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Press Releases
Heartbeat Opera announces radically staged adaptations of 2 classics: Tasca and Lady M, April 11-23
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 2, 2023
More Information: heartbeatopera.org
aleba@alebaco.com
— Musical America
HEARTBEAT OPERA
The company's SPRING FESTIVAL returns with
radically staged and re-orchestrated
and led by two fearless new directors:
TOSCA
Puccini's masterpiece is now set in a modern-day religious authoritarian dictatorship
and distilled to 100 minutes.
Sung in Italian. Subtitles in Farsi and English.
Co-Adapted by Iranian-American director Shadi G. and Jacob Ashworth
Directed by Shadi G.
Music Directed by Jacob Ashworth
Newly Arranged by Daniel Schlosberg
April 11, 13, 15, 19, 21 at 7:30pm
April 16 at 8pm | April 23 at 3pm
LADY M
opera's most thrilling anti-heroine—in just 90 minutes.
Sung in Italian. Subtitles in English.
Co-Adapted by Ethan Heard and Jacob Ashworth
Directed by Emma Jaster
Arranged and Music Directed by Daniel Schlosberg
April 12, 14, 18, 20, 22 at 7:30pm | April 16 at 3pm
TICKETS $35-$125
Students can use code Student23 for $25 tickets (Bring student ID to box office)
55 Lexington Ave. (25th St btw 3rd & Lexington Aves); New York, NY
April 11-23, 2023
COVID PROTOCOLS
and the April 18 performance of LADY M.
Masks are optional at all other performances.
Singers will not be masked at any performances.
no corner of the libretto or score is left unconsidered or unchanged.”
— The New York Times
From April 11-23, 2023, two operatic masterpieces get the Heartbeat treatment on back-to-back nights in rep: Puccini's TOSCA and Verdi's MACBETH (retitled LADY M). Heartbeat is already knee-deep in "paring them down to their concentrated cores and stripping away centuries of expectations and tradition" (The New York Times).
Both shows feature Daniel Schlosberg's world premiere chamber arrangements, hailed as "ingenious" by The Wall Street Journal and "Heartbeat's secret weapon" by The New Yorker. Schlosberg's orchestrations will be front and center, with sound design and electronics woven into LADY M, and lush reimaginings of Puccini's score for TOSCA.
Two fierce female directors will lead the productions: Shadi G., who grew up in Tehran, directs TOSCA, setting it under threat of authoritarian censorship; and longtime Heartbeat artist Emma Jaster directs LADY M, envisioning the story of Macbeth through the eyes of Lady Macbeth (the germination of a project Heartbeat began in 2020).
TOSCA
In Heartbeat's TOSCA, Puccini’s iconic story of love and revolution becomes daringly real when a troupe of singer activists decide that tonight they will risk everything to perform the uncensored version of Tosca — in which corrupt officials are murdered, revolutionaries are executed, and, most importantly, a female heroine interrupts the cycle of violence. They race to tell their whole story before the authoritarian forces lurking in the wings press in.
This brand new adaptation, which translates Puccini's masterpiece from Rome's 1800 police state to the modern-day world of religious authoritarian regimes, is by Iranian-American director Shadi G. and Heartbeat Artistic Director Jacob Ashworth. At its heart, this production asks what it means to make art where freedom of expression does not exist—where even love is banned from the stage. Supertitles will be in Farsi and English, and Farsi dialogue and singing will appear in the show.
DOUBLE CASTING
In Heartbeat's TOSCA, censorship reigns supreme, and artists risk their lives to tell the truth. Heartbeat brings that looming feeling of danger and suspicion to the fore through intentional double-casting. The Sacristan, Spoleta, and Act 3 Jailer are all played by one singer-actor, underscoring the fact that no one living under police rule can be sure who is an informant, who is a revolutionary, and who is working for the state. Similarly, [spoiler alert] Angelotti appears first as a political prisoner and hero of the revolution, and returns in Act 3 as the Shepherd, now an old man, singing in Farsi from the rooftop next door.
