Soprano Ayelet Cohen (Elad Zagman) |
Commemorating
Holocaust Remembrance Day on April 28th 2022, Russian-Jewish composer Grigori
Frid's opera "The Diary of Anne Frank", a monodrama in 21
scenes for soprano and chamber orchestra, was staged in the Henry Crown Hall of
the Jerusalem Theatre. A collaboration of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, the
Jerusalem Opera and Opera Piccola, the role of Anne Frank was performed by
Ayelet Cohen. Conducting the opera was Jerusalem Opera musical director Omer
Arieli. Alex Kagan was stage director.
Grigori Frid
(1915-2012) was born in Petrograd (now St. Petersburg) to a family of Jewish
intellectuals. He served as a soldier in World War II, experiencing the
horrors, violence and suppression of war. His oeuvre includes symphonies,
concertos, incidental music for theatre and films, as well as vocal and chamber
music. His most notable works, however, are two chamber operas - "The
Diary of Anne Frank" (1968) and "The Letters of Van Gogh"
(1975). "The Diary of Anne Frank" premiered with piano accompaniment
at the All-Union House of Composers in Moscow in May 1972. Frid was also
a visual artist, held a series of exhibitions of his paintings and had authored
a few volumes of recollections, two of which were published in 1987 and 1991.
Frid's monodrama "The Diary of Anne Frank" is based on the writings of the young Jewish girl hidden with her family and other people in an attic in Amsterdam from 1942. Anne's diary entries end on August 1st 1944. Three days later the secret annex was discovered. Its occupants were sent to extermination camps. Anne Frank died at age 16 of typhus in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. The family's only survivor was Otto Frank, Anne's father. In addition to keeping a diary, Anne had also written stories and planned to publish a book about her time in the secret annex. After the war, Otto Frank fulfilled her wish, publishing the diary, which has been translated into more than 70 languages.
At the Jerusalem
event, the ensemble of 22 players of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra with
Maestro Arieli occupied the left side of the stage. To the right, a table, a
vase of flowers and a chair were the only props for the staging of the
monodrama itself. The opera's short acts were punctuated by film clips, mostly
showing the Nazi occupation, echoing with the sounds of war and scenes from
concentration camps, as well as a few glimpses of the city of Amsterdam, its
canals, bridges and bicycles, these all accompanied by readings from Anne
Frank's diary engagingly presented (in Hebrew) by actor Alex Ansky. For the
Israeli performance, the opera's Russian text was translated into Hebrew by David
Sebba. There were surtitles in English and Hebrew.
In her precise,
in-depth and commanding performance of the role of Anne Frank, soprano Ayelet
Cohen brought to life its many dimensions, the text brimming with memories of
life before the family's isolation, mention of friends, the girl's joy at receiving a
birthday present, her developing feelings for fellow hideaway Peter, the
changing seasons and with her profound life philosophy. “I can shake off
everything as I write; my sorrows disappear, my courage is reborn…I've found
that there is always some beauty left -- in nature, sunshine, freedom, in
yourself; these can all help you…He who has courage and faith will never perish
in misery!”” The text, however, begins to shift between resignation, almost euphoric
optimism and moments of anger and dire despair. "Who has inflicted this
upon us? Who has made us Jews different from all other people? Who has allowed
us to suffer so terribly up till now?" Cohen's natural and
convincing stage presence is endorsed by her bright, easeful soprano timbre,
solid vocal technique, fine projection and her articulate and masterful handling of Frid's terse
and succinct musical language, its style based on twelve-tone and other
mid-20th century compositional styles, the score effectively evoking the text's
heartening, sunny aspects but also its stark, fateful, sinister and elegiac colours.
Under Maestro Arieli's direction, the instrumental ensemble gave an excellent reading of
the pithy score. Impressive, thought-provoking and intensely moving, this was
the first Israeli performance with orchestra of "The Diary of Anne
Frank".
Founder and soloist of
Opera Piccolo, Jerusalem-born Ayelet Cohen has enjoyed successful performances throughout the San Francisco Bay area, in Israel and Italy. She has sung with
the Berkeley-, Oakland- and Sacramento Opera Companies and with the Israeli
Opera, also soloing with the Jerusalem-, Ashdod- and Rishon LeZion Symphony
Orchestras and the Israel Camerata Jerusalem.
Photo: Elad Zagman |
Maestro Omer Arieli |
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