The Fall of the House of Usher
An Opera in Two Acts by Philip Glass
Libretto by Arthur Yorinks
Based on the story by Edgar Allan Poe
1988 © Dunvagen Music Publishers. Used by Permission.
Sung in English with English captions available.
Boston Lyric Opera gives an arthouse cinematic treatment to Philip Glass’ opera The Fall of the House of Usher, now streaming exclusively on BLO’s operabox.tv. This chilling film places Edgar Allan Poe’s iconic gothic horror story in the imagination of a migrant child as she journeys into the United States. Experience the world of the Ushers through her eyes, as she reaches for the promise of the American Dream. Music comes to life through hand-drawn animation, stop-motion film, and archival footage, featuring a brand-new recording by BLO artists.
Learn more about Edgar Allan Poe’s story, Phillip Glass’ opera, and BLO’s brand new film through our virtual reading room experience, Into the House of Usher.
This synopsis represents three interwoven stories – Poe’s original story; the story of Luna, a young girl from Guatemala City; and references of an American story shown through archival images. These pieces frame the original opera libretto.
Please note this synopsis contains spoilers for the film experience.
Luna, a young girl, is watching television at home in Guatemala City when her mother receives a phone call. They flee violence. Simultaneously, William rushes to the home of his boyhood friend, Roderick Usher, who has sent him a letter begging him to visit. Roderick and his sister, Madeline, are the last left of the Usher family, and Madeline is mysteriously ill. Upon entering the gloomy home, William meets a physician, who warns him not to upset the household. Meanwhile, archival television footage juxtaposes idyllic images of American family life, with that of children in detention centers, like the one where we see Luna again.
Luna stumbles across an abandoned dollhouse. We learn that the Ushers’ story is taking place within that dollhouse and Luna’s imagination. Roderick, pale and drawn, greets William, but when William gives him a music box as a gift, Roderick recoils from its sound. His nerves are overwrought from caring for Madeline, and he says that he cannot leave the house. Archival footage shows images of life in the United States. Outside the House of Usher, a storm rages. William observes Roderick brushing Madeline’s hair and is unnerved. He tries to sleep, but is awakened by troubling dreams of Roderick and Madeline.
Luna stares out the window at the other children in the detention yard. Images describe dancing, joyful gatherings, and birds flying free, which soon are replaced by news reports showing crowds of migrant families. Madeline has died, as has Luna’s pet chick. In the dollhouse, Madeline’s death casts a shadow over the House of Usher. William helps Roderick carry Madeline’s coffin down to the tomb under the house. Roderick reveals that he and Madeline were twins. He becomes agitated, and William tries to soothe him. Luna climbs into a ditch in the detention yard.
Luna is carried inside and handcuffed. A flashback depicts Luna and her mother crossing into the United States. William and Roderick hear frightening noises, and a window blows open. Madeline suddenly appears. A swarm of birds materialize, and the detention center falls to pieces.
Creative Team
David Angus
Conductor
David Angus| Conductor
David Angus is Music Director of Boston Lyric Opera, following a very successful period as Music Director of Glimmerglass Opera. He was formerly the Chief Conductor of the Flanders Symphony Orchestra for many years and built that orchestra into one of the most exciting young orchestras in Northern Europe. Maestro Angus now conducts all over Europe and North America. He began his career working at Opera North (U.K.) and at Glyndebourne, where he conducted a wide range of operas, and went on to work in Italy and across Europe. In the concert hall, he performs particularly in the U.K. and Scandinavia, and this season, apart from conducting productions at BLO, includes a return visit to Hawaii Opera Theatre, and further work in the concert hall and recording studio with the London Philharmonic.
James Darrah
Director
James Darrah | Director
DIRECTOR AND DESIGNER JAMES DARRAH‘s visually and emotionally arresting work at the intersection of theater, opera and film is currently in demand all over the world. His productions of opera, theater, music videos, film, and installations are known for their cinematic elegance, abstract yet visceral staging, and a multidisciplinary merging of narrative heft, innovative design, and dance that “injects real drama” (The New York Times).
