WHO: Written, produced and performed by Shelley Cooper. Directed by Mariangela Chatzistamatiou.Wherever I stay, I make the goddamn rules.---Maria CallasMaria Callas (1923-1987) was one of the most celebrated and influential opera singers of the 20th Century, so much so that she was called La Divina, The Divine One. The great conductor Leonard Bernstein called her the Bible of Opera. Born in New York City to Greek immigrant parents, her mother relocated her and her sister to Athens when Maria was 13. It was there that the young prodigy began her formal musical education, which led to her phenomenal career.In La Divina: The Last Interview of Maria Callas, Shelley Cooper portrays Callas near the end of her life, granting an interview to an unseen broadcast journalist. Callas attempts to keep the talk focused on her art, her work and her career, while the interviewer tries to deflect the discussion onto her scandalous personal life, specifically her complicated relationship with Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis. This intense affair would morph into an ongoing friendship with Onassis that would last the rest of her days, even after he married Jackie Kennedy.Callas recounts a young life with a loving father, and an overbearing mother who forced her into developing her musical talents from the age of 5, denying her the happy childhood she deserved. She recalls how opera saved her life during World War II, when Greece was occupied by Axis soldiers. After the war, when her career became established in Italy, she would astound the world with her incredible musical gifts, becoming one of the most celebrated singers of her generation.As Cooper-as-Callas, relates the story of La Divina, she sings selections from Callas repertoire, including ariras from Puccini, Verdi, Bizet, Gluck- a selection of some of operas greatest hits, as it were. Coopers own thrilling soprano singing works associated with La Divina is perhaps the finest homage one could make to her acclaimed predecessor. It has the effect of making Coopers show a concert as much as a narrative.
Ages: 13 to Adult.
Videos
RACHMANINOFF AND THE TSAR
South Coast Repertory (2/19 - 3/2) | ||
Wish You Were Here
South Coast Repertory's Julianne Argyros Stage (1/12 - 2/2) | ||
Batiashvili Plays Beethoven
Walt Disney Concert Hall (1/3 - 1/5) | ||
Cody Fry with Orchestra
Walt Disney Concert Hall (1/10 - 1/10) | ||
FARM HALL by Katherine Moar
Promenade Playhouse (1/10 - 1/26) NEW PLAY | ||
New Year's Eve with D-Nice & Friends
Walt Disney Concert Hall (12/31 - 12/31) | ||
KODO
Walt Disney Concert Hall (2/4 - 2/4) | ||
Millennium Magic 2025
Theatre West (1/24 - 1/26) | ||
Benavides’ Neruda Songs
Walt Disney Concert Hall (1/14 - 1/14) | ||
Back to the Future
Segerstrom Center for the Arts, Segerstrom Hall (12/26 - 1/5) | ||
Pacific Jazz Orchestra
Bram Goldsmith Theater at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts (5/29 - 5/30) | ||
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