A NEW TOSCA ARRANGEMENT
Jacob Ashworth conducts Heartbeat's biggest band yet of 8 players—Ashworth's second Puccini opera with the company after his "richly detailed, yet delicate" rendering (The New Yorker) of BUTTERFLY in 2017. Daniel Schlosberg's arrangement features three cellos to echo Puccini's famous 4-cello opening of Act 3, as well as bass, piano, trumpet, horn, and flute. The Te Deum chorus at the end of Act 1 is performed using inventive sound design, and is sung only by men (women in this regime are not allowed to sing in religious contexts). The unsettling male voices underscore that the victory at the end of Act 1 is a victory for the regime.
With TOSCA, Heartbeat continues to build on what they learned performing Puccini in BUTTERFLY in 2017. In the words of Jacob Ashworth, "Puccini's score is so seductive and emotionally captivating. It allows us to dive headlong into a retelling of the story that is both incredibly modern and perfectly timeless. Highly specific, yet universally relatable. Working with Shadi on this adaptation since the spring of 2022 has given me such joy and purpose, and I am relishing getting to do what I love most: staying so true to a piece we all love while finding a radical way of exploding it from the inside into something new and powerful that makes use of all that opera can be."
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LADY M
In Heartbeat's version of Verdi’s Macbeth, women drive the story, and magic takes many forms: mystical, technological, and psychological. Power and ambition become tangled with gender, race and class as they manifest in our contemporary American lives. Emma Jaster, who has been Heartbeat's Movement Director on countless projects, directs Ethan Heard and Jacob Ashworth’s adaptation, conjuring a bracingly contemporary couple as the Macbeths, along with a complete sonic and dramatic reimagining of Verdi's witches (here known as the Sisters). The opera is pared down to only 6 singers: Lady Macbeth, Macbeth, and Banquo, plus the three Sisters. Oblivious to the Sisters who toil constantly at the borders of her privileged life, Lady M chases the ascent that will destroy her marriage, her sleep, and her sanity.
EVEN MORE SHAKESPEARE
Leaning on its theater background, Heartbeat incorporates parts of Shakespeare's text that Verdi did not include. Most important among these are the lines “I have given suck, and know how tender ’tis to love the babe that milks me.” This crucial clue to Lady Macbeth's having been a mother and lost a child — and the unimaginable grief that comes from that — is left out of the Verdi but is central to this production.
THE WITCHES' MUSIC—REIMAGINED
Music Director and Arranger Daniel Schlosberg’s brand new orchestration features piano, violin, clarinet, trombone, guitar, percussion, each doubling on an impressive array of additional instruments. Heartbeat's adaptation distills Verdi’s chorus of witches down to a virtuosic trio, the Sisters, honoring Shakespeare’s original "Weird Sisters" and endowing each sister with a soloist’s importance. Picking up where Heartbeat Opera’s 2019 Der Freischütz left off, Schlosberg infuses the score with electronic music and sound design, especially as it pertains to magic. The music of the witches is recomposed and plays with the Verdi, making use of modern vocal techniques and compositional styles to evoke the same haunting, mischievous, otherworldly effect that Verdi's chorus had in 1847.
IT'S CHANGED A LOT SINCE LOCKDOWN
LADY M is the live culmination of Heartbeat's “riveting” (Opera News) early pandemic venture, Lady M: An Online Fantasia, for which Heartbeat sold out 32 online soirees in 2020. The critical reception was wild: The Washington Post said it "hacked the corporate contours of Zoom into a postmodern proscenium"; Operawire wrote "Heartbeat’s 'Lady M' Virtual Soirées will be remembered as groundbreaking"; Opernwelt said "With LADY M on Zoom, New York company Heartbeat Opera managed to create an artwork for our time during lockdown"; and New York Magazine's discerning Approval Matrix dubbed it “High brow and brilliant.”
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Heartbeat's Spring Festival
April 11-23, 2023
Baruch Performing Arts Center

TOSCA
April 16 at 8pm
April 23 at 3pm
A new 100 minute adaptation, sung in Italian, performed without intermission.
Supertitles in Farsi and English.
Libretto by Luigi Illica & Giuseppe Giacosa
Co-Adapted by Shadi G. and Jacob Ashworth
Newly Arranged by Daniel Schlosberg
Director // Shadi G.