CURRENT PROJECTS include new films, debuts and productions that continue to blur the lines between film and opera. Amid pandemic-related cancelations, Darrah has generated a wide range of new digital content and helped organizations transform existing productions and seasons into viable projects that allow for remote collaboration between musicians, directors and designers. He is the new Creative Director for Digital Content for Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra in the 2020-21 season, directing sixteen episodic short films in a new orchestral series called Close Quarters. This fall he also devises and directs two projects with Boston Lyric Opera: a new fully animated feature-length adaptation of Philip Glass’ Poe opera The Fall of the House of Usher and the world premiere of desert in, an original operatic television series with Darrah as director and co-creator with composer Ellen Reid and screenwriter christopher oscar peña.
With Opera Philadelphia, he returns in late 2020 to produce and co-write a new film adaptation of Soldier Songs by David T. Little, set to be released early 2021 and is in post-production for his new film of Poulenc’s La voix humaine, starring the soprano Patricia Racette, set to be released in the fall. He is currently making two new music videos for LA Opera’s Digital Shorts series and has his Long Beach Opera debut in March 2021 with an outdoor drive-in re-imagining of his own production of Philip Glass’ Les enfants terribles. In the summer, he directs the world premiere of The Lord of Cries by Academy Award-winning composer John Corigliano and librettist Mark Adamo at Santa Fe Opera and continues his work as Creative Director of Music Academy of the West’s Vocal Institute in Santa Barbara, California.
Darrah is also currently Artistic Director of the annual ONE Festival, where he is “expanding the boundaries of the operatic form” (The Wall Street Journal) by framing opera in a context that is both inclusive, diverse and relevant while establishing a first of its kind operatic artist residency for artists in the genre. He is also committed to training the next generation of performers, joining the UCLA Faculty of the Herb Alpert School of Music and UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television in 2019 and was named the new Creative Director of Music Academy of the West’s Vocal Institute in 2018.
RECENT HIGHLIGHTS this past season included debuts and new productions with The Kennedy Center, Theater an der Wien, Prototype Festival in New York and Theatro Nacional São Paolo in Brazil as well as an original art installation with LA Opera. Postponed projects due to the global pandemic include a new production of Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman with Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony and Frank Gehry designing as well as the Chicago Lyric Opera premiere of Mazzoli’s Proving Up, both to be rescheduled for future seasons.
His track record developing and directing acclaimed productions of new operas includes the world premieres of Reid’s Pulitzer Prize-winning opera p r i s m and Missy Mazzoli’s acclaimed new works Breaking the Waves and Proving Up, the New York premiere of Julian Wachner’s Rev23 in the Prototype Festival, a new production of Philip Glass’ Cocteau opera Les enfants terribles and the U.S. coastal premieres of Jennifer Higdon’s opera of Cold Mountain and Jonathan Dove’s operas The Other Euridice and Flight. Darrah has also crafted music videos with “enigmatic twists” (NPR) for artists including Joyce DiDonato and Jakub Józef Orlinski on the Warner Music and Erato record labels, and he directed and produced a music video for Mazzoli’s Grammy Award nominated VESPERS. He is currently in development for the world premiere of Dante with composer Patrick Cassidy and film producer Martha De Laurentiis, an expansion of Cassidy’s popular aria “Vide Cor Meum” originally written for the 2001 film Hannibal.
He was co-artistic director/co-founder of Chromatic, a new collective of artists and production company in Los Angeles from 2013-2016 and has made work with Boston Lyric Opera, Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe, The International Handel Festspiele, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Cincinnati Opera, San Francisco Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Getty Villa Museum in Malibu, Salle Playel in Paris, Barbican Centre, Sun Valley Music Festival, Kaufman Music Center, Bard Summerscape and Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, Merola/ San Francisco Opera, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Tanglewood Music Festival, Pacific Musicworks, Bemis Center for Contemporary Art, The Union for Contemporary Art, Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, and the Teatro Nacional de São Carlos in Lisbon.
