Turandot: A Night at the Opera with Christopher Browner ’12

Taft’s popular “A Night at the Opera” program returns to campus April 12 with Christopher Browner ’12, senior editor at New York’s Metropolitan Opera.

Taft’s popular “A Night at the Opera” program returns to campus this week with Christopher Browner ’12, senior editor at New York’s Metropolitan Opera. Browner will take the audience on a journey through Giacamo Puccini's final opera, Turandot; he will be joined by performers from the Met’s young artist program. The event takes place in Taft’s Choral Room on the main campus Friday, April 12 at 7 pm. The program is free and open to the public; tickets are not required.

Turandot is a three-act opera set in China. It tells the story of Prince Calaf, who falls in love with Princess Turandot. To win her hand, suitors must solve three riddles; execution awaits those who answer who do not answer correctly. Despite passing the test, the princess refuses to marry Calaf. As the tale unfolds, Calaf presents the princess with a challenge of her own.

Turandot remained unfinished at the time of Puccini’s death in 1924. The music was completed posthumously by Franco Alfano, allowing for a 1926 debut. Browner’s talk at Taft, along with pieces from the show performed by young Met artists, will serve as an insightful and enthusiastic introduction to Turndot, on stage at The Met through June 7. The show features Franco Zeffirelli’s “dazzling vision of mythic China with soprano Elena Pankratova making her Met debut as the legendary—and lethal—title princess, opposite tenor SeokJong Baek as the valiant prince who puts his life on the line to win her love.”

A lifelong opera fan, Browner still remembers the first show he saw at The Met as a child; he also remembers the seat he sat in.

“As the orchestra was tuning and the chandeliers were rising up to the ceiling, I grabbed my dad’s hand—my heart was beating out of my chest because I was so excited.”

As a Taft student, Christopher went to The Met a dozen or so times each year—even more as a student and opera critic for his campus newspaper at Columbia University. Browner was a music major, and directed operas with student groups. He apprenticed with the Santa Fe Opera, studied Italian, and visited the great opera houses across Europe. His work as a senior editor at The Met is the culmination of a lifetime spent pursuing his passion—one he is thrilled to share each year with audiences at Taft.

Performance photo and show notes courtesy metopera.org

Folk Quartet to Perform at Taft
Folk Quartet to Perform at Taft
Taft's Music For a While Concert Series continues this week with Rani Arbo & daisy mayhem. The New England-based folk quartet will perform in Walker Hall Friday evening, December 1 at 7 pm. The concert is free and open to the public; tickets are not required.

Dubbed "playful and profound" by The Boston Globe, Rani Arbo & daisy mayhem have been together for 17 years, playing to crowds from the Newport Folk Festival to the California World Music Festival and beyond. The quartet has seven releases on Signature Sounds, most recently Wintersong, a celebratory, poetic, reflective collection of seasonal songs; and Violets Are Blue an eclectic bouquet of love songs infused with poetry and groove that "skip over sentimentality and go straight to the bittersweet truth." (Music Matters Review). The band's family album, Ranky Tanky, won top awards from the Parents' Choice Foundation, National Association of Parenting Publications, and the American Library Association. Their residency programs include school and family shows, hands-on percussion-building workshops, and Arts in Medicine offerings.

Rani Arbo & daisy mayhem is a standard-bearer among string bands blurring the boundaries of American roots music, with a particular knack for pairing words and sound. Led by Arbo on vocals, fiddle, and guitar, Rani Arbo & daisy mayhem features

Andrew Kinsey on bass, banjo, and ukulele; Anand Nayak playing electric and acoustic guitars; and Scott Kessel on percussion, with a homemade kit that includes cardboard boxes, tin cans, caulk tubes, packing-tape tambourines, bottle-cap rattles, Mongolian jaw harps, and a vinyl suitcase. Kinsey and Nayak add vibrant baritones to the vocal repertoire, while Kessel brings a resonant bass.

Walker Hall is located at 50 DeForest Street, on the Taft School campus in Watertown, CT. For more information about the band, visit their website at raniarbo.com. To learn more about the Music for a While concert series, visit the Taft School website.