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            A Very Polished Performer:  
            The young 
            soprano Aleksandra Kurzak talks to Jim Pritchard (JPr) 
             
            When Aleksandra Kurzak made her debut as Aspasia in Mozart’s 
            Mitridate at Covent Garden in July 2005, Tim Ashley wrote in 
            The Guardian ‘
            
            
            Aleksandra Kurzak
 
            
            She now tackles the vocal challenges of the title role of a Rossini 
            rarity, Mathilde di Shabran. It is one of the composer’s
            
            
            finest scores, and a comedy almost Shakespearean in depth. The plot 
            is somewhat similar to The Taming of the Shrew but with the 
            sexes reversed. Mathilde, a soldier's daughter, takes it upon 
            herself to melt the heart of the cruel, misogynist Corradino Cuor di 
            Ferro (‘Corradino Ironheart’). She wants him to propose marriage,  
            but in the process nearly loses her life at one point. With both 
            protagonists having traded feats of stratospheric vocal athleticism 
            Mathilde finally celebrates her triumph to music that suggests she 
            has won a military victory by singing ‘Women were born to conquer 
            and rule’. Meanwhile Corradino has now lost his coloratura bravado 
            and is left with only a supporting role in the accompanying 
            ensemble. 
            There is a great sense of anticipation about this production first 
            seen in Pesaro in 2004 and particularly with a new pairing of Ms 
            Kurzak’s first Mathilde with Juan Diego Flórez’s reprise of 
            Corradino.
            
            Speaking to Ms Kurzak after one of the early rehearsals I likened 
            the story to the fairytale of ‘Beauty and the Beast’ and wondered 
            whether this what she thought of this.
            
            
            Mathilde comes to Corradino’s Palace and knows she will win him over 
            and is very convinced about herself, more so than ‘Beauty’. They 
            order her to be killed but they don’t do it and Corradino is 
            surprised she’s still alive and he realises he is in love with her. 
            He is a very nasty character and from the beginning doesn’t know 
            what love or friendship is. He lives for wars and killing.
            
            How 
            has she prepared for this current role?
            
            When 
            I was first asked to sing it I found it impossible to get a score 
            and we did not have the Decca recording that is now available. I was 
            in Hamburg and had a very good friend there who has everything and 
            he played me some old LPs with Rolando Panerai as Isidoro and 
            Mathilde was Cecilia Valdenassi.
            I heard this music and thought it was very nice. At the time I 
            was singing Fiorilla in Il Turco in Italia and although much 
            the same range I think Mathilde is even more difficult.
            
            
            Someone told me recently that Rossini liked jokes and was a funny 
            person but sometimes you think he must have hated singers when you 
            see the score because it is nearly impossible to sing sometimes. 
            I’ve had to practice quite a lot to learn all the notes. The Emperor 
            said to Mozart about 
            Die Entführung 
            aus dem Serail ‘Too many notes, my dear Mozart’ and that is 
            possibly the same here.
            
            
            As I did not know the opera I bought the CD as soon as possible to 
            help study the music and then I played on the piano the line I have 
            to sing and so learnt the words. Our conductor, Maestro Rizzi, said 
            he is very pleased with how I sing the role and I am too. I enjoy 
            Rossini and even it if it can be very difficult it suits my voice. I 
            do not need a lot of time to prepare, even for a new role like this, 
            somehow it’s okay.
            
            
            Which composer’s music does she think suits her voice best?
            
            
            Mozart, like most singers will tell you, is the best music to keep 
            the voice fresh but Mozart is hard too. You can hear everything in 
            Mozart and there is great beauty in a simple musical line,  so this 
            simplicity creates its own huge difficulty. I believe people when 
            they say if you can sing Mozart you can sing everything. Of course 
            there is the 
            bel canto 
            of Donizetti with the legato singing where everything 
            is difficult and you have to do it well.
            
            With Aleksandra Kurzak’s background with her mother an opera 
            singer and her father a horn player she seemed preordained for a 
            life in the theatre and so I wondered whether she always wanted to 
            be a singer.
            
            My 
            mother studied a lot of opera at home and they took me to many 
            rehearsals and I really did enjoy it. I went almost every evening if 
            I was finished with my schoolwork. I played the violin for 12 years 
            and had to practice everyday but if I had a little bit of time I 
            always went to the opera. We lived in Wroclaw (formerly Breslau) and 
            everything was in Polish. My mother sang Violetta in 
            La Traviata 
            and I saw a lot of Mozart, Rossini, Donizetti and Puccini.
            
            
            Actually it was my big dream to be a ballet dancer but the dancers I 
            spoke to told my mother to persuade me not to pursue this because 
            the life of a dancer is really hard and short. I can’t remember when 
            I decided to be an opera singer. I played solo violin with 
            orchestras and only a few months before my entrance exam for the 
            music academy I did a TV interview where I said I would do both, 
            continue with the violin and sing. I began to realise that if I 
            wanted to be a good violinist I would have to rehearse 5 or 6 hours 
            a day so it wasn’t a good idea to do both. About 2 to 3 weeks before 
            that major exam my mother said ‘Let’s see if you have a voice’ 
            because I sang by imitating her without ever thinking how to do it.
            
