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- <text id=94TT1209>
- <title>
- Sep. 05, 1994: Books:The Diva Next Door
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/MUSIC, Page 78
- THE DIVA NEXT DOOR
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> American soprano Dawn Upshaw, a fast-rising opera star, releases
- a gorgeous album of little-known songs from musicals
- </p>
- <p>By Charles Michener
- </p>
- <p> It was a storybook debut. In 1988 the Metropolitan Opera needed
- a last-minute replacement for Kathleen Battle in L'Elisir d'Amore.
- It turned to an apprentice in its young-artists program named
- Dawn Upshaw. The audience cheered, and the critics raved about
- Upshaw's charm and freshness; she seemed set for a predictable
- rise in the soubrette roles of grand opera. But Upshaw had ideas
- of her own. A few years earlier, one of her voice teachers,
- Jan DeGaetani, had told her to "seek your own path." Upshaw
- took that advice. From Mozart to Stravinsky to show tunes, she
- sings a far wider range of music than is typical for an international
- star, yet at 34 she has risen faster and further than any other
- American singer of her generation.
- </p>
- <p> From the moment of the Met triumph, Upshaw made it clear she
- intended to be a singer first, a diva second. She had performed
- in only a few operas and had barely established a recital career
- when she produced two astonishing albums. On one, released in
- 1989, she sang Samuel Barber's Knoxville: Summer of 1915 and
- compositions by Menotti, Stravinsky and John Harbison. The other,
- which came out two years later, is called The Girl with Orange
- Lips and is a collection of highly unusual contemporary pieces.
- Both won Grammys. Her next album, the Symphony No. 3 by Polish
- composer Henryk Gorecki, on which she was the soloist, became
- the most unexpected classical crossover hit of all time, landing
- on the British pop charts in 1993. Now Upshaw has another unlikely
- triumph on her hands: a new album called I Wish It So, which
- consists of mostly unfamiliar theater songs by Kurt Weill, Marc
- Blitzstein, Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim.
- </p>
- <p> Few opera singers have ever seemed so convincing--and comfortable--in the Broadway idiom. Upshaw begins with four songs of yearning
- for love: the album's title number, taken from Blitzstein's
- 1959 Juno; There Won't Be Trumpets, a song dropped from Sondheim's
- short-lived 1964 show Anyone Can Whistle; What More Do I Need?,
- from an unproduced Sondheim musical of 1954, Saturday Night;
- and That's Him, from Weill and Ogden Nash's 1943 One Touch of
- Venus. Accompanied alternately by small ensembles and an orchestra,
- Upshaw stakes her claim as theater music's most luminous ingenue
- since Barbara Cook--vulnerable yet resolute, urgently soaring
- yet as down-to-earth as the girl next door.
- </p>
- <p> In the remainder of the album, Upshaw reveals that she is equally
- at home in less sentimental moods, skillfully handling, for
- example, the cynical extravagance of Bernstein's Glitter and
- Be Gay (from Candide). Only in I Feel Pretty, from West Side
- Story, does she seem outside the song, pushing its innocence
- too hard. Otherwise, she conveys what the best singers have
- always strived for: the sense that a song springs directly from
- mysterious promptings within her.
- </p>
- <p> Upshaw grew up in a suburb of Chicago. "Mom, who was a schoolteacher,
- played the piano," she says, "and Dad, who was a minister, played
- the guitar. I started singing with them and my older sister
- when I was five--songs by Peter, Paul and Mary and other folk
- stuff." Their group was called the Upshaw Family Singers. Her
- youthful idols were Barbra Streisand, Joni Mitchell and Aretha
- Franklin, and she dreamed of a career in musical theater. At
- Illinois Wesleyan University, though, she studied voice with
- her future father-in-law, David Nott, and he introduced her
- to classical song, starting with Schubert and Debussy. "His
- emphasis was on the words," she says. "I don't think my voice
- is all that beautiful. If I have any strength, it's connecting
- the text and the music." That is far too modest: Upshaw's light
- but penetrating soprano has a purity that is instantly recognizable.
- </p>
- <p> She has never been busier. This fall she sings Mozart at the
- Met (The Marriage of Figaro, Idomeneo) while preparing a January
- recital for Lincoln Center at which James Levine will accompany
- her. She has recently released two classical albums: songs by
- Aaron Copland (with baritone Thomas Hampson), and lieder by
- Schumann, Schubert, Wolf and Mozart, with texts by Goethe, accompanied
- by pianist Richard Goode. Due out in October is a record that
- shows yet another departure: music from Eastern Europe with
- the Kronos Quartet.
- </p>
- <p> If Upshaw is driven, she doesn't show it. She lives with her
- husband Michael, a musicologist, and their two children (she
- gave birth to a boy this summer) in a comfortable house near
- New York City. Sitting in her living room she might be any suburban
- woman discussing what it's like to keep everything in balance.
- "I know I should be giving more thought to shaping my career,"
- she says. "But every morning still feels like a fresh start.
- My four-year-old daughter Sadie has the same spirit. The first
- thing she says when she gets up is `O.K., now can we talk about
- the day?'"
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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