Don Giovanni 2023

Don Giovanni

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte

based on the play El burlador de Sevilla

by Tirso de Molina



Mozart's brilliant take

on the tale of the unrepentant womanizer

and the stone guest.


Period costumes, magnificent sets and projections,

full orchestra and chorus.





Friday, Feb. 17 - 8 p.m.

Sunday, Feb. 19 - 2 p.m.

Saturday, Feb. 25 - 8 p.m. (best avail.)

Sunday, Feb. 26 - 2 p.m.



All performances at the Lucie Stern Theatre

1305 Middlefield Rd., Palo Alto, CA 94301




FREE Preview with Piano

Thursday, February 9, 2023 - 2:00 p.m.

Holt Building - 221 Lambert Ave - Palo Alto, CA 94306


Limited seating

Reserve now by clicking the button below



Performances last approximately 2 hours and 50 minutes,

including two 15-minute intermissions.



Pictured: The Tailor, by Giovanni Moroni. 


Reserve for the Preview Buy Tickets

Don Giovanni 2023 - Media Gallery

PRODUCTION PHOTOS by Otak Jump

  • About Don Giovanni


    World Premiere: Estates Theater (Stavovské divadlo) Prague

    October 29, 1787

    WBO Premiere: April 16, 1982

    Pictured: Interior of the Estates Theater -  Prague

    Photo: Jerome Schneider (own work)


    Considered one of the greatest operas of all time, Don Giovanni is one of three operas that Mozart wrote to libretti by Lorenzo DaPonte. West Bay Opera has only presented it 3 times in the last 67 years, in 1982, 2004 and 2012. Our last production, in May 2012, directed by the late David Cox and conducted by Maestro Michel Singher, was set in contemporary Brooklyn. The current production goes back to the original period in the 1600's.  The libretto is adapted from the play El burlador de Sevilla o el convidado de piedra, by Tirso de Molina. The Prague premiere was a resounding success. The following year, the work had its premiere in Vienna. For that occasion, Mozart wrote superb additional arias, including Ottavio's Dalla sua pace and Elvira's Mi tradi, both of which we offer in our present production. Don Giovanni is a challenge for any company, regardless of size. We present it virtually without cuts and with a stellar cast.

    With its timeless, fast-paced wit and gripping dramatic force, Don Giovanni is a guaranteed great evening at the opera.

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    Creative Team


    Pictured: costume designs for WBO's La forza del destino by Claire Townsend - 2011

    José Luis Moscovich - Conductor

    Richard Harrell - Stage Director

    Peter Crompton - Set and Projections Designer

    Callie Floor - Costume Designer

    David Gillam - Makeup and Wig Designer

    Steven Mannshardt - Lighting Designer

    Frederic O. Boulay - Projection Co-designer

    Giselle Lee - Sound Designer

    Shirley Benson - Properties Designer


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    Cast


    Pictured: Kristen Choi (Zerlina) and Daniel Cilli (Giovanni)

    WBO's Don Giovanni -  2012

     Photo: Otak Jump

    Don Giovanni - John Allen Nelson

    Leporello - Antonio Azpiri

    Commendatore - Joshua Hughes

    Donna Elvira - Shaina Martinez

    Donna Anna - Michelle Drever

    Don Ottavio - Eric Levintow

    Zerlina - Sarah Benzinger

    Masetto - Joshua Hughes

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    Orchestra


    Pictured: maestro José Luis Moscovich and the WBO Orchestra

     Photo: Otak Jump

    Concertmaster | Kristina Anderson

    Violin I  |  Lisa Zadek, Virginia Smedberg, Emily Chiet

    Violin II | Judy Kmetko, Frida Pukhachevsky, Kymber Gillen

    Viola | Thomas Elliott, Rebecca Gemmer, Melinda Rayne

    Cello | Stephanie Wu, Thomas Shoebotham, Cyrus Behroozi

    Bass | Marie Laskin

    Flute | Michelle Caimotto

    Oboe | Meave Cox, Dana Bauer

    Clarinet | Art Austin

    Bassoon | Cullen Blain, Susan Dias

    Horn | Cathleen Torres, Diane Ryan

    Trumpet | Rick Leder, Steve Anderson

    Trombone | Tommy Holmes

    Bass Trombone | Ken Sablinsky

    Timpani | Don Baker


     Christy Crews, orchestra manager

    Virginia Smedberg, librarian

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    CHORUS

    Pictured: Scene from WBO's Feb 2012 Don Giovanni production

    Photo: Otak Jump


    Joanne Bogart, Anthony Castillon, JoAnn Close, Mark Baushke, Didier Benoit, Christine Dukey, Inna Gitamn, Mcihael Good, Terry Hayes, Lynne Haynes-Tucker, Ning Leng, Joanne Newman, Michelle Alexandra Pavlova, Michael Schmid, Philip Schwarz, Jennisara Sumiri-Schmid, Jo Taubert, Paul Wendt

