Berkshire Opera Festival’s season kickoff

NEW MARLBOROUGH, Mass. —Berkshire Opera Festival held its third annual fundraiser, “Café Society: A Celebration of Giacomo Puccini’s La Bohème,” at Gedney Farm on Sunday, June 11.

Conditions were perfect for good conversation and great music. More than 100 people crowded into Gedney Farm’s barn for silent and live auctions, a delicious dinner, and to enjoy musical selections performed by  marvelous guest artist Soprano Teresa Perrotta and BOF’s Artistic Director and Co-Founder, Maestro Brian Garman. Perrotta is a recent grand finals winner of the Metropolitan Opera Eric and Dominique Laffont Competition.

Accompanied by Garman, Perrotta raised the roof with “Donde lieta usci” from La Bohème; “A Stranger Here Myself” from Kurt Weill’s One Touch of Venus; and from Faust, Marguerite’s “Jewel Song.”

BOF will stage three performances of La Bohème on Saturday, August 26, Aug. 29, and Sept. 1 at The Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.

The lively fundraiser—a nod to Café Momus from the opera— raised money to help sponsor singers in the children’s chorus, costumes, and musical instruments and scores, in addition to supporting general operations. Several guests bid on and won the opportunity to appear as character actors in this year’s production.

Tickets for performances cover only about one-third of BOF’s operating costs each year, and the COVID years were challenging for the festival, so Sunday’s event was important.

For tickets, go to www.berkshiretheatregroup.org/event/berkshire-opera-festival-presents-la....

Christie’s Rachel Orkin-Ramey conducted Berkshire Opera Festival’s live auction with gusto. Photo by Max Vadakin

Gedney Farm’s main 19th-century  barn was the setting for the Berkshire Opera Festival’s Café Society fundraiser. Photo by Max Vadakin

Christie’s Rachel Orkin-Ramey conducted Berkshire Opera Festival’s live auction with gusto. Photo by Max Vadakin

Latest News

State intervenes in sale of Torrington Transfer Station

The entrance to Torrington Transfer Station.

Photo by Jennifer Almquist

TORRINGTON — Municipalities holding out for a public solid waste solution in the Northwest Corner have new hope.

An amendment to House Bill No. 7287, known as the Implementor Bill, signed by Governor Ned Lamont, has put the $3.25 million sale of the Torrington Transfer Station to USA Waste & Recycling on hold.

Keep ReadingShow less
Juneteenth and Mumbet’s legacy
Sheffield resident, singer Wanda Houston will play Mumbet in "1781" on June 19 at 7 p.m. at The Center on Main, Falls Village.
Jeffery Serratt

In August of 1781, after spending thirty years as an enslaved woman in the household of Colonel John Ashley in Sheffield, Massachusetts, Elizabeth Freeman, also known as Mumbet, was the first enslaved person to sue for her freedom in court. At the time of her trial there were 5,000 enslaved people in the state. MumBet’s legal victory set a precedent for the abolition of slavery in Massachusetts in 1790, the first in the nation. She took the name Elizabeth Freeman.

Local playwrights Lonnie Carter and Linda Rossi will tell her story in a staged reading of “1781” to celebrate Juneteenth, ay 7 p.m. at The Center on Main in Falls Village, Connecticut.Singer Wanda Houston will play MumBet, joined by actors Chantell McCulloch, Tarik Shah, Kim Canning, Sherie Berk, Howard Platt, Gloria Parker and Ruby Cameron Miller. Musical composer Donald Sosin added, “MumBet is an American hero whose story deserves to be known much more widely.”

Keep ReadingShow less
A sweet collaboration with students in Torrington

The new mural painted by students at Saint John Paul The Great Academy in Torrington, Connecticut.

Photo by Kristy Barto, owner of The Nutmeg Fudge Company

Thanks to a unique collaboration between The Nutmeg Fudge Company, local artist Gerald Incandela, and Saint John Paul The Great Academy in Torrington, Connecticut a mural — designed and painted entirely by students — now graces the interior of the fudge company.

The Nutmeg Fudge Company owner Kristy Barto was looking to brighten her party space with a mural that celebrated both old and new Torrington. She worked with school board member Susan Cook and Incandela to reach out to the Academy’s art teacher, Rachael Martinelli.

Keep ReadingShow less