home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0220>
- <title>
- Feb. 21, 1994: The Arts & Media:Music
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 21, 1994 The Star-Crossed Olympics
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 60
- Music
- Battle Fatigue
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Fed up with her temperamental shenanigans, the Metropolitan
- Opera fires soprano Kathleen Battle
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Walsh--With reporting by Benjamin Ivry/Paris and William Tynan/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Even by the famously hot-blooded standards of opera, last week's
- passionate dramma giocoso at the Metropolitan Opera in New York
- City was positively--well, operatic. In the fiery lead role
- was the mercurial lyric soprano Kathleen Battle, renowned for
- leaving a trail of ill will in her wake wherever she goes. Opposing
- her were the forces of decorum and rectitude, represented by
- Met general manager Joseph Volpe. The denouement was catastrophe.
- Volpe, citing "unprofessional actions...profoundly detrimental
- to the artistic collaboration among all the cast members," summarily
- fired Battle from this week's production of Donizetti's The
- Daughter of the Regiment and withdrew all future offers. In
- so doing, he set off grand international choruses of "It's about
- time."
- </p>
- <p> The combative diva, 45, is the darling of a huge public, a glamorous
- former schoolteacher from Portsmouth, Ohio, who possesses one
- of the loveliest voices in opera today. Thanks to her supple,
- dulcet soprano and winning stage personality--and with the
- powerful patronage of Met artistic director James Levine--she has risen to worldwide fame in secondary roles that ordinarily
- do not make stars, parts like Zerlina in Mozart's Don Giovanni
- and Sophie in Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier. Battle's presence
- in a cast or with an orchestra practically guarantees a sold-out
- house; her albums, whether art songs or spirituals, are consistent
- best sellers.
- </p>
- <p> Behind the scenes, however, Battle often lives up to her martial
- surname. Divas are expected to be difficult; opera lore is rife
- with tales of their devouring egos and overweening eccentricities--not to mention the outrageous quirks of arrogant male singers,
- especially tenors. But Battle is, according to many who have
- worked with her, impossible. Fussy, erratic and arbitrary, the
- headstrong soprano has infuriated colleagues and administrators
- and crossed swords with functionaries and hapless hoteliers
- across the globe. The cast of The Daughter of the Regiment applauded
- when it was told during rehearsal that Battle had been fired.
- </p>
- <p> Stories about her pettiness are legion: the time in Boston she
- telephoned the management of the Boston Symphony Orchestra to
- complain that the Ritz-Carlton's room service had put peas in
- her pasta; the time when, feeling chilly while riding in a limo
- in Southern California, she used the cellular phone to call
- her management company in New York, which phoned the limo service,
- which phoned the driver, who turned the air conditioning down;
- the time in New York when she and Luciano Pavarotti competed
- to see which could arrive later for a dress rehearsal. Battle
- has a penchant for changing hotel suites in the middle of a
- stay just to vary the color of her surroundings. After her appearances
- at the San Francisco Opera this season, the backstage crew sported
- T shirts that read: I SURVIVED THE BATTLE.
- </p>
- <p> The Met's Volpe finally lost patience with her rehearsal shenanigans--which included lateness and even absence, as well as withering
- criticism of her fellow performers and flaky, almost paranoid
- demands that they not look at her. Battle's role in the production
- is now being sung by Harolyn Blackwell.
- </p>
- <p> "I applaud Joe Volpe for standing up to her," says Ernest Fleischmann,
- managing director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. "Somebody
- has to say stop. It's a salutary lesson and a help to us all."
- In these sentiments, he is far from alone. Other impresarios
- were also harsh in their assessment. "In the Met's place, I
- would have done exactly the same," said Hugues Gall, newly appointed
- head of the Paris Opera. "In the 1920s the director of the Met,
- Gatti-Casazza, used to deal firmly with even greater stars,
- like Caruso. But Caruso wasn't as crazy as Miss Battle seems
- to be."
- </p>
- <p> On the advice of her handlers, the powerful Columbia Artists
- Management Inc., the soprano was saying little. Battle is a
- reserved, private woman who has subordinated her personal life
- to her career; in a brief statement that was her only public
- comment, she complained she was never warned that her actions
- were out of line. "To my knowledge," she said, "we were working
- out all of the artistic problems in the rehearsals, and I don't
- know the reason behind this unexpected dismissal. All I can
- say is, I am saddened by this decision."