    Bruce Olstad, Chorusmaster

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    Production Staff


    Technical Director: David Gardner

    Orchestra Manager: Christy Crews

    Orchestra Librarian: Virginia Smedberg

    Housing Coordinator: Diane Yeramian


    Click below to see the full listing of the

    DON GIOVANNI PRODUCTION STAFF

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    Pictured: Longitudinal section of the stage showing projector placement.

    By Peter Crompton

    Don Giovanni 2023 - Press and Reviews  

    • Read Eddie Reynolds review in https://theatreeddys.com/

      Don Giovanni

      February 18, 2023 by Eddie Reynolds


      Don Giovanni


      Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Music); Lorenzo Da Ponte (Libretto)


      West Bay Opera


      How can an opera about an arrogant, despicable rake who travels throughout Europe seducing women for pure sport and then leaving them often after having promised marriage continue to be one of the most popular, most produced operas of all times?  Why in this particular era of “Me Too” do audiences still flock to see the story once again play out before them?


      It only takes the “Overture” of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s 1787-premiering Don Giovanni to answer any doubters as to why the continued popularity.  In the current West Bay Opera production, Conductor José Luis Mostocovich strikes the downbeat for the magnificent, twenty-five piece orchestra as two thunderous D-minor chords shake the Lucie Stern arena, alerting the audience that a tale leading to dire consequences is about to unfold.  As notes full of haunting mystery immediately follow, we watch stage-filling projections of an mansion’s interior full of golden, opulent statutes begin to melt away.  As the music swirls in louder fury, flames begin to engulf the scene.  In a matter of a minute or two, we hear and see before us the future fate of the title-character womanizer.  Even as the overture lightens into delightful allegro of notes rapidly pursuing each other up and down multiple scales, we see the return of the original, richly decorated interior but now with foreboding blue and black wisps and shadows floating in the air.  We are reminded that half of Mozart’s original title is Il dissoluto punito, literally, The Rake Punished. 


       Much of the lasting power of Don Giovanni comes also from its clever combination of high melodrama, splashes of comic relief, and a strong dose of the supernatural that Lorenzo Da Ponte inserted in the libretto, giving Mozart ample opportunity to explore a wide range of musical styles throughout his compositions.  Mozart and Da Ponte also ensure that the three latest conquests by the lecherous Giovanni are not helpless victims but are women who become powerful voices for seeking justice and revenge in an 18th century world when probably crimes against women went largely unnoticed/unanswered.  In this West Bay Opera production of Don Giovanni, it is these three women characters who reign forth as the true, highly impressive stars of the evening.


      The first of these women we meet is Donna Anna, daughter of the Commendatore of an 18th century Spanish community, as she chases Giovanni, berating him in sopranic, lyrical rolls of notes that clearly express her desperation and fury for a man who has just abused her.  This brief introduction of Michelle Drever’s Donna Anna is just a glimpse of the tour de force performance she will deliver the entire evening.  When she soon discovers someone has killed her aged father (she does not yet know it was her now-escaped attacker), she invokes her fiancé, Don Ottavio, to “swear to revenge his blood,” singing through piercing eyes and a jaw locked in determination notes that lift in a beautiful harking of his help.  When later she knows the perpetrator is Giovanni, her visual countenance intensifies while her voice gloriously pierces with an edge like the sword she wants Ottavio to use on the culprit.  Notes once again float to feverish heights, vibrating with her persistence and insistence on justified revenge.  Throughout the evening, Michelle Drever commands the stage, equally impressing us when singing barely above a whisper as well as when ringing forth in crescendos extraordinaire.


      Soprano Shaina Martinez equally wows us time and again in the role of Donna Elvira, an oft-jilted lover of Don Giovanni who wavers between yet one more time forgiving his infidelities and then calling for, even demanding his demise.  That contrast is seen in our first encounter with her as Elvira.  With a face of full frown and pursed lips, she sings with strong, profound soprano tones that smack with hard, sharpened edges that match the anger she is expressing to the philandering Giovanni.  Yet, she cannot help herself and her evident attraction to him, collapsing tearfully on his chest while still singing now with faltering fury of a revenge she believes Heaven wants her to take out on him.  Even after more examples of his evil ways with women and his betrayal of her continue to come to her attention, Shaina Martínez leaves us near the end with maybe her evening’s best performance of many strong ones when her Donna Elvira sings of her fear of “thunderbolts” that will soon strike the heart of Giovanni, conveying her misery and extreme sadness in a voice that weeps in beautiful melancholy.