            For the entry exam for the Wroclaw music academy I sang Konstanze’s 
            aria ‘Ach ich liebte’ from 
            Die Entführung 
            aus dem Serail because it was very high at the beginning and I 
            had four extremely high notes that would now kill me. It was almost 
            impossible but I didn’t have then anything in the first octave of my 
            voice so that was my range at the time. So I sang all these high 
            notes and it was a complete surprise and left everyone pondering 
            ‘How is this possible as she doesn’t know how to sing and yet she 
            sings?’ I passed the exam and was in first place.
            
            
            I was at the music academy for four years from 1996 to 2000. In 1998 
            I won the Stanislaw 
            
            Moniuszko International Voice competition in Warsaw, Moniuszko is 
            the Polish national composer. I met there one of the professors from 
            the Hochschule für Musik in Hamburg who I was taught by after I 
            completed my studies in Wroclaw. In 2001 I joined the Young Artists 
            programme of the Hamburg State Opera and after two years became a 
            member of the ensemble. I liked my six years in Hamburg very much as 
            it is a beautiful city. I began with small roles and covered other 
            parts. I started with Kate Pinkerton in 
            
            Madama Butterfly, and then there was Gilda in Rigoletto 
            followed by Queen of the Night. In the second year they gave me 
            Blondchen 
            and other 
            bigger parts.
            
            During my time in Hamburg I sang everything that was suitable for my 
            voice. I sang Cleopatra, Marie in 
            La fille du 
            régiment, Fiorilla in Il turco in Italia, Konstanze, 
            Nanetta, Susanna, Gretel, those sorts of roles. It can be 
            hard if you are not really ready but I have the support of my mother 
            and if I have problems then I can always call her and she comes to 
            see me. I need her even now although I know my voice better and can 
            sort some things out; it is still good to have a second person to 
            hear you sing.
            
            
            
            I am very pleased when I now sing in New York, here in London or 
            elsewhere and meet people who saw me in Hamburg who have travelled 
            especially to see me.
            
            I 
            wondered how important her successes in her various singing 
            competitions were to her career.
            
            Well 
            I won in Warsaw, then in Helsinki in 1999 and at the 2000 Viñas 
            International Singing Competition in Barcelona but it was the 
            Plácido Domingo competition, the Operalia, where I didn’t win a 
            prize, that seems to have been the most important because Peter 
            Katona of the Royal Opera was there and discovered me. In the first 
            round there I sang the first Queen of the Night aria but in this 
            competition you must sing two arias and I had prepared other things 
            and was sure they would not ask for the second Queen of the Night 
            aria so had not even practised it with the pianist. I thought no way 
            would they ask me for this and they did! So I sang 
            
            Der Hölle Rache and they passed me into the second round.
            
            
            
            It is probably because of the Operalia that I got to make my debut 
            at The Met in New York because there are a lot of casting directors 
            and opera intendants there. I never had an audition at The Met but 
            my agent called me and said they wanted me to sing Olympia in 
            
            
            Les Contes d’Hoffmann. Still today it is a mystery how it 
            happened but I assume they heard me at the Operalia. It was going to 
            be December 2004 and it had always been my dream to go to New York 
            just to see the opera house and now I had the opportunity to sing 
            there. It was one of the happiest times of my career so far. They 
            were so nice there and at the first rehearsal they said ‘Welcome to 
            The Met … relax …  and do not think you have to sing everything out, 
            do what you want to do’ so I sang a little bit and kept some back 
            because I was quite scared about being in that famous place. I had 
            never sung Olympia so this was a role debut too, everything 
            together, but I like this sort of challenge very much. It was a 
            beautiful Otto Schenk production with Ramón Vargas as Hoffmann, 
            James Morris as the villains and 
            Frédéric 
            Chaslin conducting.
            
            
            
            It was my first time in America of course and my parents came to see 
            me and it was their first time too. My mother was overcome and said 
            ‘Don’t ask me anything, how you sang or how you looked because I 
            don’t know anything because I was crying all the time’. I have 
            recently sung Blondchen there and will return soon for Gilda.
            
            About six months after my debut at The Met I came to Covent Garden 
            for the first time as Aspasia in 
            
            Mitridate and have been back for Norina in Don Pasquale, 
            Adina, Susanna and now this. I am thrilled I can be here because it 
            is such a great place to work.
            
            Ms Kurzak has already worked with many important conductors and 
            I wondered who she has enjoyed working with most.
            
