Saturday, March 3, 2012

TimesLive.co.za: 'Acclaimed Langa Baritone Fikile Mvinjelwa shows the way for African opera stars'


[THE DUKE'S JESTER: Fikile Mvinjelwa as the vengeful, tortured hunchback Rigoletto in Cape Town Opera's 2008 production of the opera of that name Picture: STUART RALPH]

Times Live

Christina Kennedy | 04 March, 2012

FIKILE Mvinjelwa was among the first wave of black opera singers to start reaching for the stars during the dawn of democracy in South Africa in the early 1990s. And the former Langa resident has more than lived up to his early promise - he now sings with the New York Metropolitan Opera. The Washington Post hailed him as a 'real find' when he performed in Virginia Opera's production of Giuseppe Verdi's Rigoletto two years ago, saying 'the pick hit of the evening was South African baritone Fikile Mvinjelwa in the key role of Rigoletto himself'. He 'proved to be a genuinely riveting, truly memorable tragic hero/avenger'.

This week Mvinjelwa returns home to perform as the guest artist in Opera Africa's double bill at the State Theatre in Pretoria and Joburg Theatre. The first half comprises the new, Zulu, one-act operatic work, Ziyankomo and the Forbidden Fruit, composed by Phelelani Mnomiya, with a libretto by Themba Msimang; the second half features excerpts from popular operas.

Mvinjelwa, the toast of New York in the title role in Rigoletto, as Amonasro in Aïda and as Ezio in Attila - all by Giuseppe Verdi - is no stranger to South African stages and works . The 2001 Standard Bank Young Artist award-winner has performed widely for the Cape Town Opera, in particular, and has graced local and international stages in works such as Brett Bailey's production of macbEth: the opera as well as in Mzilikazi Khumalo's Princess Magogo kaDinuzulu and Philip Miller's Rewind Cantata.” [The South African Composer, Arranger and Choral Director J.S. Mzilikazi Khumalo (b. 1932) is featured at AfriClassical.com]

No comments:

Post a Comment