Collaborating Strangers Music and lyrics for a new children's opera were worked out frOm a distance. very child who believes that being part of 'a musi- cal show would be the best Chanukah gift of all needs only to wait a little while for that to happen. During the holiday sea- son, the Michigan Opera Theatre (MOT) is begin- ning to take a new chil- dren's opera, Aesop's Fables, to 60,000 boys and girls around the state. With a cast of three adults presenting "The Fox and the Crow," "The Tortoise and the Hare," "The Grasshopper and the Ant" and "The Lion and the Mouse," the opera also is going to include dif- ferent children's choruses picked at every place the opera will be performed and songs audiences will sing along with the cast. Each year, MOT tours the state with full operas, one-act operas and musical revues. Aesop's Fa- bles will become the major offer- ing for Michigan schools during the 1994-96 seasons based on re- sponses to a teachers' survey that led to its development. In addition to about 60 school performances each year with an average audience of 500, other free metro area programs are scheduled. The opera will be staged three times during First Night, the city of Birniingham's New Year's eve celebration for families; the loca- tion is still to be announced. There also will be a presentation Jan. 22 at Temple Beth El. After 1996, the opera becomes available to other companies throughout the United States. "Opera segments range in length from six to 24 minutes and are connected by dialogue," said Karen DiChiera, director of corn- munity programs at MOT. Her efforts went into making the opera a sophisticated production within strict time limits so that it could be performed during fixed classroom periods. Ms. DiChiera selected the writ- ers for the opera. Douglas Braver- man wrote the script and the lyrics, and Lawrence Singer com- posed the music. Both believe that their Jewish cultural backgrounds helped mold their style. The team met last December just to de- cide that the words would be completed ahead of the music and did not speak again until the first rehearsal of the vo- calists. "This approach is not original to us," Mr. Braverman said. "Gilbert and Sullivan worked this way for many years because they did not get along. We did it this way be- cause we were sepa- rated by distance." Mr. Braverman, who works full time as director of pur- chasing for Renault North America and sometime translator for Renault USA Inc., often is required to travel. Mr. Singer, who works as a free- Larry Singer and Douglas Braverman only met once. lance composer and is about to teach a mu- sic composition course at Oakland found that the ones that have be- University, also leaves the Detroit come the most enduring were the best," Mr. Bravetman said. area to accept assignments. Mr. Braverman is not new to "Since I did the lyrics first, it gaVe me a great deal of freedom," MOT. He previously collaborated said Mr. Braverman, 42. "I wrote with composer Richard Berent, largely during a one- week vaca- writing the script and lyrics for tion in New York, and then I sent Cheering Up a Princess. That earlier team also provid- it all to Larry with suggestions as to the type of music I heard in the ed the scores for Expectations, a back of my mind. Larry, in turn, show about Christmas and received my work by mail and Chanukah in Detroit presented at the Attic Theatre; Peter Pan- wrote the score." Mr. Singer, 53, spent 600 hours demonium, a children's musical on the opera, which is the first he produced at the Players Club in has composed. He found that the Detroit; and numerous original words formed an easy pattern to comedy songs for singer Sheri Nichols, a former Detroiter now follow. "Once Douglas set up the working in California. Mr. Braverman has had an rhythm, he kept to it," Mr. Singer said. 'When music can get into original comedy, Snowman, pro- that rhythmical context, a big part duced in New York, where he was raised and lived until Renault of the problem is solved." As the scriptwriter, Mr. Braver- transferred him to Michigan in man decided which lesson-teach- 1980. Mr. Singer's career started ing fables to include. "I had hoped to take some of when he was a teen-ager growing the most obscure fables, but I up in Michigan, when he played PHOTOS BY G LENN TRIEST SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS oboe and composed works that have been recorded and per- formed in other countries. As a college student taking classes in Italy 30 years ago, he built a European audience through his records and radio ap- pearances. In addition to completing as- signments for many orchestras including the Detroit Symphony, the graduate of the Eastman School of Music wrote the melodies for a special piece re- quested by the Holocaust Memo- rial Center. Based on the lyrics of a Polish survivor, the composition soon will be recorded. Mr. Braverman hopes Aesop's Fables will interest children in opera itself, making them want to see more. "The impressions hopefully will stay with them," Mr. Singer said. 111 ego ~ lV o‘r