      Different in nature but also splendidly notable is the third soprano who helps carry the night, Sarah Benzinger as the country maiden, Zerlina, with hair of ribbon-wrapped braids topped with a tierra of fresh flowers.  On the night of her wedding, Zerlina too is wooed by Giovanni and is foolishly persuaded into his bedroom.  Her vocals are pleasantly, lightly, even sweetly delivered, often coupled with a grin and air of coquettishness and strong hints of a natural naivite.


      One of the night’s best directed scenes by Stage Director Richard Harrell is between Zerlina and her betrothed, Masetto.  Sarah Benzinger employs a full register of notes both playful in their flirting and remorseful in their begging of forgiveness in a duet that is a mixture of pouting, tickling, and kissing as Zerlina tries to convince Masetto that she still loves him even after being lured into Giovanni’s arms.


      As Masetto, Joshua Hughes sports a bass-baritone range that rings with a flavoring of full fun influenced by his peasant, countryside life.  Not only does he sing impressively, but his ability to capture in his acting a comical but likable lad brings a palpable energy to every scene he wanders into, especially when he mixes pathos and hilarity as he languishes in exaggerated pain before Zerlina after he is boxed around by Giovanni.


      The evening’s other fiancé, Don Ottavio, is sung by Eric Levintow whose tenor voice reaches easily and clearly to master Mozart’s requirements but who often lacks the power in his volume to totally sell his part.  At times, he reaches his higher notes with some strain from below rather than landing lightly on them from above; and his longer runs vary from beautifully flowing to somewhat disjointed.


      Totally successful throughout the night is Antonio Azpiri as the opera’s famed comic, Leporello, servant to Don Giovanni.  With a deeply rich bass-baritone that rings solid with exacting notes, Leporello can bounce through a run of staccato notes with alacrity and sparkle.  Leporello adjusts himself as convenient to the moment and the people he is with.  As the imp, the fool, the co-conspirator, the grumbler, the revenge-seeker, the lover, the scaredy cat, and more, Antonio Azpiri excels in each chameleonic shift.


      Unfortunately, less successful in his portrayal is John Allen Nelson in the title role of Don Giovanni.  In all fairness, the production’s planned star was Joel Balzun, who had to withdraw due to a respiratory infection.  The evening’s stand-in Giovanni often shows much baritone promise in his vocal resonance, but too often he lacks the power to sing above the accompanying orchestra or to match the vibrance of a scene with the likes of Leporello or Elvira.  He fails to capture the deviousness and evil of his character and sometimes just seems too stilted and stationary in his delivery, even when that delivery does have the possibility of being spot-on vocally.


      So much of the stage direction of Richard Harrell of the evening is quite masterful and clever, making full use of Peter Crompton’s multi-level, three-walled scenic design and his array of projections that range from aristocratic interiors full of grandiosity to garden scenes with their own, evident luxury to country scenes of flowers, fruit, and frivolity.  Steve Mannshardt’s lighting sharply contrasts time of day and night, moments of tension and of joviality, scenes of deceit and of love.  The wide range of town and country costumes designed by Callie Floor provide their own, wonderful 18th century backdrop as well as often add humor to the country folk assembled.


      But what is usually a most dramatic climax of the Commendatore’s statue sending Giovanni to his well-deserved doom is this evening’s most disappointing section.  First, the Commendatore and his statue is simply miscast in the double casting of the otherwise successfully cast Masetto, Joshua Hughes.  In the role of the live, elder Commendatore, he simply appears too young; in the role of the statue, he lacks the echoing power of voice or the terrifying presence of being that the Statue usually renders in the final scenes.  Not helping are the director’s choices where Giovanni’s attempt at flailing arms against projected flames do not convey adequately the horror of his final demise, especially when he then just walks off stage left to his supposed doom.


      However, fortunately the evening has been blessed with many memorable performances – especially among its three sopranos.  Coupled with the score itself that is delivered superbly by the maestro and his orchestra, West Bay Opera’s Don Giovanni has much to offer anyone relishing a night of one of opera’s most beloved treasures in a setting intimate and inviting.