            
            
            Thankfully I have enjoyed working with everybody and never seem to 
            have any problems with conductors, maybe it is because I learn 
            quickly and can do what they want. I am pleased they always seem to 
            like what I do. Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, Christoph von Dohnányi, 
            Maestro Campanella here in London with 
            
            Don Pasquale and, of course, Charles Mackerras recently for 
            Le Nozze di Figaro are some of the conductors I particularly have 
            appreciated singing for. I prefer to work with this older generation 
            because I know they are so wise have so much experience and I can 
            learn a lot from them. Mackerras said to me after one performance 
            ‘Aleksandra I’ve never had such a good Susanna as you in my life.’ 
            Can you imagine that? What a compliment that was.
            
            Critics, me included, have been impressed by Ms Kurzak’s acting 
            and how she seems to make her characters real and appears to enjoy 
            what she is doing on stage.
            
            
            
            Yes I do but often it is the nature of the roles I am singing at the 
            moment but I’d love to die on stage like most singers. 
            
            [She laughs.]
            
            How has her voice changed since she began her career?
            
            
            
            I find it is bigger and more round and I don’t have all those high 
            notes now but I have a better middle voice because that is very 
            important too. So I am going slowly in this 
            
            bel canto direction, with Rossini, Bellini and Donizetti – I was 
            offered Lucia at The Met but there was a clash of dates. I do not 
            sing Queen of the Night any more and will say goodbye to Blondchen 
            as well. I will sing my first Donna Anna in Vienna next year and 
            will soon do my first Armenaide in Tancredi, and then 
            Violetta.
            
            
            
            I will not push my voice and will just follow what I feel like 
            doing. There are a lot of roles I want to sing but don’t know if I 
            ever will such as the big Verdi ones Abigaille and Leonora in 
            
            
            Il trovatore. If the voice comes, it comes and I will not do 
            anything special. You can’t force it and I want to sing as long as 
            possible and not just for 4 or 5 years and then have vocal problems. 
            That’s certainly not that I want.
            
            
            
            My mother started with Queen of the Night and now sings Tosca and 
            all those types of things so I don’t know yet what I will end up 
            doing. 
            
            I know she has recently moved back to Poland and I wonder if she 
            notices any changes now she is back there.
            
            
            
            Well I can see now that they do not have much money for culture and 
            the arts but I have only been back about one year so don’t really 
            know. I will be singing one performance of Susanna soon there 
            together with my mother as the Countess just for fun and for my 
            family so everybody including my grandmother can come and see us.
            
            
            
            Did she enjoy Laurent Pelly’s L’elisir d’amore that she sang 
            in last season at Covent Garden and what does she think of some of 
            the productions she has appeared in up to now in her career?
            
            
            
            I liked the 
            
            L’elisir production with the bales of hay but there was so much 
            to do that it becomes too much after a while. At the beginning I did 
            everything the director wanted me to do because I cannot say no and 
            have to do it because these are his ideas but eventually I made 
            slight changes to this view of Adina. I am learning more each time I 
            work with different directors; you must as a singer respect them but 
            I must do something I want to do as well. Can you imagine I once saw 
            a singer singing standing on her head? It was Marlis Petersen as 
            Lulu in a new Hamburg production in 2005 by Peter Konwitschny but at 
            least she was also something of a gymnast and was okay with this.
            
            
            
            Times have changed of course and twenty years ago music was the most 
            important thing but now it is the music and the staging. In Germany 
            you see a lot of strange things and when I was singing Cleopatra in 
            Hamburg I had to buy my costume from the sex shops on the Reeperbahn. 
            I had to perform in my underwear and had to sing ‘Piangerò’ crawling 
            around on the floor. It was a disaster for the director and his team 
            who were booed on the first night but at the next performance the 
            audience seemed to love it. It is often a different public on 
            opening night from those coming later.
            
            
            
            Coming back again to what she was currently working on I wondered 
            whether she had sung with Juan Diego Flórez before.
            
            
            
            No and it is the first time I have worked with the entire cast, 
            director Mario Martone and Maestro Rizzi. Flórez is fantastic, he 
            has to be nasty but he sings very well.
            
            
            
            I remarked that in this production it is over two hours until the 
            only interval and asked Ms Kurzak how much of that involves her.
            
            
            
            I appear after about 20 minutes and I am there until the interval. 
            It is a nice production with not a lot of things on stage like we 
            had for that recent 
            
            L’elisir d’amore here. It is just mainly a staircase and it is 
            all very beautiful with wonderful lighting and very beautiful 
            costumes. It is more static than L’elisir and very much the 
            Italian way of doing these operas but this is good because we have 
            such a lot of notes to sing so we cannot be running around all the 
            time. 
            Mathilde
            di Shabran is an ensemble piece and I have only the one aria 
            right at the end. There is a lot of ensemble, duets, trios, quintets 
            and the music is enjoyable and also good for the voice which is what 
            I really like.
            
            
            Jim Pritchard
            
            
            (There are 
            performance of Mathilde di Shabran on 23, 27, 31 October and 
            3, 6, and 11 November; as booking opened in July these performances 
            are sold-out but there are always 67 seats available from the box 
            office on the day of the performance.)
            
            
            
            
            
	
	
			
	
	
              
              
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