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BWW Interviews: Rachel Willis-Sørensen Talks Her Career, Houston Grand Opera's DON GIOVANNI, and the Best Aspects of Performing Opera


Related: Houston, Houston Grand Opera, Don Giovanni, Rachel Willis-Sørensen, Mozart, Richard Wagner

BWW Interviews: Rachel Willis-Sørensen Talks Her Career, Houston Grand Opera's DON GIOVANNI, and the Best Aspects of Performing OperaDespite being wholly busy and working on perfecting DON GIOVANNI with the Houston Grand Opera creative teams and cast, I had the pleasure of being able to spend a delightful 30 minutes with the talented and intelligent Rachel Willis-Sørensen. We discussed her career, including her impressive contest wins, preparing Donna Anna in DON GIOVANI for Houston audiences, performing in Houston, and the best aspects of being an opera performer.

Me: How did you first get started in opera?

Rachel Willis-Sørensen: I was singing a lot of contemporary styles. I did a lot of Broadway style musical theatre and jazz music. I did a lot of jazz choirs and solo jazz work in high school, and I found I was losing my voice a lot. So, I wanted to take voice lessons to get a little technique. The teacher suggested that I had a voice that was pretty well suited to opera. I was like, "What the heck is opera?" I had very little exposure, I guess. You know that opera signing orange on Sesame Street or car commercials or something. It wasn't like any part of my life. I went and saw CARMEN, and I really enjoyed it. Mostly, I think, at the end of the day, the thing that got me interested was the teacher appealing to my ego [Laughs], and saying, "Wow you have a really big larynx, like you have a really unique timber, and if you could figure out how to do this." She expressed it as "the fulfillment of the potential of the human voice" to sing without electronic amplification and be heard over a 100-piece brass orchestra. The fact that was a possibility for me was really exciting, so I just started studying it. The more I listened to it, the more I really fell in love with the music. I found all these really wonderful composers who's music really speaks to me and just this amazing dynamic humanism, you know, the expression of these deep, diverse feelings through the music in such a way that I feel is just really unique to opera. It's really explosive and exciting. I mean, you can get that from a lot of sources. For me, I just really love opera. I fell in love with it, so I pursued it. Now, I get to do it for a living and that's a huge and exciting blessing.

Me: When did you realize that you wanted to perform in opera professionally?

Rachel Willis-Sørensen: For a while, I was taking it like one step at a time. I got into music school in Utah-BYU-and I was cast like second cast, third cast, fourth cast, whatever. [Laughs] I got one performance of [LA] BOHÈME, and I was singing Musetta. Because I was not the primary cast, the costume shop had a fitting, and they gave me this old dress that didn't fit. It was way too big. They pinned it on the outside to take it in. Then came the day of my performance and nobody had taken it in, and it was still pinned on the outside. I didn't have a wig, and it was like "Ugh! Such a second hand production!" And this really nice girl actually said, "You're not looking ugly on your night." She pinned it on the inside for me, and it was really great. It's funny because it was so stressful. Then, I finally got to go on in the second act and got to sing this big aria, "Quando me'n vo'." The whole cast is on stage, and it's supposed to be at the Café Momus in Paris. It's just like this really exciting part for that character because she sings this big aria and has the whole attention of everyone on stage. It was the first time I sang with a full orchestra, and there I was in this huge theatre-maybe 2,000 seats-with my huge red dress and the whole orchestra, and it was like the first time in my life I was proportionate to the event. I'm really tall, and I have a big, loud voice. I feel, in general, like I'm too big, too much, something, but in opera it really fit. It was like everything I had was an asset, not a deficit, to my performance. It was so exciting. I just felt like this magical thrill, like I found my niche on the planet. You know, I found really where I belong. It was so exciting to want to pursue that for the rest of my life. So, that was really the moment. Singing "Quando me'n vo'" on stage in a production of LA BOHÈME is where I realized this is what I was born to do, you know.

Me: Having studied and worked at the Houston Grand Opera Studio, how does it feel to return to Houston Grand Opera as Dona Anna in DON GIOVANNI?

Rachel Willis-Sørensen: Well, that's really fun actually because I have so many friends here, so many exciting memories, and so many fun things I like to do in the city. It felt kind of like coming home, you know. Actually, I was so thrilled at the gate, when we landed, that I got a little choked up. [Laughs] A little teary. I was happy to come back to all these family-like friends that I made while I was here the first time. Also, the company has extremely high standards. It's fun to be able to work on something and get to take the time to make it what it really should be, and I know that they [Houston Grand Opera] are willing to do that. So, it's really great. It does feel nice to have made some professional milestones between leaving and coming back so that they take me seriously and believe that it's going to work out for me. I think they always believed in me. That was why they gave me the chance in the first place, but to have it kind of come to fruition, to have good things happen, to have other people acknowledge me and that, you know, I might have a career. So, it's exciting to come back and have people hail you like a little hero. [Laughs] That's nice.