He holds an MFA in Theater, Film and Television from UCLA and later continued studies with Stephen Wadsworth at The Juilliard School. He has received the national Princess Grace Award in Theater, the James Pendelton Foundation Grant, was a directing nominee in the 2015 International Opera Awards, led the premieres of two operas to win “Best New Opera” awards from the Music Critics Association of North America and a Musical America-New Artist of the Month.
He is a native of San Antonio, Texas and lives in Los Angeles, California.
Raúl Santos
Screenwriter
Raúl Santos | Screenwriter
Raúl Santos is a film producer, writer, and director. After graduating from the School of Visual Arts in NYC, his feature “The Rock” (2011) was awarded Best European Documentary at SEFF’11, as well as other recognitions in festivals in Russia, France, Latin America, and a special screening at the UN in New York. His work also includes “Siempre, Luis” (writer, 2020, Sundance Film Festival, HBO Documentary Films) about Lin-Manuel Miranda’s father and his activism in Latino politics; “Camaron: Flamenco and Revolution” (writer, 2018, Netflix, theatrical, finalist at the Spanish Academy Awards) about the legendary flamenco artist; and “The Longest Road” (producer, 2012, theatrical, Amazon Prime Video) about Latino rock star Enrique Bunbury. His recent work also includes two series for National Geographic: “Resurrection Island” and “The Big Freeze”. Raúl Santos is an active member of the Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain and the Brooklyn Filmmakers Collective.
Yuki Izumihara
Production Designer
Yuki Izumihara | Production Designer
Pablo Santiago
Director of Photography
Pablo Santiago | Director of Photography
Pablo Santiago’s lighting design spans theater, opera, dance and gallery work. His work has been seen at Los Angeles Theatre Center and the Latino Theater Co., Arena Stage (Washington, D.C.), the Paramount Theater (Boston), Skirball Center (New York City), Su Teatro (Denver), the Getty Museum (Los Angeles), Opera Santa Barbara, and more. Recent highlights include War of the Worlds with the LA Phil, Dementia at Los Angeles Theatre Center, Pélleas et Mélisande at Cincinnati Symphony, Breaking the Waves for Opera Philadelphia and PROTOTYPE Festival, Destiny of Desire at the Goodman Theatre and Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and Flight for Opera Omaha. His upcoming projects include Ted Hearne’s Place co-commissioned by the LA Phil, the Barbican Centre and Beth Morrison Projects, as well as the professional World Premiere of Proving Up at Opera Omaha and the Miller Theater (New York City), Eugene Onegin at The Boston Conservatory, and Boris Godunov at San Francisco Symphony.
Camille Assaf
Costume and Doll Designer
Camille Assaf | Costume and Doll Designer
Camille Assaf is a French-American costume designer living in Paris. She has designed numerous productions spanning the gamut of genres: from experimental theater, to ballet, film and of course, opera – her passion. She most recently collaborated with James Darrah on Les Enfants Terribles for Opera Omaha and its upcoming restaging at Long Beach Opera. She has also designed for the Opéra Royal de Versailles (France), Opera Holland Park (London), the Santa Fe Opera, the Juilliard Opera, and the Metropolitan Opera’s Lindemann Program, as well as Nashville Opera, Milwaukee Opera, Wolf Trap Opera, and others. Her work for dance and performance was also seen at the New York City Ballet, the Park Avenue Armory, the Guggenheim Museum, Palais de Tokyo, Centre National de la Danse, to name a few. Film credits include Simiocratie, Cadmium Green Deep, Bébé Tigre, and the upcoming Panorama with artists Gerard and Kelly for the Pinault Foundation. In 2008, she was part of the team of designers, led by Eiko Ishioka, responsible for the costumes for the Beijing Olympic Games’ opening and closing ceremonies. Assaf has also designed costumes in Phnom Penh, Shanghai, and Hong Kong. Her designs were included in “Costume at the Turn of the Century, 1990–2015,”a major exhibition in Moscow – and at the Prague Quadrennial. She is a recipient of the Leo Lerman Fellowship award, the National Endowment for the Arts / TCG Career Development Program.
