Showing posts with label Jeffrey williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeffrey williams. Show all posts

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Hunky Pin-Up Guys in Young Vic's HMS Pinafore

CJ Hartung, Joshua Hughes, Jeffrey Williams, John Kaneklides, and with flag (L-R)
Who says that Gilbert & Sullivan can't be sexy? The Young Victorian Theatre Company has assembled a cast of three barihunks and a hunkentenor for their current run of Gilbert and Sullivan's HMS Pinafore. The pin-up worthy cast includes barihunk Joshua Hughes as Sir Joseph Porter, KCB, First Lord of the Admiralty; barihunk Jeffrey Williams as Captain Corcoran, Commander of the HMS Pinafore; hunkentenor John Kaneklides as Ralph Rackstraw; and, bass-barihunk Christopher "CJ" Hartung as Dick Deadeye.

The show has already proved to be a huge box office success, as Saturday's opening night performance and today's matinee both completely sold out. Fortunately for anyone near the Baltimore/Washington D.C. area, there are three remaining performances on July 20, 22, and 23 at the Sinex Theater in the Roland Park area.

Joshua Hughes, graduated with a Master of Music in Voice Performance from the Peabody Conservatory, and previously appeared in the company's 2016 summer production of Iolanthe. He recently performed in Charpentier's Les Arts Florissants and Purcell's The Fairy Queen with Dallas Bach Society.

Jeffrey Williams and cast
Jeffrey Williams, who won the Middle/East Tennessee District of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions, will be appearing next season with the Nashville Opera in both Puccini's Tosca and Hercules vs Vampires. He is also an Assistant Professor of Voice at Austin Peay State University in Clarksville, Tennessee.

CJ Hartung is a student at the Peabody Conservatory of Music and is a regular young artist with the Berk's Opera Company, where he most recently sang the role of Lodovico in Verdi's Otello.

John Kaneklides has been singing both opera and musical theater, having performed Henrik in Sondheim's A Little Night Music and Tony in Leonard Bernstein's West Side Story. This season he made his role debut in Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann with the St. Petersburg Opera, where he performed the title role.

Tickets for the remaining shows are available online.

Friday, July 11, 2014

Baritone Brigade in Baltimore Gondoliers

 
Jeffrey Williams (left);  Jeffrey Williams, Andrew Pardini and Alexis Tantau (right)
Barihunk Jeffrey Williams, who we introduced to readers in December 2012, will be singing the role of Don Alhambra in the Young Victorian Theatre Company's production of Gilbert & Sullivan's The Gondoliers. He's joined in the cast by a number of luscious low voices, including Spencer Adamson as Antonio [see photo below], Andrew Adelsberger as Duke of Plaza Toro, Timothy Kjer as Giorgio and Andrew Pardini as Giuseppe Palmieri.

Performances are on Saturday, July 12, Sunday, July 13, Saturday, July 19 and Sunday, July 20 at the  Sinex Theater in Baltimore. Tickets and additional cast information are available online.

Spencer Adamson and the cast of Gondoliers
The Gondoliers, or, The King of Barataria, was the twelfth opera written together by Gilbert and Sullivan. Opening on December 7, 1889 at the Savoy Theatre, The Gondoliers ran for 554 performances, and was the last of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas that would achieve wide popularity.

The story of the opera concerns the young bride of the heir to the throne of Barataria who arrives in Venice to join her husband. It turns out, however, that he cannot be identified, since he was entrusted to the care of a drunken gondolier who mixed up the prince with his own son. To complicate matters, the King of Barataria has just been killed. The two young gondoliers must now jointly rule the kingdom until the nurse of the prince can be brought in to determine which of them is the rightful king. Moreover, when the young queen arrives to claim her husband, she finds that the two gondoliers have both recently married local girls. A last complicating factor is that she, herself, is in love with another man.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Reader Submission: Jeffrey Williams

Jeffrey Williams
We've said it numerous times, but it's worth repeating: Some of our favorite barihunks have been reader submissions. We have a couple of them to share with you this week beginning with Pennsylvania native Jeffrey Williams, who was spotted by a loyal reader in Philadelphia. 

This past summer, Williams attended the Russian Opera Workshop at the Academy of Vocal Arts in Philadelphia.  Following his time at the Russian Opera Workshop, he spent the remainder of the summer with barihunk Tom Krause at the Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria and in Sachrang, Germany.  Previously, he studied abroad at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, with French baritone, Didier Frédéric.  For two summers, Williams also attended Middlebury College’s German School and German for Singers program, studying with the late James McDonald, Ruth Ann McDonald, and Bettina Matthias. 

Williams has portrayed Lord Ruthven in Marschner’s Der Vampyr, Nick Shadow in The Rake’s Progress, Prince Yeletsky in Pique Dame, the title role in Rachmaninoff’s Aleko, the title role in Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro, Rabonnier (La rondine), Le Commissaire (Orphée), Jack Point (Yeomen of the Guard), Superintendent Budd (Albert Herring), Strephon (Iolanthe) and Marchese d’Obigny (La Traviata), as well as opera chorus work with the Washington National Opera, the late Baltimore Opera, and Florida Grand Opera.

Jeffrey Williams
He will be Papageno in Mozart’s The Magic Flute with the University of Miami’s Frost Opera Theater and the Young Patronesses of the Opera (FGO) In-School Opera program with 35 performances throughout Miami-Dade and Broward counties January-March 2013.  Ticket information will be made available in early January. Performances will also be streamed live online.

Williams currently studies with mezzo-soprano Robynne Redmon and baritone Tom Krause.  He is also a staff singer at Plymouth Congregational Church in Coconut Grove, FL.


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