Ten Questions with...
1. My favorite thing about being a singer is:
The variety of the
job. It is exciting to work on different styles of music, learn numerous
languages, create different characters, think about how my body works, and
study with experts in each of those fields.
2. The greatest
challenge in being a singer is:
I think it may end up
being the amount of travel. It is difficult to feel settled and have things
like pets and a garden when so much of your career involves performing in
different places. So far, that's a great part of the adventure, but I do hope
to have a dog and kids someday.
3. A live music
performance I’ve attended that I will never forget is:
The Luther College
Nordic Choir came to town when I was in high school and did a concert. Very
different style of singing than I do now, but the goosebumps are the same.
4. A few of my
favorite films are:
Singing in the Rain,
The Sting, Best in Show, The Philadelphia Story.
5. Three things I can’t live without are:
A good book to read,
great friends to spend time with, and the support of my family.
6. My number one
hobby is:
Playing board games
or running.
7. If you could
perform with any singer, retired or deceased, who would it be?
Beverly Sills.
8. If you weren’t
a singer, what profession would you be in?
Teaching.
9. What role do
you wish you could sing that you could never sing because it’s the wrong voice
type/gender?
So many baritone/bass-baritone roles! Figaro (in 2 operas),
Don Giovanni, Rigoletto, Scarpia in Tosca, the four villains in The Tales of Hoffmann, Fritz in Die
Tote Stadt, to name a few.
10. Describe your
favorite moment on stage.
I had a great time
trying not to crack up when I was playing Olympia, the mechanical doll, in
The Tales of Hoffmann. The staging had all of my colleagues playing semi-mechanical
goofy characters who were incredibly excited every time the doll moved. As I
would walk toward one side of the stage, they would wave and grin at me, being
as silly as possible, and it took a lot of effort not to break character the
first few times. Good colleagues make lots of performing moments wonderful.
Bonus: One
question you wish someone would ask you (and the answer).
What is your favorite
food?
Whole steamed artichokes - dip the leaves in butter before scraping off the yummy stuff with your teeth, then remove the choke when you get to it and dip the heart in the butter. Heavenly.
See Jeni in Madison Opera's production of Handel's Acis and Galatea January 10-13 in The Playhouse at Overture Center. Tickets start at just $20, but they're going fast!
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