11
May/23

ON SITE OPERA: IL TABARRO

11
May/23

On Site Opera’s Il tabarro takes place on board the 1908 lightship Ambrose at South Street Seaport (photo by Bowie Dunwoody)

IL TABARRO
South Street Seaport, Pier 16, 89 South St.
1908 Lightship Ambrose
May 14-17, $60, 6:30
osopera.org
southstreetseaportmuseum.org

In late summer 2021, On Site Opera (OSO) presented What Lies Beneath, a collection of six vignettes on board the 1885 cargo ship the Wavertree at the South Street Seaport.

In April 2022, the Manhattan-based company brought its stirring version of Giacomo Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi, the first work in the Italian composer’s Il Trittico (“The Triptych”), to the Prince George Ballroom on East Twenty-Seventh St.

Now OSO is teaming up again with the South Street Seaport Museum for the second part of Puccini’s trilogy, Il tabarro (“The Cloak”), with a libretto by Giuseppi Adami, on board the 1908 lightship Ambrose; the audience will be seated on Pier 16, with minimal interaction with the cast. The approximately sixty-minute story of a love triangle gone bad — does it ever go well? — runs May 14-17 and stars baritone Eric McKeever as barge owner Michele, soprano Ashley Milanese as his wife, Giorgetta, and tenor Yi Li as dockhand Luigi. The ensemble features mezzos Claire Coven and JoAnna Vladyka, sopranos Yohji Daquio, Lindsey Kanaga, Theodora Siegel, and Kiena Williams, baritone Paul LaRosa, bass Brian McQueen, and tenor Daniel Rosenberg, with costumes by Howard Tsvi Kaplan, lighting by Shawn Kaufman, props by Rachel Kenner, and sound by Scott Stauffer. The orchestra will be conducted by Geoffrey McDonald, and the production will be helmed by Laine Rettmer, the first guest director of a full show in OSO’s eleven-year history; OSO co-founding director Eric Einhorn will be leaving the company at the end of the year.

On Site Opera rehearses Il tabarro at Sunlight Studios (photo by Bowie Dunwoody)

“What we have planned for this next installment of Puccini’s Il Trittico promises to be the perfect marriage of found site and libretto,” Rettmer said in a statement. “You will experience the overlay of 2023 merging into 1916 in this engrossing sixty-minute tale set against the setting sun on New York City’s Seaport.”

Ticket holders can also order in advance a $25 boxed dinner from Cobble Fish, which can be eaten before or during the show. The Ambrose, aka Lightship LV-87, is a National Historic Landmark and was the first lightship to have a radio beacon; it served in various capacities, including as an examination vessel during WWII, through 1963. The Seaport Museum offers free guided tours of the lightship Wednesday through Sunday. OSO will ultimately conclude Puccini’s Il tabarro with Suor Angelica at a date to be announced.