•April 2, 2008 • Comments Off on

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Very Fun with Traubel and Lewis

•April 2, 2008 • Comments Off on Very Fun with Traubel and Lewis

Jerry Lewis was a huge opera fan and he always took every chance he could to bring opera front and center. Traubel was a great sport, aside from having I think one of the greatest voices of her generation, she was very adept at jazz too!

The first clip is a rehearsal for her to try and keep a straight face because she just couldn’t stop from laughing around Jerry. Who could?

She had to, they were making a film together, the 1961 “The Ladies Man”.

The second clip is just mayhem. Fabulous and fun mayhem. Not bad Jazz singing and pop singing either.

“I thought I saw…..”

•April 2, 2008 • Comments Off on “I thought I saw…..”

I just am a sucker for a pretty face, and if it is a little “putty cat”, I am purring myself. Their faces are perfection.

Nat King Cole is one of my all time favorite voices.

Costello = Romeo

•April 1, 2008 • Comments Off on Costello = Romeo

He really has something very special.

What fun we had.

•April 1, 2008 • Comments Off on What fun we had.

In the Post, they wrote: “WE HEAR THAT:

….. director Franco Zeffirelli will be signing DVDs of his “Aida” hit tonight at Barnes & Noble near Lincoln Center, where 1,000 opera fans are expected to hear Aprile Millo sing for her friend . . .”

Indeed I wanted the beginning of this five day celebration to be joyous and filled with warmth.

So many people, so many cameras, so much love. CNN, ABC, RAIUNO, and the documentary ” Five Days in the Life of a Genius” filmed during the chaos, lovely chaos of the tribute that Barnes and Noble put together for Franco this last Friday. The room itself was packed, and the store itself had set out banners and windows and the whole section upstairs where Broadway shows come to give little glimpses of their shows; a little anti-chamber near the room offered tantalizing “lithographs” and books and DVDS of Franco.

Inside, we put a little opera in the mix, as I was asked by Franco and Barnes and Noble to sing a bit, and so I invited Marcello Giordani and Mark Delavan to come and give a little flavor of opera in honor of Franco.

Marcello sang a magnificent “Nessun Dorma”, and Mark sang wonderfully “Eri Tu,” and Ford’s aria from “Falstaff”. As the Mistress of Ceremonies, I sang a bit of the duet with Marcello from Tosca and had a lot of fun with the public and the cameras.

Then Ira Siff masterfully conducted the interview in which Franco astonished and entertained and was adorable. A man so full of the very history of opera, real opera. Serafin, Visconti, Callas, Berstein, Kleiber, Sutherland, Pavarotti, Levine- so brilliant.

The real person that is Franco has touched my soul and charmed and intoxicated me for years both as fan and as friend. He is one in a trillion.

The love last night in the grand auditorium during the intermission of his Boheme was tangible and today at the Lucheon of the Opera Guild. He was overwhelmed, as were all who were there.

This type of talent is so rare, and charm like this combined with real knowledge and education and talent just doesn’t happen anymore. What he has forgotten, we have yet to learn. Most directors to me are “pleather”, he is suede, plush rich velvet, nappa, butter soft leather. Mythic, glorious, triumphant, unafraid, authentic.

“They” think his productions are over the top and too much. GO TO ITALY. The church scene in “Tosca” is the way it is still to this day at High Mass.

His “Cavalleria” is Sicily in that day. They have a cinematic depth. The reality goes from first view all the way to the back, no fake effect. Busy? Remind yourself it is a 4,000 seat house give or take a few.

It can handle it.

Maria Callas on the stage, second act Boheme, wouldn’t be lost. WE WOULD SEE HER-I never missed finding Stratas or Jose C. and the other night found the attractive cast quite easily.

This will be a debate for a long time, but of one thing I am very sure. They are popular favorites and are versions of the same productions that La Scala had and has, that Vienna loved and that Covent Garden had and adored. To remove them? La Boheme, Turandot, and Tosca should be made into a festival and brought back for a zeffirelli festival every few years. It is my hope this will be the case.

There is plenty of room for the new shows we are forced to look for and support. Time marches forward, we are in a minimalist period in opera for now. So it goes, that will pass too, most likely. Puts a lot of pressure on the voices to be the stars of the show.

When I sang Franco’s Turandot production as Liu, the second act opened, what had been the dour grey of the popolo oppressed and surpressed, the second scene opens on total GOLDEN Splendor of the Imperial Palace. EVERYTHING was light and privileged and drenched in opulence.

As Liu I am hidden in the populace, with Timur, “hiding in plain sight” so I was afforded a fabulous view of the house as the curtain rose and the lights “popped” on.

The faces of the audience were like little children. This night had Birgit Nilsson in the first row, Elizabeth Taylor center of the house with George Hamilton, Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, literally everywhere you looked there was a face you knew,and you know what?

They all looked like ten year old kids…..really talented ones at that!

AWED, surprised and enchanted. THEY LOVED IT.

They went to be blown away by the grandeur and the lavish, glamorous, gigantic emotions of opera.

AND THEY WERE!

I loved that. For a moment, even before the voices would confirm and beguile, the battle to win their hearts had already begun…..

God bless you my dear friend, piece of my heart.

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•March 31, 2008 • Comments Off on

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Is the distant universe really what it appears to be? Astronomers hope not. Intervening dark matter, which is normally invisible, might show its presence by distorting images originating in the distant universe, much the way an old window distorts images originating on the other side. By noting the degree to which background galaxies appear unusually flat and unusually similar to neighbors, the dark matter distribution producing these weak gravitational lensing distortions can be estimated. Analysis of the shapes of 200,000 distant galaxies imaged with the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) does indicate the presence of a massive network of distributed dark matter. Future results may even be able to discern details of the distribution. The above computer generated simulation image shows how dark matter, shown in red, distorts the light path from and apparent shape of distant galaxies, depicted in blue.

Franco’s “Taming of the Shrew”

•March 30, 2008 • Comments Off on Franco’s “Taming of the Shrew”

I have loved so many of Franco’s films. I grew up sobbing to “Romeo and Juliet” and fell hard for Leonard Whiting, the most handsome Romeo, and Julia Hussey was exotic and beautiful. Shakespeare made palatable to the general masses.

Recently his “Hamlet” and “Tea with Mussolini” were wonderful, but my hands down favorite is this little gioello with the stunningly beautiful Elizabeth Taylor and the giant Richard Burton, an actor of untold riches and depth. HE IS Petruchio.

The whole cast is so terrific, really great and there are scenes with Elizabeth that will take your breath away. Her beauty is so truly amazing.

These are some of my favorites in honor of my great friend, the genius that is Franco Zeffirelli.

Singing for Elizabeth’s Wedding

•March 27, 2008 • Comments Off on Singing for Elizabeth’s Wedding

Look how gorgeous she is.

This was at a beautiful gazebo at Michael Jackson’s Never Never land.

He walked her down the aisle looking very handsome and full of pride.

Seventeen helicopters buzzed around in the skies for the “only” fotos, and they flew in opposite directions, complete with a hang glider coming down with a camera attached to his helmet.

In the first row were so many wonderful people. I remember so many terrific people. Nancy Reagan, and Merv Griffin, Eva Gabor, Quincy Jones, the list goes on and on. I was so proud to be with her, as Valentino gilded the lilly. Not hard to make her look fabulous. God bless you Elizabeth. You know I love ya!

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Singing for Elizabeth in Franco’s film

•March 27, 2008 • Comments Off on Singing for Elizabeth in Franco’s film

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For the first recording

•March 27, 2008 • Comments Off on For the first recording

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