Music Director // Jacob Ashworth
Costume Designer // Mika Eubanks
Lighting Designer // Oliver Wason
Sound Designer // Michael Costagliola
Assistant Director // Yekta Khaghani
Associate Music Director // Mona Seyed-Bolorforosh
Festival Production Management // Intuitive Arts Management
Tosca // Anush Avetisyan
Cavaradossi // Chad Kranak
Scarpia // Gustavo Feulien
Sacristan/Spoleta/Jailer // Christopher Nazarian
Angelotti/Shepherd // Joseph Lodato
Undercover Officer (non-singing role) // Masih Rahmati
Undercover Policeman (non-singing role) // Reza Mirjalili
BAND
Conductor // Jacob Ashworth
Flute // Amir Farsi
Trumpet // Clyde Daley
Horn // Nicolee Kuester
Piano // TBD
Cello 1 // Clare Monfredo
Cello 2 // Madeline Fayette
Cello 3 // TBD
Bass // Milad Daniari
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LADY M
April 16 at 3pm
A new 90 minute adaptation, sung in Italian.
Subtitles in English.
Original libretto written by Francesco Maria Piave, with additions by Andrea Maffei, based on William Shakespeare's play
Based on concepts developed in Heartbeat’s Lady M: An Online Fantasia in 2020
Co-Adapted by Ethan Heard and Jacob Ashworth
Directed by Emma Jaster
Arranged and Music Directed by Daniel Schlosberg
Scenic Designer // Afsoon Pajoufar
Costume Designer // Beth Goldenberg
Lighting Designer // Oliver Wason
Media Designer // Camilla Tassi
Sound Designer // Michael Costagliola
Electronics and Live Processing // Gleb Kanasevich
Assistant Director // Vanessa Ogbuehi
Associate Music Director // Mona Seyed-Bolorforosh
Assistant Costume Designer // Ana-Sofia Meneses
Festival Production Management // Intuitive Arts Management
CAST
Lady M // Lisa Algozzini
Macbeth // Kenneth Stavert
Banquo // Isaiah Musik-Ayala
Witches // Samarie Alicea, Taylor-Alexis Dupont, Sishel Claverie
BAND
Conductor & Piano // Daniel Schlosberg
Guitar // Nicoletta Todesco
Percussion // Mika Godbole
Trombone // Sam George
Clarinet // Paul Won Jin Cho
Violin // Pauline Kim
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Heartbeat Opera
“Every Heartbeat event feels like a happening.”
– Opera News
Heartbeat Opera was founded in 2014 to create incisive adaptations and revelatory arrangements of classics, reimagining them for the here and now. Since then Heartbeat “has already contributed more to opera’s vitality than most major American companies” (New York Times), and has established itself as a highly-respected, innovative force in the opera world. The company was founded by Ethan Heard and Louisa Proske, classmates at Yale School of Drama’s directing program, followed quickly by Jacob Ashworth and Daniel Schlosberg from Yale’s School of Music, who joined as Co-Music Directors from the first season. Today, Jacob, as Artistic Director, and Dan, as Music Director, along with newly appointed Executive Director Tim Hausmann, are continuing Heartbeat’s legacy of radical adaptations of classic opera and leading the company into its next bold chapter.
In its first eight seasons, Heartbeat presented thirteen fully-realized productions, often featuring new chamber arrangements and English translations. Heartbeat adaptations, which can be seen as world premieres of classics, speak to the current moment: Fidelio featured a primarily Black cast and more than 100 incarcerated singers from six prison choirs; Carmen was set on the U.S./Mexico border and featured accordion, electric guitar, and saxophone; Butterfly (based on Madama Butterfly) looked at the story through the eyes of the biracial son, exploding the stereotype of a submissive Asian woman; Der Freischütz explored the dangers of toxic masculinity and gun culture. During the pandemic, Heartbeat took Lady M, its adaptation of Verdi’s Macbeth, online and sold out 32 Virtual Soirées, reaching 740 households across 5 continents; it also created Breathing Free, a visual album, which screened at venues across the country and was nominated for the 2021 Drama League Award for Outstanding Digital Concert Production. In the last year, Heartbeat remounted its acclaimed Fidelio at the Met Museum and then launched a highly successful first ever tour to the west coast. Heartbeat has shared its work at the Kennedy Center, Brooklyn Academy of Music, The Broad Stage, The Mondavi Center, Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center, and Chamber Music Northwest. It staged the first ever opera performance on The High Line and has mounted its immensely popular, annual, interdisciplinary Drag Extravaganza in iconic venues such as National Sawdust and Roulette nearly every year since its founding.
