Changing the face of opera
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Young Chang
Denyce Graves was once a shy girl who clutched onto mother Dorothy
Kenner’s skirt in the back of her family’s gospel group.
Her mother had formed the chorus to help Graves break out of her
shyness. But siblings tackled most the solos.
My mother “would say, ‘OK Denise, now you have to sing a solo,’ and
I’d cry and say I didn’t want to do it,” Graves reminisced. “She didn’t
know what she was creating.”
The shy girl blossomed. Graves, who will perform at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center tonight as part of Opera Pacific’s Voices in Song
series, is now an internationally acclaimed mezzo-soprano. She is not
only singing solos, but also looking for ways to test the limits of
classical music.
“I don’t feel that I’ve even scratched the surface of what I want to
do,” said Graves, who is known for her signature title roles in the
operas “Carmen” and “Samson et Dalila” which she debuted at the
Metropolitan Opera in the ‘90s.
“I’d like to have more of an influence, and I’d like to take more
liberties within the classical structure. I’d like to change the whole
style of the recital art form, for example.”
Her recent project, a recital recording with BMG Classics and longtime
collaborator Warren Jones, does exactly that. Graves, 36, said the album
might raise eyebrows, but that doesn’t deter her.
“There are all sorts of songs and material out there that I would love
to sing and explore,” she said. “And have the freedom to shape it and
mold it with my own musical style and taste.”
Her repertoire includes German lieder, French melodies and Broadway
musical tunes, and others. She said she can’t begin to choose a favorite.
Performing in “Carmen” and “Samson et Dalila” has landed her in opera
houses around the world, as have such productions as “Otello,” “La
Vestale” and “Rigoletto.”
And she has probably sung more with Placido Domingo -- whom she calls
“sweet,” “fun” and “courageous” -- than with any other performer.
Her mother, who said she always knew Graves had a “beautiful,
beautiful, beautiful voice,” expected this.
“Whenever we sang in church . . . she may have been nervous on the
inside, but I could not tell, and the audience couldn’t see how shy she
was,” Kenner said. “Right now, when she goes on stage, she owns it. She
says she’s still nervous, but I can’t tell.”
For Graves, it was a challenge to free her mind.
Especially because, as a trim African American, she does not fit the
opera singer stereotype of a heavyset European.
Graves said her first hurdle was convincing herself she could carry
off traditional roles -- such as Carmen. Once she did, she convinced
others.
“Producers, directors, designers and board members, they’re all people
who have their own particular frame of reference, and for whatever
reason, they dream as they dream,” she said. “And I realize that
sometimes my face may not be a part of their vision, so I have to work
very, very hard in what I do and in my commitment to what I do.”
Her message is simple: “The art is greater than our minds.”
While a student at the New England Conservatory in Boston, Graves went
from being Denise to Denyce.
She was at an automated teller machine machine withdrawing cash when
she looked up and saw a sign that read “NYCE: New York Cash Exchange.”
She decided then that she wanted her name to embody a similar spirit.
“I want to be well-known, I want to be successful, I want my name to
spell success,” she said.
Graves credits her mother and a teacher named Judith Grove, whom she
calls her “guardian angel,” for her opportunities.
From the family chorus, the young Graves joined a school choir headed
by Grove at a Washington, D.C., elementary school. When she graduated
from middle school and started junior high, Grove became the music
teacher at the new school. During this time, Grove encouraged her student
to audition for the Duke Ellington School for the Performing Arts.
They filled out the applications, Graves auditioned and was accepted.
Shortly after, Grove became the principal of Duke Ellington School. She
encouraged Graves from kindergarten through 12th grade.
Perhaps that support from her teacher is why the cause that is most
important to the opera singer today is furthering arts and education.
“It’s the one that moves me the most because I realize how important
education is and how important the arts is to education in every
well-rounded person,” Graves said. “The arts affects everything. And I
know. I watched the miracle of it in my own life.”
FYI
WHAT: Denyce Graves
WHEN: 8 p.m. Friday
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
COST: $35-$65
CALL: (714) 740-7878
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