Me: Are you and Donna Anna alike in any way?

Rachel Willis-Sørensen: No! [Laughs] Not at all. [Pauses] This is kind of a tough call because people seem to want a really elegant and regal aesthetic for this character, but I personally have a problem with that. She's raped, or almost raped. Somehow, there's a big, traumatic event that takes place during the overture with the drumbeat or during the first bit, when Leporello's singing. We don't see it, and we don't really know, except that she describes it later. And, in my opinion, there is no duplicitous music. I think Mozart just intended for her to be telling the truth. So, in my opinion, it does happen. He [Don Giovanni] tries to rape her, fails, and he runs away because maybe a servant comes in-that part's not really clear. But, then, her dad comes to save her, and he's murdered. It's really traumatic. These events would be really horrifying. I don't know that a person would be concerned with decorum in those moments, but it's interesting, I guess, people except to see a very regal, sort of ballet approach to these moments. And it seems to me that there's so much more drama than that.

I don't know. In my personal life, I don't think I'd be concerned with my posture and walking really gracefully in the moment when my father was murdered, you know. [Laughs] So, that's often an issue I have to address, but it's not so hard to play a person in your natural approach. You just have to put yourself in a different place. I guess, to me, maybe what works is to consider that she's been broken. These experiences have been so difficult, and she's not getting the support she needs from her fiancé, Don Ottavio. He keeps sort of saying that he will help, and he is actually never successfully there for her in spite of what is a really challenging emotional undertaking. I mean, she is in this bad position. It's just a double whammy, but the rape attempt would have been the most traumatic thing that ever happened to her. I sort of get the impression that her mother died in childbirth or something, sometime really early after she was born, because they never talk about the mother. She's obviously not a present figure in her life. So, her dad is her whole family. She has no siblings. And then he gets murdered. So there are these two really huge, life altering events taking place in one moment.

Then the whole opera transpires in the course of something like maybe 36 hours maximum. It's not long. So sometimes she gets a bad rap for being really depressed, but, I mean, you've got to think that 36 hours ago, by the end of the opera, her dad died. And her fiancé is already insisting that they get married the next day. You would be mad. You would say, "I need some time to mourn," which is what she says and which inevitably gets a laugh. I don't know. I mean, it's not funny to me. I can understand because it looks like she's evading him, like she doesn't want to marry him, but, you know, if you're parent was murdered and your fiancé insisted to marry you the next day, you'd probably feel it was insensitive.

Me: What do you enjoy most about preparing to play Donna Anna for Houston audiences?

Rachel Willis-Sørensen: The musical preparation has been a real thrill. Trevor Pinnock is our Maestro. He is very famous for his work with early music and accurate period instruments. He has a very different aesthetic to most other maestri I have worked with, and it's interesting to see how he wants to make the music come alive. It's really exciting. He really pushes the boundaries of convention, in terms of how we're allowed to express music dramatically-different colors and different tempi choices. It's really exciting musical preparation that has been fun and groundbreaking, and I feel will inform the way that I sing Mozart for the rest of my career.

Me: What are your favorite aspects of working with Houston Grand Opera?

Rachel Willis-Sørensen: It's great to come back home, to come back to place where I have so many acquaintances. The audience is really friendly. Actually, you know what, the city of Houston is definitely a big perk. I live in Dresden, Germany right now and it's a very different cultural situation. I don't know how to say this without sounding offensive. I mean, I like it there, don't get me wrong. People just are not very friendly. And in Houston, everyone's friendly, you know. You go to the grocery store and they call you "hun."

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David ClarkeDavid is a Special Education teacher with a passion and love for the performing arts. He aspires to become a full time theatre critic and/or professor of Drama as Literature.
Past Articles by This Author:
  • BWW Reviews: Houston Grand Opera's IL TROVATORE is Spellbinding and Spectacular
  • BWW Reviews: Opera in the Height's FALSTAFF is a Delightful and Mirtful Comedy
  • BWW Reviews: HGO's TRISTAN AND ISOLDE is Immaculately Profound, Riveting, and Unforgettable
  • BWW Reviews: HGO's THE MEMORY STONE is Haunting, Gorgeous, and Spellbinding
  • BWW Interviews: Marty Regan and Kenny Fries Talk HGO's THE MEMORY STONE
  • BWW Reviews: CRUZAR LA CARA DE LA LUNA is Astoundingly Beautiful and Compelling
  • BWW Interviews: Vanessa Cerda-Alonzo Talks HGO's CRUZAR LA CARA DE LA LUNA
  • BWW Interviews: Charles Swan Talks About His Career, Being a Swing, SHOW BOAT, and Teaching

  • BWW Blog: Leah Edwards - Evolving ArtBWW Blog: Leah Edwards - Evolving Art

    BWW Reviews: 'And the Winners Were...' A Report Card for the Metropolitan Opera's 2012-2013 SeasonBWW Reviews: 'And the Winners Were...' A Report Card for the Metropolitan Opera's 2012-2013 Season

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