Yee Eun Nam
Art Director / Lead Designer (Luna)
Yee Eun Nam | Art Director / Lead Designer (Luna)
Currently based in LA, Yee Eun Nam is a visual artist and an award-winning set and video designer for opera, theater, and live performance. Opera design work includes Then I Stood Up: A Civil Rights Cycle (LA Opera Connects), “Notorious RBG in Song” (Skirball Cultural Center); Venus & Adonis/Savitri (New Camerata Opera), Backwards from Winter (Center for Contemporary Opera), Cruzar la Cara de la Luna (The Soraya, LA), Lohengrin (New World Center, Miami), A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Ariadne auf Naxos, The Tales of Hoffmann, The Crucible, Dead Man Walking, Cunning Little Vixen, L’enfant et les sortilèges, La bohème, and Hansel and Gretel (Miami Music Festival, Miami); and Don Giovanni (Freud Playhouse). Recent regional theater design work includes Legacy Land (Kansas City Rep), Found Musical (IAMA Theatre Company), Where the Mountain Meets the Moon and Aubergine (South Coast Rep), The Canadians (South Coast Rep), Black Super Hero Magic Mama (Geffen Playhouse), Sweat (Mark Taper Forum), Bordertown Now (Pasadena Playhouse), Citizen: An American Lyric (Kirk Douglas Theatre, Fountain Theater), Silent Sky (Perseverance Theatre), Sisters in Law (Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts), Las Mujeres Del Mar (Playwright’s Arena), Joy Luck Club (Sierra Madre Playhouse), Hannah and The Dread Gazebo (Fountain Theatre), Mountain Top (Garry Marshall Theatre), SAPO (Getty Villa), The Mother of Henry, Members Only, Dementia, and A Mexican Trilogy: An American Story (Latino Theater Company), and Generation Sex and Lovesick (Teatro Luna). In 2020, she has been creating digital content and video arts with San Francisco Symphony, Boston Lyric Opera, Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, Goodman Theatre, The Movement Theatre Company, and Rattlestick Playwrights Theatre. Nam has multiple nominations for LA Stage Alliance Ovation Award and is a winner of LADCC Theatrical Excellence for CGI/Video in 2020. She is a member of United Scenic Artists, Local 829. Born and raised in Seoul, Korea, she also has studied sculpture and metal craft. She holds an MFA in Theater Design from UCLA and BFA in Design and Metal Craft from SNU in Seoul, Korea.
Will Kim
Lead Animator (Luna)
Will Kim | Lead Animator
Hailing from Los Angeles Seoul, Korea, Will Kim’s animation works have been seen in various international film festivals and museums including St. Louis Int. Film Festival, AFI Dallas, Hiroshima Animation Festival, Cinequest, Getty Center, Centre Pompidou Web Série, and San Diego Museum of Photographic Arts. He has recently illustrated and animated for Adidas, Hallmark, Ito-En, and Mitsubishi. A current resident of Los Angeles, Kim teaches and runs Animation Program in the Art Department at Riverside City College. He holds a BFA from Cal Arts and an MFA in Animation from UCLA.
Rodrigo Muñoz
Lead Illustrator / Character Designer (Luna)
Rodrigo Muñoz | Lead Illustrator
Rodrigo Muñoz is a New York-based costume designer originally from Mexico City. He graduated from Mexico’s National School of Theatre and Artswith a B.A. in Theatre Set Design and an M.F.A. in Costume Design; and from NYU Tisch School of the Arts in the Design for Stage and Film program. His recent credits include: “Impulso” for the 1MOVE: DES19NED BY initiative of The Movement Theatre Company; “The Revengers Tragedy” for Red Bull Theatre, directed by Jesse Berger; “Jazz Singer” at the Abrons Arts Center, directed by Joshua William Gelb; “Jump” with Astoria Performing Arts, directed by Arpita Mukherjee, “The Harlem 100 featuring Mwenso & the Shakes” with IMG Artists & JMG Live; “Tobias,” directed by Arpita Mukherjee for the 2020 WP Pipeline Festival; “Hamlet,” directed by Mark Wing Davey; and “Animal Farm” directed by Scott Illingworth for NYU Graduate Acting Program. Along with Cha See and Kimie Nishikawa, Muñoz is a co-founder of the See Lighting Foundation, a grassroots organization committed to supporting immigrant theater artists during the global pandemic. For more information, visit www.rodrigomunozdesign.com.
