Blind Injustice (opera)

Blind Injustice is an opera based on the stories of six people who were wrongfully convicted of crimes in Ohio, and who eventually had their convictions overturned through the work of the Ohio Innocence Project.[1][2] The opera was commissioned by the Cincinnati Opera; it was written by librettist David Cote and composer Scott Davenport Richards.[3] The libretto was based in part on the book Blind Injustice by Ohio Innocence Project co-founder Mark Godsey, and on interviews with those whose stories are portrayed.[1][4] The opera opened at the Cincinnati Opera on July 22, 2019.

Blind Injustice
Opera by Scott Davenport Richards
LibrettistDavid Cote
LanguageEnglish
Premiere
22 July 2019 (2019-07-22)

Composition and premiere

Although the opera is based on Mark Godsey's book of the same title, work on the opera began before the book was published. Members of the Ohio Innocence Project (OIP) young professionals committee met in early 2017 with members of Cincinnati's Young Professional Choral Collective (YPCC) to discuss devising choral music based on OIP's work;[1] YPCC's founding director, KellyAnn Nelson, saw the opportunity to create something larger. The Cincinnati Opera became involved and commissioned the creation of the opera.[3]

Librettist David Cote worked with director and dramaturge Robin Guarino to develop the opera's text in early 2018.[5] Approximately 40 percent of the libretto is drawn directly from interviews with the exonerees; their stories are at the heart of the opera.[1][2] Adjustments to the libretto were still being made in mid 2019, to reflect exonerees' civil cases for restitution.[5] Scott Davenport Richards's score includes elements of jazz, blues, minimalism, and hip-hop.[2][4] The score was released bit by bit to the creative team throughout 2018.[6] In November 2018, a workshop was held to introduce some of the musical numbers to the exonerees themselves as well as collect creative feedback.[7]

The opera, which consists of one 90-minute act,[3][8] premiered at the Wilks Studio Theatre in Cincinnati's Music Hall on July 22, 2019, directed by Robin Guarino.[2][4] The narrow stage was flanked by audience members seated on either side, giving it the intimate feel of courtroom.[2][4] The orchestra comprised members of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra under the direction of John Morris Russell.[9] Members of YPCC served as part of the chorus.[2][3]

Some performances were followed by question-and-answer sessions with the real life exonerees represented in the opera.[3][4]

Roles

The main characters in the opera are all based on six real people who had been wrongfully convicted and later exonerated by the Ohio Innocence Project (OIP).[1][3] In addition to those real people, other characters are less closely based on individuals. There is a single prosecutor, who serves as the prosecutor for all of the cases, as well as a single defense attorney and one student research from the OIP, Alesha.[2][3]

In order of vocal appearance:

Role Voice type Premiere cast, July 22, 2019
(Conductor: John Morris Russell)
Prosecutor baritone Joseph Lattanzi [2]
Defense Attorney tenor Samuel Levine [2]
Nancy Smith, an exoneree mezzo-soprano Maria Miller [2]
Derrick Wheatt, an exoneree baritone Sankara Harouna [2]
Eugene Johnson, an exoneree bass-baritone Miles Wilson-Toliver [2]
Laurese Glover, an exoneree tenor Terrence Chin-Loy [2]
Clarence Elkins, an exoneree tenor Thomas J. Capobianco [2]
Rickey Jackson, an exoneree baritone Eric Shane [2]
Alesha, law student working on the Ohio Innocence Project; Ensemble soprano Victoria Okafor [2]
Derrick Wheatt's mother, Ensemble mezzo-soprano Deborah Nansteel [2]
Earl Mann, Ensemble baritone Morgan Smith [2]
Earl Mann's Cellmate, Ensemble baritone Joseph Parrish [2]

The chorus was drawn from Cincinnati's Young Professionals Choral Collective.[2]

