That last quote is priceless...
May 02, 2006 10:39 PM Filed in:
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Skating
Scandal Made Into Opera
By Jimmy Golen, AP Sports Writer
Published May 2, 2006
Chicago Tribune
MEDFORD, Mass. -- When Tufts music student Abigail Al-Doory sought
inspiration for her opera, she looked not to Wagner's "Ring" cycle
but to the Olympic rings, where themes like power, envy and greed
are plentiful.
In "Tonya and Nancy: The Opera,"
Al-Doory provides 18 movements on the scandal that turned the
once-dainty sport of figure skating into a soap opera of whacking,
wailing and time spent in jail.
Scheduled for two Tuesday night performances, the production
portrays the skaters not as rivals but as a pair, singing for the
audience's sympathy as the tawdry affair unfolds.
"I think they had a lot in common, which is what we wanted to draw
out in the opera," said Al-Doory, who composed the music to
complete her masters degree. "They both figured out they had to
reclaim their identities. It's a note of hope."
More Peggy Fleming than Renee Fleming, "Tonya and Nancy" follows
the lines of "Jerry Springer -- The Opera," a London hit based on
the equally lowbrow world of daytime talk TV. Al-Doory takes the
well-known rivalry between the skaters and recasts it as one in
which they both struggle to overcome personal troubles and public
perception.
"We, as a society, allowed this to happen to two young girls.
They're building up their entire lives for this moment. And who are
they after that?" Al-Doory said. "It can't help being absurd and
funny because of the situation. But it's serious.
"I really believe in the story. We're not just making fun of
people. This isn't a parody."
Even so, she'll have a hard time selling a ticket to Kerrigan, who
said Monday she'd been aware of the production but wasn't planning
to attend.
"I lived it," the skater said. "What do I need to watch it
for?"
She'll miss Margaret Hunter (Nancy) and Kristen Sergeant (Tonya)
open with dueling news conferences before the action flashes back
to the knee-whacking and follows them through the Olympic skateoff
to their futures.
Nancy becomes a wife and mother; Harding, banned from skating,
joins the Faustian freak show that is women's boxing.
"The difference is," Harding sings, "you don't get in trouble for
hitting her."
That this is "Tonya and Nancy," and not the other way around, is no
accident. Only in opera -- or its schlockier, soapier offspring --
would a convicted Olympic also-ran get top billing over a
squeaky-clean silver medalist.
"She is the more fascinating character. And, also, it sounds better
to me," librettist Elizabeth Searle said at rehearsal last weekend.
"I don't think there's any way to look at Tonya's history and not
feel some degree of sympathy."
Harding never leaves the stage during the 40-minute production,
which will be performed near Harvard Square. Breaking from the
made-for-TV mold, though, she is not put on display for mockery or
scorn.
The opera is a brutal expose on Harding's home life, showing her as
a victim of maternal and spousal abuse. You see her breakdown,
perhaps contrived, as she warbles, "The lace is broke!" But you
also see her face contort into real fear when her duet with husband
Jeff Gillooly twists into a wife-beating tango.
Kerrigan also comes away tarnished. But every "Why me?" has an
answer of "Why her?"
Nancy sings, "My mom is legally blind." Tonya: "My mom is legally
nuts."
The casting makes the point, too: Jennifer Hazel plays both
skaters' mothers, taking the same cartoonish hairbrush she used to
stroke Nancy's brunette locks and using it to beat Harding for
missing the medal stand at the Olympics.
But Nancy is no more satisfied.
"Silver?" she repeats joylessly after finishing second.
"It's a pretty bald look at both of them based on headlines and
stuff they said in real life," Al-Doory said.
The costumes, the choreography, the scripted outcomes -- what's the
big difference, anyway, between opera and figure skating?
Verdi had his elephants; Al-Doory has Stant, the bodybuilder and
Navy Seal reject hired to knee-club Kerrigan at the 1994 Olympic
trials and clear Harding's path to Lillehammer. Gillooly planned
the attack to incapacitate his wife's top rival, but it turned her
into a pariah and made Kerrigan even more of an American
sweetheart.
Armen Nercessian (Stant) played the knee-whacking as vaudevillian
comedy, dancing a soft-shoe with the collapsible baton in the place
of a white-tipped cane that Fred Astaire might have used. Then, to
shock the scene back into tragedy, he slams it into the
stage.
Once the audience sees the club is for real, Stant surreptitiously
swaps it with a foam one that will allow him to whack Kerrigan
without holding back. Hunter, like Kerrigan before her, was
surprised at how much it hurt.
"We didn't play the knee attack for laughs," Searle said.
Banging pianos to represent the clattering typewriters of the
newspapermen who flit from Tony and Nancy (and only briefly to
Oksana Baiul, who actually won the gold medal in Lillehammer). The
chorus stands in for the skating judges, who make Kerrigan's 5.9's
and Harding's 5.5's into a Gregorian chant.
The story is "dark and gloomy and absurd, but at the same time I
was kind of moved by it," Searle said.
Searle, who is Al-Doory's aunt and already the author of one
well-received novella about the skating scandal, was the Nancy and
Tonya junkie back in '94. She collected newspaper clips and took
notes in the months before the Lillehammer Games.
About 80 percent of the libretto, or script, was taken from actual
dialogue or newspaper headlines or the actual scores the skaters
received in Lillehammer. Searle said she made the other 20 percent
up to hold the plot together.
In the most obvious example, Kerrigan shrieks the apocryphal "Why
me?" instead of her actual, "Why? Why?"
"It's not entirely documentary truth," director Meron Langsner. "I
wouldn't think that's interesting."
Al-Doory's goal is to make the viewers rethink their impression of
Harding and Kerrigan, maybe send them away with a tune in their
heads.
If she fails, Nancy won't be the only one wondering, "Why
me?"
"Our adviser encouraged us to do a string quartet. I wanted to do
something with voice and a story," Al-Doory said, 72 hours before
the performance. "I really should have done a string
quartet."