and the guitarist had opportunities to display his fine Spanish-style guitar skills. The artist on the bass violin seemed to be having lots of fun slapping and plucking and bowing and sawing his instrument, with a couple of virtuoso improvisations.

The opera was performed only three times; we hope it is revived so more people get a chance to see it.

A review of the world premiere performance from the Union-Tribune can be found here.

For those who are more interested in the building and its backstory than in the new opera, we recommend the coverage on 99 Percent Invisible. Roman Mars writes:

The widely accepted narrative about Sarah Winchester, and the one that the current owners of the house are selling, is that she was haunted by spirits. But not everyone is buying it. Historian Mary Jo Ignoffo explores alternative theories about Sarah Winchester in her book, Captive of the Labyrinth.

Ignoffo found no evidence supporting the idea that Sarah Winchester communed with spirits. She believes that what drove Sarah Winchester to build was her desire to be an architect.

Sarah Winchester lived at time when it was highly unusual for women to be architects. She wasn’t licensed, so her own home was the perfect place—and the only place—where she could practice architecture.

Whatever her motivations were, Sarah Winchester built a house with more than 150 rooms, 2000 doors, 47 fireplaces, 40 bedrooms, 40 staircases, 17 chimneys, 13 bathrooms, six kitchens, three elevators, two basements, and one shower. She spent nearly all of her life being an architect.

Paul Simon: Words, Music, and More

Skirball Cultural Center
September 2, 2017
Sepulveda Pass
Los Angeles

Time, time, time
See what’s become of me
While I looked around for my possibilities
I was so hard to please
But look around
Leaves are brown
And the sky is a hazy shade of winter
— “A Hazy Shade of Winter”

We made it to the Skirball museum for the final weekend of the Paul Simon: Words and Music exhibition. We met up with Meredith’s sister Kathleen who lives in Los Angeles to see it together.

We had prepared ahead of time by listening to lots of Paul Simon’s music the week before, both solo and Simon & Garfunkel recordings. The biggest hits have always been things we listen to fairly often, but it was fun to get reacquainted with some of the songs we hear less often.

Words and Music is a traveling exhibition created by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame museum. The primary special exhibit room at the Skirball was filled with photos, artifacts, and videos. The exterior wall was arranged in chronological order, with thematic displays in the center space. Among the many artifacts were Simon’s very first guitar, which his father bought for him for $50, and three of Simon’s Grammys.

The exhibit spans the entire period of Simon’s career up to today and includes a number of videos in which he reflects on what he was doing during each period, and who and what influenced him. Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel were classmates in school, met in sixth grade, and started singing together as teens. Near the beginning of the exhibition their very first recording contract is displayed, signed on their behalf by their respective parents. They first performed as “Tom and Jerry,” using the stage names Tom Graph (Garfunkel) and Jerry Landis (Simon), to sound more all-American and not distinctly ethnic Jewish.

There were interesting facts and vignettes throughout. We learned that “Mrs. Robinson” had started as “Mrs. Roosevelt.” Simon was working on the song at the same time the duo was working up the sound track for The Graduate, so the name change was both obvious and convenient.

The Skirball had a related exhibit down the hall called the Music Lab. Several machines were set up in that room, and the visitor could experiment, mixing songs, playing on drum pads, and blending rhythm and vocal tracks. Unfortunately, the museum was quite crowded the day we went, and Kathleen found the cacophony in that room unbearable. Meredith listened through headphones to an interesting video in which Simon described how he writes songs. She then left the lab and wandered off in search of her sister. Bob stayed, tried all the machines in the room, and had a great time.

We ate a late lunch at Zeidler’s, the museum restaurant. When we first stopped by, no tables were available. We headed over to browse the permanent exhibition, which is quite interesting and worthwhile. (The Skirball Center is the Jewish cultural center in Los Angeles. The permanent collection spans over 4,000 years of the Jewish experience, from antiquity to modern America.) Then we headed back to the restaurant. The food was very good, as we have found it to be in the past. Zeidler’s is our favorite restaurant museum, and everyone’s visit to the Skirball should include a meal at it.

Parking at the museum is free and ample. Handicapped access is good. The museum participates in Bank of America’s Museums on Us program. On the first full weekend of each month, Bank of America debit or credit card holders can get in for free.

Labor Day weekend was the end of the Simon exhibit at the Skirball, and it has now closed. The Skirball’s next special exhibitions will be part of the Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA cooperative endeavor. Starting on September 14, Another Promised Land: Anita Brenner’s Mexico will open, and then on October 6, Surface Tension by Ken Gonzales-Day: Murals, Signs, and Mark-Making in LA will open alongside the Brenner exhibit.

Third Blog-iversary

May 23 marks three years we have been writing this blog. In the first two years most of our entries chronicled outings we took with Meredith’s mother, Margaret. Once she had moved back to Los Angeles, we started a routine of visiting her and taking her out to lunch and then a museum or historic site. Often we finished the visit by meeting up with Meredith’s sister for coffee. After a while we thought, why not write about those trips? It gave us a chance to review the museums and also to write about our interactions with Margaret.

Over the past three years, we have written 85 posts, counting this one. The museum featured most often was the Getty Center in the Sepulveda Pass. Margaret preferred historical and archeological exhibits to art museums, per se; when the Getty featured special exhibitions of that sort we tried to take her to them. Our favorite museum restaurant is Zeidler’s Cafe at the Skirball Museum, also in the Sepulveda Pass.

Margaret passed away in June of last year. Two months ago, on what would have been Margaret’s 80th birthday, Meredith met up with her sister Kathleen and our oldest daughter to scatter Margaret’s ashes. Meredith plans to post a page here, eventually, with photos of Margaret’s life.

What are we doing in Year Four? Going forward, we continue to post as we visit places and things strike our fancy.

  • Meredith plans to be in Tennessee for the total solar eclipse in August and will write an entry about it.
  • We are looking forward to the Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA collaboration running from September 2017 through January 2018 at dozens of museums around Southern California. We went to a number of the exhibitions in the original Pacific Standard Time collaboration, which predated our blog, and we will definitely seek out some of these new exhibitions.
  • Time permitting we want to see the Paul Simon exhibition at the Skirball, which is running currently and will be there until September 3, 2017.

If you have any places you want to see written up, mention them in the comments or contact us directly.

Hail the Poetry of Gilbert and Sullivan

Hail Poetry!
Opera A La Carte
Soka University
July 17, 2016

We thoroughly enjoyed the world premiere of a new musical, Hail Poetry! The music itself is not new — the shows features 25 Gilbert and Sullivan songs over the course of two acts. The songs are taken from Trial By Jury, HMS Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance, The Gondoliers, and The Mikado. In this new production, we see Gilbert writing the lyrics and arguing with his collaborator Sullivan. The show follows the original company rehearsing and producing the works for the first time. The songs were well sung and the acting was first rate.

Meredith had seen a brief note in the Los Angeles Times, announcing the show, but it was not a full review. We thought it was some sort of Gilbert and Sullivan revue or compilation. We did not realize until we actually saw it, that is an entirely new show.

It was exciting to be a sort of beta test group for the show. After it ended, we stayed for a session with the cast and writer, who fielded questions from the audience and explained how the show had been put together. The production was funded in part by a Kickstarter campaign. The company – Opera A La Carte, based in Pasadena — would like to take it on the road. Look for it in the future and don’t miss seeing Hail Poetry! if you get a chance.

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The musical was performed at the Soka University Performing Arts Center. The Soka campus is beautiful, worth a trip in itself, and the theater is first rate.

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