Jian Lee
Character Animator (Luna)
Jian Lee | Associate Animator
Jian Lee is an artist / educator based in LA. As a teenager, she loved to draw comics and share those with her friends. Her interest eventually expanded to drawing, painting and animation. She came to LA to study animation at California Institute of the Arts (Cal Arts).
Jian Lee currently teaches at Riverside City College, Moreno Valley College and Cal Poly Pomona.
Cast
Chelsea Basler
Madeline Usher
Chelsea Basler | Madeline Usher
Grammy Award-nominated soprano Chelsea Basler, was scheduled to return to the Metropolitan Opera to cover Micaëla in Carmen (COVID19), perform the role of Julia Lowell in Borzoni’s The Copper Queen with Arizona Opera (COVID19), perform with Emmanuel Music as Angela in Weill’s Firebrand of Florence (COVID19), and perform as the soprano soloist in Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony with Cape Symphony (COVID19) during the 2020-21 Season. In the summer of 2020, she was proud to be part of Boston Lyric Opera’s virtual performance of The Fall of the House of Usher, singing the role of Madeline. In the winter of 2021 she looks forward to making her house debut in concert with the Arizona Opera.
In the spring of 2019, Ms. Basler returned to Boston Lyric Opera for the East Coast premiere production of Poul Ruders’ The Handmaid’s Tale, as Moira and made a company debut with Boston Midsummer Opera as Clorinda in La cenerentola. In the fall of 2019, Ms. Basler joined the Metropolitan Opera roster, covering Poussette in Manon, rejoined BLO to sing Mary Johnson in the New England Premier of Fellow Travelers, making her Boston Youth Symphony Orchestra debut as the High Priestess in Aida, her Odyssey Opera debut as Penelope in Benjamin Britten’s Gloriana (COVID19) and returning to the Metropolitan Opera to cover Musetta in La bohème (COVID19). In the summer of 2019, Ms. Basler performed the role of Angela in Kurt Weill’s Firebrand of Florence at Jordan Hall in Boston and Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood.
Ms. Basler enjoys a particularly strong relationship with BLO, which she initially joined as an Emerging Artist during the 2013–2014 season. She rejoined the company for their March 2018 production of The Threepenny Opera as Lucy and Ms. Basler made her critically acclaimed role debut as Micaëla in Boston Lyric Opera’s mounting of the Calixto Bieito production of Carmen in the autumn of 2016. Her other roles with Boston Lyric Opera include Valencienne in The Merry Widow; Glasha in Katya Kabanova; Margret in Lizzie Borden, a production which was reprised at the 2014 Tanglewood Festival; and Isolt the Fair in Frank Martin’s The Love Potion (Le vin herbé).
Particularly noted for her interpretation of the title role of Carlisle Floyd’s Susannah, Ms. Basler has benefited from the mentorship of the role’s creator, the late Phyllis Curtin, and both the coaching and enthusiastic endorsement of Floyd himself. She made her Nashville Opera debut in the role during the spring of 2018 and her Pasadena Opera debut in the same role in 2016. Additional recent engagements include performing Mozart’s Susanna in Opera Saratoga’s 2016 production of Le nozze di Figaro and covering Liù in Virginia Opera’s 2017 production of Turandot.
