As many of you know, I volunteer as the staff photographer for Opera Southwest, Albuquerque's opera company, photographing singers for publicity uses and photographing dress rehearsals.
Last February, Opera Southwest presented Il Postino, an opera by Mexican composer Daniel Catán. The opera was based on the novel Ardiente Paciencia by Antonio Skármeta that was made into a film by Michael Radford in 1994.
The Opera Southwest production featured Raul Melo as Pablo Neruda and Cammy Cook as Matilde Neruda. Both singers had leads in the OSW production of Pagliacci in 2017.
Alex Richardson sang the role of the postman, Mario Ruoppolo, and Cecilia Violetta Lopez sang the role of Beatrice Russo, his inamorata.
Richardson previously appeared in OSW's productions of Amleto and Tosca.
The plot revolves around the relationship between the postman, Mario, and the poet, Neruda, who has taken up residence on a small Italian island in exile from Chile because of his political views. Mario, dissatisfied with his life as a fisherman (like his father), gets hired to hand deliver fan mail to Neruda by bicycle.
Mario falls in love with Beatrice, who works in her aunt's village cafe.
Mario rushes to tell Neruda that he is in love . . .
To win her, Mario enlists Neruda's help with poetry.
It works. Beatrice, too, is smitten . . .
They marry.
Eventually, when Neruda is no longer considered an enemy of the state, he and Matilde leave the island and return to Chile.
Mario, without his postal customer, loses his job and goes to work in the cafe.
But he has been inspired by Neruda's poetry and politics.
Mario writes to Neruda, and receives a reply . . .
but it is only a letter from Neruda's secretary asking him to ship Neruda's old belongings to Chile.
Dismayed, Mario rides to the empty villa . . .
and finds an old phonograph and a tape recorder that Neruda used.
Listening to the recordings, Mario is inspired to travel around the island recording all the beautiful sounds of his world . . .
. . . including the heartbeat of his unborn child that Beatrice is carrying.
The story moves ahead five years, when Neruda and his wife return to visit the island.
They encounter Beatrice and her son at the village cafe . . .
where she gives a heart-wrenching account of how Mario was killed at a political rally where he had been invited to recite a poem.
Beatrice shares with Neruda a recording by Mario, who thanks Neruda for bringing poetry into his life.
The opera ends with Mario's farewell, "Querido Don Pablo."
The scene fades to black and the curtain falls as Mario rides into eternity.
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If you would like to see these images -- and many more -- in a larger format, please visit my photography website, Todos Juntos Photography, by clicking here.
Enjoy!
Wow! Just wow. Your retelling is practically another art form in itself. Bravo.
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