Naomi's Road: Pulls the heart in all the right places and directions

Vancouver Opera's first Opera in the Schools Commission is superb!

Two children are left in the care of an aunt, when their father is sent away from them, after their mother leaves the country to look after her sick grandmother.  And the "holiday" they are told they have just boarded a train for is actually going to be a re-location camp for the next 3 years of their life.  They will be called "enemy aliens," called racial slurs, and they may never see their real home again. 

This is all great stuff for school children to learn about bullying, Canadian history, the importance of family, and how to make friends.  Oh... and it has been turned into an opera.

Vancouver Opera has turned to the children's version of the award winning novel Obasan by Joy Kogawa for it's second-ever original commission, designed for their Vancouver Opera in Schools program.  Naomi's Road revolves around the upheaval of a 9 year old girl's life, as she and her older brother are removed from their home in Vancouver, and sent to a re-location camp in Slocan, located in BC's Interior.

Limited by a 45-minute time frame, the creative team of composer Ramona Leungen with librettist Ann Hodges were challenged to bring alive a dark time in Canada's history, but make it palatable and relatable for 21st century school children.  They have succeeded in spades!  Naomi's Road conveys the story without oversimplifying it.  The music is acessible and emotional, with soaring melodies and lovely ensemble work.

I attended the Saturday afternoon performance following the previous evening's World Premiere.  A question period followed the short but lively performance during which adults in the audience wanted the opera extended by an hour, and children wanted to know how the actors could change costumes so fast playing multiple roles.

Young soprano Jessica Cheung stands out.  Her projection portraying a 9 year old is amazing.  She is completely believable, with little nuances that enhance her character.  When I remarked to Jessica after the performance about "another costume change" into very chic and hip street clothes, she remarked "So people don't think I really am a little girl.

Composer Ramona Luengen, says of Jessica, "We were so thrilled to find her.  She brings so much vitality and spark.  We just wanted to keep her.  Where else are you going to find a twenty year old that can play a 10 year old... and sing?!?!"

Sam Chung does a good turn as Stephen, Naomi's older brother.  He initially plays a shy reserved child who becomes emotionally volatile as he discovers that the "holiday" really isn't a holiday and becomes cynical about many things related to the internment.  Sam does a good job evolving Stephen's emotional maturity compressing three years into 45 minutes.

Gina Oh and Sung Taek Chung both take on multiple roles, playing Mother, Obasan & Mitzi and Father, Rough Lock Bill, Trainmaster and Bully, respectively.  They create characters complete and separate from the roles they shed with a change of clothes.  Seeing Gina go from loving mother to reserved aunt to childish Mitzi within 30 minutes is remarkable.  I particularly liked how Sung played doting father, then later reappeared as Rough Lock Bill - a First Nations Character in Slocan who befriends the children, gives Stephen a flute and helps demonstrate racial acceptance and unconditional friendship.

During the Q&A, a question was asked about the role played by Joy Kogawa, author of Naomi's Road children's book.  Luengen described attending a reading by Kogawa 2 years ago, in the Kogawa childhood home (now threatened by demolition - see www.kogawa.homestead.com), which she describes as magical.  Anne Hodges said that Joy gave them complete reign over the story and never said to take or leave anything out, nor questioned what they did.  "She was like a benevolent and peaceful spirit that permeated what we did, and always seemed to be in town whenever we needed her."

When I told music director Leslie Uyeda that I had tears in my eyes when the children were in the train scene, she replied, "You're the third person who has said that... that scene is so emotionally charged, especially when they are separated from their father.  It is so iconographic.  It's in all the pictures," she commented about the photographs showing Japanese-Canadians at the train station waving to family members being sent to different camps, and used on the cover of the book Obasan.

If this is only the 2nd-ever commission by the Vancouver Opera (the first was 1994's The Architect), I can only eagerly anticipate the next one, and hope that it will be soon.  Maybe they will pick another Vancouver-based story such as the Komagata Maru incident that affected the South Asian community, or an issue from Chinese-Canadian history, similar to the opera Iron Road, that is yet to show in Vancouver.

Kudos for the Vancouver Opera's Naomi's Road.  I foresee a long life for it, touring BC's schools and beyond.  Glad I wasn't sitting on a gymnasium floor for 45 minutes... but I think the kids will definitely enjoy it!

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