Ms. Basler has fulfilled several prestigious young artist residencies, most recently joining Santa Fe Opera as a 2015 Apprentice Artist, covering Arminda in Mozart’s rarely performed La finta giardiniera and creating the role of Sara in the world premiere of Jennifer Higdon’s Cold Mountain, a live recording of which was released by Pentatone and has recently been nominated for a Grammy. As a 2013 Apprentice Artist with Opera Saratoga, she performed Josephine in H.M.S. Pinafore. In 2012 and 2013, Ms. Basler was a young artist with Sarasota Opera, where she appeared as Guardian of the Dawn in Daron Hagen’s Little Nemo in Slumberland and Curley’s Wife in Of Mice and Men. As a young artist with Des Moines Metro Opera in 2012, Ms. Basler covered the role of Magda in La rondine.
Sponsored by Linda Cabot Black
Jesse Darden
Roderick Usher
Jesse Darden | Roderick Usher
Daniel Belcher
William
Daniel Belcher | William
GRAMMY® Award-winning baritone Daniel Belcher has performed in many of the world’s music capitals, including Paris, London, New York, San Francisco, Berlin, Stuttgart, Amsterdam, Geneva, Madrid, Toronto, Montreal, Tokyo, Seoul and Houston. With a repertoire of more than 80 roles, Belcher has championed roles from the Baroque to those composed expressly for him. He came to international attention in 2004 creating the role of Prior Walter in Peter Eötvös’ Angels in America for the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris. Belcher recently created the roles of Alfred Stieglitz in Laura Kaminsky, Mark Campbell and Kimberly Reed’s world premiere of Today it Rains with Opera Parallele, Inspector Kildare in Kevin Puts and Mark Campbell’s Elizabeth Cree at Opera Philadelphia, James Addison III in Ricky Ian Gordon and Royce Vavrek’s The House Without a Christmas Tree at Houston Grand Opera, Lord Bellingham in Lori Laitman’s The Scarlet Letter at Opera Colorado, Brian Castner in Jeremy Howard Beck’s The Long Walk with Opera Saratoga, and Robert Kennedy in Robin de Raaff’s Waiting for Miss Monroe for his debut at The Netherlands Opera and Holland Festival. Other world premiere roles include John Brooke in Mark Adamo’s Little Women, Andy Warhol in Michael Daugherty’s Jackie O (and multiple roles in Tod Machover’s Resurrection, all with Houston Grand Opera. Additional recent engagements include Sharpless in Madama Butterfly at the Lyric Opera of Kansas City, Fredrik Egerman in A Little Night Music at Madison Opera, and Beaumarchais in John Corigliano’s The Ghosts of Versailles as well as reprising his Figaro in Il barbiere di Siviglia at Chautauqua Opera.
Christon Carney
Physician
Christon Carney | Physician
Christon Carney, a native of Nashville, TN, currently calls New England home. He received his Masters of Music in Vocal Performance from the New England Conservatory and his Bachelors of Music in Music Education from Lipscomb University. He’s debuted with Boston Lyric Opera as Second Villager in the 2019 production of Pagliacci, and has continued to perform with BLO’s chorus. Christon has also debuted with the Nashville Opera during their production of La Traviata as Giuseppe. He has been honored to be a finalist in the Alltech Vocal Scholarship Competition, as well as, the Harlem Opera Theatre Competition. He has participated in vocal ensembles such as, the Boston Lyric Opera Chorus, the Rhode Island Civic Chorale and Orchestra, the Nashville Symphony Chorus and Chamber Chorus, Nashville Opera Chorus, Nashville’s Heimermann Chorale and helped to premiere several large works by living composers.
