Overture Magazine - 2018-19 Season BSO_Overture_MAR_APR | Page 33

PORGY AND BESS Larry Hylton Sportin’ Life Larry D. Hylton is an American tenor who has inspired audiences around the world. A graduate of the Duke Ellington School of the Arts in Washington, D.C., Hylton studied voice with Jackson Sheats, Charlotte Black, Samuel Bonds and Betty Ridgeway. Hylton has appeared around the world with many reputable companies, including the Metropolitan Opera, Opéra National de Lyon, Opéra de Montréal and the Edinburgh International Festival. While Hylton is widely known for his portrayal of Sportin’ Life in Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess, his other credits include Carmen Jones under the baton of Plácido Domingo, Sweeney Todd, Debbie Allen’s Soul Possessed and Black Nativity. In 2015 Larry debuted the role of Prince in Ricky Ian Gordon’s Morning Star produced by the Cincinnati Opera. Venturing into independent film, Hylton supplied vocals for the 2015 documentary Seeking Asylum produced by Evolutionary Press. Hylton currently resides in New York City, where he is a staff musician at the historic Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem. Larry Hylton last appeared with the BSO in July 2016 performing in the Star-Spangled Spectacular, Nicholas Hersh, conductor. [He reprises his role as Sportin’ Life from the BSO’s 2016 production.] Reyna Carguill Serena A native of Panama City, Reyna Carguill has appeared in performances throughout the U.S. and abroad. Recent highlights include the role of Élisabeth de Valois in Don Carlos and Lucrezia Contarini in I Due Foscari with Sarasota Opera. Carguill toured the U.S. with the 75 th Anniversary Production of Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess in the role of Serena. In 2014 she sang the role of Serena to great acclaim with the Princeton Festival of New Jersey’s production of Porgy and Bess and Leonora in Il Trovatore for Sarasota Opera. On the concert platform, Carguill has sung Britten’s War Requiem in a performance with the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir, Mahler’s Symphony No. 2 with conductor David Effron and Vaughan Williams’ Serenade to Music with conductor Raymond Leppard. While completing a bachelor’s degree in Vocal Performance from Oakwood College in Huntsville, AL, Carguill studied with Ginger Beazley. At Indiana University, Carguill studied with soprano Virginia Zeani. She is also a recipient of a Richard F. Gold Career Grant. Reyna Carguill makes her BSO debut. Jasmine Habersham Clara American soprano Jasmine Habersham most recently performed the role of Pip in Moby Dick with Utah Opera, Pamina in The Magic Flute with Opera Theatre of St. Louis: Opera on the Go, Papagena in The Magic Flute with Cincinnati Opera, Yum-Yum in The Mikado with Kentucky Opera, Esther in Intimate Apparel with Cincinnati Opera Fusion and Clara in Porgy and Bess with Utah Festival Opera. As a member of the Glimmerglass Festival she performed the roles of Papagena in The Magic Flute and an Apparition in Macbeth. In concert she has performed Szymanowski’s Stabat Mater, Schubert’s Mass in G, Bach’s Mass in B Minor, Handel’s Messiah and Duke Ellington’s Concert of Sacred Music. Additional performances for the 2018 –19 season include a reprisal of Pip in Moby Dick with Opera San Jose and the role of Katie Jackson in the world premiere of Joel Puckett’s The Fix with Minnesota Opera.   Jasmine Habersham makes her BSO debut. About the Concert PORGY AND BESS George Gershwin Born in Brooklyn, NY, September 26, 1898; died in Beverly Hills, CA, July 11, 1937 On an October night in 1926, George Gershwin, wound up from rehearsals of his Broadway-bound musical Oh! Kay, found himself unable to sleep. At 28, he was the toast of American music. He had created the scores of numerous hit Broadway shows and was already considered one of the country’s best songwriters. But he was a restless artist, always looking for new challenges. In 1924, he had brilliantly mingled jazz and classical idioms in his Rhapsody in Blue and followed it with the full-length Piano Concerto in F the next year. And he dreamed of someday crossing over from the world of musical comedy he had already mastered to create a full-fledged American opera. That night, Gershwin turned to a popular new novel, Porgy, about African-American life in the Charleston ghetto by a white South Carolinian named DuBose Heyward. The composer was enthralled and read until dawn. His savvy theatrical sense told him this was a story crying out for dramatic treatment, and he promptly fired off a letter to Heyward expressing his interest in using it for a future opera. But Gershwin admitted he did not feel he had the technical knowledge yet to tackle such an ambitious project. It would be another nine years before Porgy and Bess had its premiere. The scion of an aristocratic but impoverished Charleston family, Heyward had spent time as a cotton checker working among black stevedores on the Charleston wharves. He found himself mesmerized by “the color, the mystery and movement of Negro life.” Just down the street from his home was a decaying courtyard of tenements called Cabbage Row, which became the Catfish Row of his novel and play. The inspiration for the crippled Porgy was a real-life local character Samuel Smalls, M A R –A P R 201 9 / OV E R T U R E 31