      Rating: 3.5 E


      https://theatreeddys.com/2023/02/don-giovanni.html

    • Read Michael J. Vaughn's review in the Palo Alto Weekly

      Arts

      Review: Last-minute sub makes for a devilishly good bad boy in West Bay Opera's 'Don Giovanni'

      by Michael J. Vaughn / Contributor


      Uploaded: Thu, Feb 23, 2023, 12:39 pm 0

      Time to read: about 3 minutes


      John Allen Nelson, left, as Don Giovanni and Antonio Azpiri as Leporello in West Bay Opera's "Don Giovanni." Courtesy Otak Jump.


      If there's anything opera fans love more than onstage drama, it's backstage drama — and last week, West Bay Opera had a doozie. A week before opening night, the singer who was supposed to play the title role in Mozart's "Don Giovanni" came down with pneumonia.


      After a few harried calls and referrals, they located a replacement, John Allen Nelson, giving a recital in Baltimore. Nelson, who had performed the role a few times before, was soon on a flight to the West Coast, reviewing PDFs of the Giovanni score. After three entire rehearsals, he was ready to hit the stage.


      The good news is, sometimes a replacement does a pretty amazing job (just ask Brock Purdy). From note one, it was apparent that Nelson possesses a baritone as smooth as liquid silver, and the proper mixture of charisma and child-like glee to portray one of opera's favorite bad boys. Also, in the opening sword fight, he succeeded in not actually stabbing anyone, which is important.


      The even better news is, the rest of West Bay's cast offers an excellent and intriguing buffet of voices, beginning with Leporello, Giovanni's servant. Antonio Azpiri's baritone is a little earthier than Nelson's, which makes a fine complement in their many scenes together. He also projects a nebbishy put-upon quality that serves whenever his boss throws him under the bus. Azpiri's performance of the famed List Aria — a statistical rundown of Giovanni's thousands of conquests — is funny and magnificent.


      Playing Donna Elvira, the dumped woman who will not go away, Shaina Martinez deploys a forceful, agile soprano that befits Elvira's vows of vengeance. She does a lovely job with the final-act aria, "Mi tradi," in which Elvira describes the anguish of loving and hating at the same time. She also makes the most of Elvira's timely "blocking" entrances, arriving just in time to warn off Giovanni's latest target.


      The most delicious singing comes from Michelle Drever as Donna Anna, whose father falls to Giovanni's sword in the opening scene. Drever has a powerful lyric soprano, but also the ability and taste to control her dynamics when the moment calls for it. She produces high pianissimos that seem to still the air around her. Skill and vocal intelligence came together in "Non mi dir," a justly famous aria in which Anna explains to her fiance the depths of her grief. The results are exquisite and heart-rending.


      As for that fiance, Don Ottavio, Eric Levintow has a fine lyric tenor but falls prey to occasional hesitations. Ottavio is a problematic character to begin with — he stomps around declaring vendettas without really achieving anything — but he absolutely needs to believe in himself. Soprano Sarah Benzinger sometimes fails to catch the zest of the peasant bride Zerlina, but she seemed to recover with "Vedrai carino," the ultra-sweet aria in which Zerlina forgives her groom Masetto for his jealousy.


      In truth, of course, Masetto was one Elvira interruption from being cuckolded. Bass-baritone Joshua Hughes plays the unlucky groom with a pugnacious, Bronxian handling of the Italian text, and uses his gangly frame to great comic effect, especially when Giovanni is beating the crap out of him.


      Hughes also played Anna's slain father, The Commendatore, in a double-casting taken from Mozart-era practices. Stage director Richard Harrell also used a traditional approach to the cemetery scene, which was gratifying to see. There's really nothing creepier than a statue coming to life, but for some reason directors feel the need to mess with it. Giovanni's final descent (spoiler alert) into hell, on the other hand, is pretty high-tech, featuring a stage-height projection of the Commendatore drenched in flames (triple creepy!). Still, if they want a 100 on the test, I'm going to need a gust of smoke or a burst of flash powder as Giovanni runs into the fiery depths. Just don't burn down the theater.


      The projections by Peter Crompton and Frederic O. Boulay were particularly effective, filling the stage with old-world landscapes and churches that gave the action ultra-realistic backgrounds. They included small touches of animation: flickering candles, shifting beams in God-light clouds. Callie Floor's costume designs were highlighted by Giovanni's black leather traveling clothes and Donna Anna's elegant black skirt.