Synopsis

The plot of the opera follows six people wrongfully-convicted and eventually exonerated as well as the work of the lawyers and law students working on their cases. The Prosecuting Attorney and the Defense Attorney are both based in part on Mark Godsey, co-founder of the Ohio Innocence Project, at different stages of his career. The prosecutor, representing a younger Godsey (who had been a prosecutor for the Southern District of New York), extolls his role in keeping people safe, while the defense attorney reflect an older Godsey's views on the fallibility of the judicial system.[2] Clarence Elkins was convicted of two rapes and a murder after a "flimsy identification".[2] Nancy Smith, a bus driver for Head Start, was convicted on child sexual abuse charges.[8][9] Laurese Glover, Derrick Wheatt, and Eugene Johnson, known as the East Cleveland Three, were convicted on the basis of tainted evidence and misidentification by an eyewitness; they served 20 years in prison.[4][9][10] Rickey Jackson served 39 years for a murder he did not commit, based on false testimony.[4][10] The opera follows their stories from the time of the alleged crime, their time in prison, the work of the Ohio Innocence Project (represented through the character of Alesha), and their eventual release from prison.[3]

Critical reception

Blind Injustice opened to positive reviews in both local and national publications. The Wall Street Journal called it a "powerful piece of music theater."[2] National Public Radio's Elizabeth Kramer said "the opera's overarching call for awareness can resonate with audiences universally."[1] Seen and Heard International noted "Richards's potent music and Cote's hard-hitting words."[9] Cincinnati City Beat called it a "masterpiece", and declared that the only flaw was the small seating capacity, saying that the opera's powerful message deserved a broader audience.[4]

gollark: How would you just get an "evil" version anyway? No (long-lived) empire really just sets out and goes "let's be evil" surely?
gollark: Someone asked this somewhere, I'm sureā€¦
gollark: The trouble with brains is that if you stick them into full-power-off (no oxygen supply or whatever) they can't really turn back on again, unlike (sane) computer systems.
gollark: From my limited trek knowledge they just sit there doing nothing.
gollark: Little-to-no material scarcity doesn't mean there's not anything people want which isn't free.A relevant question is why lots of jobs shown in some of the nanofics aren't done by nonsophont AIs, though.

References

  1. Kramer, Elizabeth (July 23, 2019). "Blind Injustice Opera Sets Out to Open Eyes About Wrongful Conviction Rates". NPR. Retrieved 2019-07-30.
  2. Waleson, Heidi (July 26, 2019). "Blind Injustice Review: Stories of the Innocent". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2019-07-30.
  3. Gelfand, Janelle (July 19, 2019). "Opera's powerful premiere Blind Injustice explores wrongful convictions". Cincinnati Business Courier. Retrieved 2019-07-30.
  4. Arenstein, Anne (July 24, 2019). "Cincinnati Opera's Blind Injustice is a 'Masterpiece'". CityBeat Cincinnati. Retrieved 2019-07-30.
  5. Gresham, Mark (7 August 2019). "Review: Cincinnati Opera's Blind Injustice opens eyes with story of exonerated prisoners". Ear Relevant. Atlanta, Georgia. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  6. Godsey, Mark (May 21, 2019). "Voice to the Voiceless". Cincinnati Opera's 2019 Season Program Book. p. 38. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
  7. Arenstein, Anne (July 17, 2019). "Cincinnati Opera's World Premiere of 'Blind Injustice' Uncovers Innocence". City Beat. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  8. de Acha, Rafael (July 30, 2019). "Falsely Accused, Falsely Convicted By Blind Injustice". Classical Voice North America. Journal of the Music Critics Association of North America. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
  9. de Acha, Rafael (2019-07-24). "Cincinnati Opera Does Great Justice to Blind Injustice : Seen and Heard International". Seen and Heard. Retrieved 2019-07-31.
  10. Shane, Eric (May 21, 2019). "In Performance". Cincinnati Opera's 2019 Season Program Book. p. 38. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
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