Operatunities

At
age 15, Lea Woods Friedman wanted to be a pop star. The next Madonna, maybe, or
Mariah Carey. But when Friedman started voice lessons at Punahou, her instructor
thought differently.

“My teacher told me my voice was suited for opera,”
says Friedman with a laugh. “So I started participating in Hawai’i Opera Theatre,
sang in the chorus and then I thought, ‘OK, I could really do this as a career.”

Listening to Friedman today, it’s clear that her teacher knew her stuff.
At just 28 years old, Friedman’s soprano skills have already taken her all over
the world-Beijing; Kuala Lumpur; Osimo, Italy; New York (where she now resides);
and, most recently, back to her hometown of Honolulu.

This
month, Friedman performs in two productions-a Chamber Music Hawai’i concert at
the Honolulu Academy of Arts on Feb. 2 and the Hawai’i Opera Theatre’s The Merry
Widow, an English operetta, on Feb. 27 and 29 and March 2 and 4.

Friedman
is accustomed to belting it out for audiences of more than a thousand. When offered
the chance to perform at the Academy’s 250-seat Doris Duke Theatre, she couldn’t
resist.

“It’s wonderfully intimate, so I can get in touch with the audience,”
says Friedman. “I’ll be singing two pieces that are very different from my Puccini-style
singing, Schubert’s ‘Shepherd on the Rock’ and Samuel Barber’s ‘Knoxville: Summer
of 1915.'”

Friedman seems to like stepping outside of her comfort zone.
After earning a degree in hotel administration from Cornell University in New
York, she decided to refocus on opera and learn Italian. She spent three years
studying in (where else?) Florence, Italy, eventually relocating to Manhattan
and studying under revered soprano Diana Soviero.

The work is paying off.
Last year, Friedman shared the stage with Metropolitan Opera bass Hao Jiang Tian
in a concert sponsored by the China Institute of New York City and with tenor
Warren Mok of Opera Hong Kong.

“It’s a tough career, and I’m still quite
new to this industry,” says Friedman. “It’s all very exciting. Although I’m now
based in New York, I happily return home to Hawai’i to perform with the Chamber
and the Hawai’i Opera Theatre-especially during this winter season!”

Lea
Woods Friedman

A
special concert of vocal chamber music with Lea Woods Friedman, presented by Chamber
Music Hawai‘i, Feb. 2, 7: 30 p.m., Honolulu Academy of Arts, Doris Duke Theatre.
For tickets: 524-0815 ext. 245, www.chambermusichawaii.com.

Hawai‘i
Opera Theatre’s The Merry Widow, Feb. 27 & 29, March 2 & 4. For tickets:
596-7858, www.hawaiiopera.org.


recommended

film

Barry
Rivers
, co-founder of the Maui Film Festival, recommends Bill Forsyth’s
Local Hero. "A lot of people don’t know this film, starring Peter Riegert
and Burt Lancaster. It’s a great story about a man who works for an oil company,
and he’s sent to a small village in Scotland, where the company is about
to start drilling. But once he gets there, he falls in love with the place and
falls in love with a woman there. The movie has a great message and a surprise
love story. There’s also a great soundtrack by Mark Knopfler of Dire Straits."
Warner Studios, 1983.

cd

Jared
Keo
of the Hawaiian band Ho‘onu‘a, recommends the Stylistics’
The Best of the Stylistics. "That’s the one—perfect for pillow
talk, perfect for Valentine’s Day. Me, I’m an oldies kind of guy, and
everything that a guy wants to tell his girl is on that CD." Amherst Records,
1975.

book

Frank
Stewart
, author and editor of Manoa, a journal of Pacific and Asian writing,
recommends Ramesh Menon’s The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian
Epic. "Originally written about 300 B.C., the Ramayana has profoundly inspired
Asian storytelling and art, but has seemed inaccessible until this new English
version. More monsters than Lord of the Rings, more space travel than Star Wars
and ultimately about love, loyalty and goodness." North Point Press, 2003.