      José Luis Moscovich's orchestra began the overture with a few small flubs (almost like a car starting in the cold) but was perfect the rest of the afternoon. Moscovich conducted with a distinct sense of propulsion, which maintained an air of tension throughout the opera. I also enjoyed the ingenious move of placing several musicians in a two-tiered platform in the stage-right wings.


      A masterful opera reveals new ideas with every viewing. This one came with Leporello's opening aria, "Voglio far il gentiluomo," which I realized resembles Figaro's "Se vuol ballare" from The Marriage of Figaro. Both arias feature servants complaining about their bosses (revolution being a constant presence in Mozart's works). In the final act, when the composer has Giovanni's house-band playing excerpts from Mozart's previous operas (and Leporello comically complaining), they include, voila! "Se vuol ballare."


      West Bay Opera presents Don Giovanni, Feb. 25, 8 p.m. and Feb. 26, 2 p.m. at Lucie Stern Theatre, 1305 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. $35-$92, Proof of vaccination and masking required. wbopera.org or 650-424-9999.


      https://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/2023/02/23/review-last-minute-sub-makes-for-a-devilishly-good-bad-boy-in-west-bay-operas-don-giovanni

    • Read Barbara Keer's review in Splash Magazine

      I always find it a special experience to be able to attend a West Bay Opera production.  I don’t live in the area and when I visit, the opera is not always available.  However, on Sunday, February 26, 2023 I was able to attend the afternoon performance of Don Giovanni by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.  What a performance it was! 


      Entering the auditorium of the Lucie Stern Theatre in Palo Alto, I immediately feel at ease and comfortable and ultimately a part of the action because this space is small and welcoming. Whether one is coming to their first opera or is an opera buff there is so much to enjoy.  The projections, sets, costumes, live orchestra, supertitles and voices are at a level comparable to some of the finest opera houses around the world. Check this out when The Flying Dutchman” Richard Wagner opens on May 26, 2023.


      I always look forward to the introduction by José Luis Moscovich who welcomes the audience and shares tidbits about the opera and the company. This production was dedicated to the memory of Marie Cuevas supporter and friend of the company. Moscovich has been General Director of West Bay Opera since 2006. As he leaves to conduct the orchestra, it is the orchestral music and the projections that take over.  The projections are a very important enhancement to all of the performances. Kudos to Projection Co-Designer, Frederic O. Boulay for this performance.


      Don Giovanni is considered one of the greatest operas of all time.  It is one of three operas that Mozart wrote to libretti by Lorenzo Da Pointe.  In the last 76 years, West Bay Opera has presented it 3 times: in 1982, 2004 and 2012.  While the last production was set in contemporary Brooklyn, the current production is set in the 1600’s, the original period. When the opera premiered in Vienna it was a rousing success.


      Essentially this is the story of Don Juan, Don Giovanni’s sole purpose in life seems to be to seduce as many young woman as possible and keep a track record in a book. Don Giovanni was convincingly performed with the expected arrogance and pomp by baritone John Allen Nelson in his West Bay Opera debut. Leporello, Don Giovanni’s servant was Antonio Azpiri.


      Leporello’s role was to obey his master (though he preferred not to do so) as he distracted, interacted and created scenes to assist Don Giovanni in charming the women. Azpiri was delightful, and the source of much of the humor in the opera.


      We first meet Don Giovanni running from a failed seduction of Donna Anna (Michelle Dever) who is the thread that weaves the story together. Donna Anna’s father (Joshua Hughes) defending his daughter’s honor engages in a sword fight with Don Giovanni and is killed, making Don Giovanni a murderer who doesn’t seem very disturbed by his deed.


      Searching for women, Don Giovanni and Leporello come upon a wedding party and the bride to be, Zerlina (Sara Benzinger) is initially interested but is warned off by Donna Anna. Benzinger’s acting stood out as well as her voice.  Masetto (Joshua Hughes), Zerlina’s betrothed, no longer trusts her. Donna Elvira (Shaina Martinez), another potential conquest was an audience favorite.


      Having wreaked havoc in the village, abandoned morality, and refused to make amends for his transgressions, Don Giovanni arrogantly meets his match in the statue gracing the grave of Donna Anna’s father and descends to the underworld.


      With drama and humor, brilliant costumes by Callie Floor, makeup and wigs by David Gillam, choreography by Kara Davis, remarkable sets by Peter Compton, props by Shirley Benson all under the direction of Richard Harrell, and, of course, beautiful music, this was a memorable production.


      https://splashmags.com/index.php/2023/03/03/west-bay-operas-don-giovanni-was-a-winner/#gsc.tab=0


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