- </p>
- <p> Sources inside and outside the Met agree that Battle's downfall
- was triggered by her harsh treatment of co-star Rosalind Elias,
- 64, a veteran and locally beloved mezzo. In one high-comedy
- scene, Elias, as the Marquise of Berkenfield, is seated at the
- piano coaching the high-spirited Marie, played by Battle, in
- a proper old tune. Battle stiffly complained that Elias' piano
- playing was inept and was adversely affecting her phrasing;
- she issued a series of ultimatums culminating in a demand that
- the solo be played by a musician in the orchestra pit.
- </p>
- <p> The Met management, wearied by Battle's incessant demands--last year, she abruptly pulled out of a Met Rosenkavalier after
- a tiff with conductor Christian Thielemann--informed Columbia
- Artists' formidable president, Ronald Wilford, that Battle would
- be fired. Wilford asked that the decision be postponed a couple
- of days and, in a meeting with Volpe on Feb. 7, pleaded Battle's
- case. "Enough is enough," Volpe told him. "This has to stop."
- Later that day, after Battle left him three telephone messages,
- Volpe finally called her back and told her she was fired. Says
- Volpe: "Please understand that I pride myself on working with
- singers. What I find so unfortunate in this situation is that
- I was not able to make this work."
- </p>
- <p> The battle of Kathy is also complicated by her race; black singers
- such as Battle, Leontyne Price and Jessye Norman have had to
- make their way--determinedly, often courageously--in an
- overwhelmingly white milieu. Yet so unpopular has Battle become
- that she is often openly derided with the crudest kind of racial
- epithets--backstage at the Met she is known as the "U.N.,"
- or "uppity nigger"--and speculations about her sanity are
- widespread. "She's young, pretty, very talented and very, very
- screwed up," says a Met insider. "I think she's sick, actually,
- but I couldn't tell you why."
- </p>
- <p> Why indeed? Singers, especially sopranos and tenors, are notoriously
- insecure. They are the only musicians who wake up every morning
- not knowing whether their instrument is going to be there. "A
- singer is really a human container for the vulnerable, invisible
- instrument--the voice. Because they can't touch their instrument,
- they can't see it, that makes for sensitive and fragile people,"
- says Elma Kanefield, a psychotherapist at the Juilliard School
- in Manhattan with a private practice exclusively devoted to
- performing artists. "This instrument is vulnerable to weather
- or biochemical changes or other people's colds. I think they
- play out this vulnerability in other areas of life. Instead
- of their voices being vulnerable, they feel vulnerable."
- </p>
- <p> "I think she's frightened to death," says former diva Beverly
- Sills, now chairwoman of Lincoln Center. "She's obviously an
- insecure girl, with a perfectly beautiful voice. You can't do
- an opera all by yourself. No matter how big a superstar you
- are, if you don't have a collaboration with your colleagues,
- you're in a lot of trouble. I think it's wiser to concentrate
- on singing like a prima donna than on acting like one."
- </p>
- <p> Battle's handful of defenders agree she can be difficult but
- argue that her artistry makes her worth the trouble, and obliquely
- criticize the Met for not defusing the situation diplomatically.
- "Many great artists are difficult in their search for perfection
- in their craft," says Peter Gelb, president of Sony Classical
- Film and Video and Wilford's former deputy at Columbia Artists.
- Gelb has made nine TV programs with Battle. "The role of the
- Met is to support great talents. Nothing a producer does comes
- close to the challenge and difficulty great artists face when
- they go onstage."
- </p>
- <p> Volpe says he is keeping the door open for Battle to return
- to the Met, provided she cleans up her act. "If the time should
- come that Kathleen has been successful in working with other
- organizations," he says, "then of course I would consider it."
- Abandoned, scorned and vilified, Battle is at last appearing
- in the kind of role she is not accustomed to singing: tragic
- heroine. It's not a part that suits her. She would do far better
- to rediscover the wholesome, appealing qualities that made her
- a star in the first place and leave the prima donna business
- to someone else.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-