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'My operatic world beyond Carmen'

It's not every day you meet a notorious femme fatale

November 12, 2015 12:37
Intense:  Rinat Shaham enjoys the spontaneity of operatic performance

By

Yehuda Shapiro

3 min read

It's not every day you meet a notorious femme fatale. The Israeli mezzo-soprano Rinat Shaham is in London for her debut at English National Opera, appearing in a new production of Verdi's The Force of Destiny, but the world knows her best as Bizet's Carmen. As it happens, it was in the UK that she first took on the untameable gypsy - at Glyndebourne in 2004. Since then, her interpretation has sizzled across the world.

"Carmen is like tofu," she says, making an arresting cross-cultural analogy. "She takes on the personality of the woman who is singing her, just like tofu takes on the taste of goulash sauce or curry sauce… The audience will have huge expectations of the role, but it's about the charisma, temperament and imagination you bring to it."

Off the stage, though, Shaham is neither a vamp nor a diva. While she exudes a certain intensity, there is no theatricality about her: thoughtful, lively and responsive in interview, she is looking forward to exploring Brick Lane with her husband, the Australian musician and film-maker Peter Bucknell. Though she works primarily in Europe, they make their home in New York, and it is nearly a decade since her last appearance in Britain, when she cross-dressed as the mischievous young page Cherubino in Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro at the Royal Opera House.

America has been her base since she left her home town of Haifa with a scholarship to study at Philadelphia's Curtis Institute of Music, one of the elite US conservatories. Her father, now retired, was a music teacher and she describes her older brother Hagai as "a phenomenal violinist… I grew up listening to him practising, but I found the framework of classical music too strict for my creative personality - what I liked was jazz, with its improvisation. But then I discovered that opera provides a great platform for combining art forms. I wanted to sing, I wanted to dance, I wanted to dress up. That's all embraced on the opera stage."

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