Jorgeandrés Camargo
Servant
Jorgeandrés Camargo | Servant
Jorgeandrés Camargo, Bass, a native of Houston, Texas, holds performance degrees from Eastman School of Music and Boston University Opera Institute. Recent performances include the role of Figaro in The Marriage of Fígaro with Boston Opera Collaborative, and Rocco in Fidelio (a virtual zoom opera) with Promenade Opera Project. He will return to Boston Lyric Opera next season as Il Bonze in Puccini’s Madama Butterfly. Other roles include Il Gran Sacerdote in Nabucco, Mephistopheles in Louisville Ballet’s ‘Project Faust’, Pistola in Falstaff, Leporello in Don Giovanni, Don Alfonso in Cosí fan tutte, Bartolo in Le Nozze di Figaro, Geronimo in Il matrimonial segreto, Capitán in Florencia en el Amazonas, Prophet/King in Dark Sisters, Quince in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Roy Cohn in Angels in America. Mr. Camargo can also be heard on the Sound Mirror recording of Blitzstein’s The Cradle Will Rock. He has previously worked with Kentucky Opera, Ojai Music Festival, CoOperative, Crested Butte Music Festival, Opera Breve, First Coast Opera, American Lyric Theater, and Opera Saratoga.
With Special Appearance By:
Sheila Vand
With Special Appearance By: Sheila Vand
Sheila Vand is an actress and artist who has appeared in numerous award-winning films such as The Rental (2021 Critics Choice Super Award nominee – Best Actress, Best film), We The Animals (2019 Independent Spirit Award nominee, 2018 Sundance NEXT Innovator Prize), A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night (Gotham award winner, Independent Spirit award nominee), ARGO (Academy Award winner), and many more. Her stage work includes a Broadway debut alongside Robin Williams in the Pulitzer Prize finalist Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, as well as the world premiere of Frank Zappa’s 200 Motels at the Walt Disney Concert Hall with the LA Philharmonic. Sheila can be currently seen starring in internationally-acclaimed artist Shirin Neshat’s exhibit Land of Dreams at The Gladstone Gallery in NYC, as well as the upcoming second season of TNT’s Snowpiercer alongside Daveed Diggs. Sheila has served on juries at the Sundance Film Festival and the Vimeo Film Festival. Her own original works include Sneaky Nietzsche (a theatrical experience mounted at LACMA) and MILK: What Will You Make of Me? (a visual art collaboration with TED-fellow Alexa Meade).
Into the House of Usher: BLO’s Virtual Reading Room
BLO invites you Into the House of Usher to explore and learn about Edgar Allan Poe’s story, Phillip Glass’ opera, and BLO’s brand new film. Engage where history and present day meet in this virtual reading room, and even add your own creative brilliance by contributing to our community short story. Can you discover all the mysteries this house has to tell?
Virtual Stages: Learning to Engage in a Pandemic
In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic changed the world as we knew it. New guidelines for public life were put in place, impacting every corner of our society. Doors closed, programs were canceled, gatherings were banned, and the arts sector was all but decimated. We found ourselves pondering: how can the arts survive if we are not allowed to perform, and our audience is not permitted to watch?Yet, seemingly overnight, a virtual world rapidly developed and became the new normal. Companies, artists, and everyone really, dove headfirst into cyberspace and started innovating. Suddenly, our daily activities became available online, including work, [...]
The Fall of the House of Usher & Uncanny Truths of American Identity
Rumor has it that Edgar Allan Poe modeled the House of Usher on a dwelling in Boston with a gruesome secret. The Tremont Street home of eighteenth-century bookseller Hezekiah Usher (located just a few blocks from the house where Poe was born, in 1809) was demolished in 1830, and two bodies were said to have been discovered in the basement, locked in a ghastly embrace. But that is just a rumor. The precise origins of Poe’s celebrated story remain elusive – like so many elements of the work itself. “The Fall of the House of Usher” is shrouded in uncertainty. [...]
The Reviews are In!
“[An] arresting stop-motion film.” – The New Yorker
“…[BLO’s] most ambitious and spectacular project of the season” – The Boston Globe
“The striking visual components embrace the opera’s ambiguity and nightmarish ambiance.” – The Wall Street Journal
“Amazing hand-drawn and stop-motion footage.” – Cinema Junkie/KPBS
“The crushing forces of the pandemic, shaped by the news media, sculpt this film into something like a diamond. Beautiful, though with cutting edges.” – WBUR/The Artery
For press images, please visit
The Fall of the House of Usher Media Kit
Images: operabox.tv/Boston Lyric Opera