Heartbeat has been hailed across the national and international press, including in four features in The New York Times, in stories on CNN and the BBC, and in an ALL ARTS/WNET documentary: “Bracing—icy vodka shots of opera instead of ladles of cream sauce” (New York Times), “elegant and boisterous” (New Yorker), “fascinating and gorgeous” (Observer), “ingenious” (Wall Street Journal), “gripping and entertaining” (Opernwelt), "a flatout triumph" (Opera News).
Heartbeat has collaborated with organizations such as Atlas DIY and A BroaderWay to bring opera education to young people in NYC. It is represented by the world-class artist agency Opus 3 Artists.
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Shadi G.
Shadi G. is a theatre and film director, choreographer and writer from Tehran, Iran based in New York City. She graduated from Yale’s School of Drama with an MFA in Directing. She has directed Threshold of Brightness (BMP), Memorial (NYU Tisch) Banned, (Broadway Bound), Glimpse (Rattlestick Theatre), Mother Courage (Hunter College), Fen (Columbia University), Untitled (Rattlestick Theatre), Lucretia (HERE), Death of Yazdgerd, Titus Andronicus (Yale School of Drama), and The Slow Sound of Snow (Yale Cabaret).
As Co-Artistic Director of the 2017 Yale Summer Cabaret, Shadi co-curated a four-play season entitled Canon Balle, directing Ellen McLaughlin’s Trojan Women, and LEAR by Young Jean Lee. As an assistant director, Shadi worked with Evan Yionoulis at Yale Repertory Theatre on Cymbeline.
In 2019, Shadi co-founded the Emruz Festival. She co-curated a six-day festival of theater, music and short films created by Iranian artists. Later, in the summer of 2019 Shadi co-curated a series of play readings written by immigrant playwrights, named Immigrant MixFest at the Atlantic Theater Company. Her new play, TOSCA TEHRAN, was one of five plays at the festival. She is one of the co-founders of Peydah Theatre Company.
Shadi is a 2016 Paul and Daisy Soros Fellow. She was recognized as an SDC Student Director Initiative Honorable Mention in the 2013 Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival. Shadi was the directing fellow in 2018-2019 at Rattlestick Playwrights Theater and the winner of the Robert L.B. Tobin Director-Designer Showcase for Opera America in 2019.
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Emma Jaster
Emma Jaster has worked her entire life in theater, dance, opera, and immersive live events. She started onstage with her father, mime Mark Jaster, at the age of 6, studied at the Lecoq school in Paris, and went on to work with U-Theatre in Taiwan, the Natanakairali Institute in India, Robert Wilson’s Watermill Center, and the Grotowski-based Teatr Zar in Poland among others. With Heartbeat Opera, she has served as Movement Director for 9 productions since 2016 including Breathing Free, Lady M, Fidelio, La Susanna, Butterfly, and Dido & Aeneas. Other Movement Director credits include: Theater for a New Audience: Remember This: The Lesson of Jan Karski | Shakespeare Theater: Our Town | Juilliard: Agrippina | Constellation Chor/Marisa Michaelson: Desire/Divinity Project, Sappho Fragments | Center Stage: Stones in His Pockets | Theater J: Our Class, Falling Out of Time.
Jaster often directs original devised works with performers from around the world, focusing on the cross-cultural and humanizing potential of performance. She has been granted artist residencies at HERE Arts and BAX in NYC, ODC and Studio210 in San Francisco, and artist fellowships from the DCCAH and the Asian Cultural Council. She has taught at IDEO, MoMA, Cornell Tech, University of Louisville, and Georgetown University, where she is a core member of the Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics. With The Lab, Jaster works with international artists at the intersection of politics and performance and develops courses to share the skills of the stage for the sake of diplomacy and advocacy.
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Heartbeat Opera’s Spring Festival is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the city council.
Additional support for the Festival is provided by a grant from Opera America.
Heartbeat Opera is also proud to be supported by the Howard Gilman Foundation.
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For further information, press tickets, photos, and to arrange interviews,
please contact Aleba & Co. at 212/206-1450 or aleba@alebaco.com.





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