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Preview: The Royal Opera's upcoming premier, Mamzer Bastard

It’s not every day you see the word “Mamzer’” in an opera title

June 7, 2018 13:49
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6 min read

It’s not every day you see the word “Mamzer’” in an opera title. Perhaps even more extraordinary, though, is that the influence of Chasidic and cantorial music is central to Mamzer Bastard, the new opera by the young Israeli composer Na’ama Zisser, staged later this month at the Hackney Empire. It even includes a cantor, Netanel Hershtik, from the Hampton Synagogue in New York as part of the cast.

Na’ama Zisser is currently doctoral composer-in-residence at London’s Guildhall School of Music and Drama (GSMD); the opera serves as her thesis and is a co-commission between the Royal Opera and the GSMD in association with the Hackney Empire. It’s an adventurous and productive way to nurture young composers, and Zisser is only the second person to hold the post. Yet Mamzer Bastard is also a family effort: Na’ama’s two librettists are her elder sister, Rachel C. Zisser, and Samantha Newton, Rachel’s partner in life as well as work.

At the theatre café between intensive rehearsals, the Israeli-born sisters two of five siblings —— could scarcely be more different from one another. They are a decade apart in age, with Rachel, 39, forceful and forthright while Na’ama, 29, seems quieter and deeply intuitive. Still, they share a wry sense of humour, as does Manchester-born Samantha, 35, part of the family for 13 years and originally Roman Catholic (“I wanted to go to Midnight Mass,” Rachel says, “and Sam said ‘Why’?”). Together the three are a force to be reckoned with. Today Na’ama is pale, focused, but tired: “This is the biggest piece I’ve ever written,” she says the opera is about an hour and a half, without a break. “I’ve just sent out 400 pages of score!”

Na’ama first began composing after she discovered, during military service as a musician, that she loved making musical arrangements. Offered opportunities to study in London or New York, she chose the former: “I was 20 and my mum said it was nearer home!” she remembers.