Sean Panikkar Profiled on GRMag.com

An Evening with Sean Panikkar

February 7  |  7:30 PM
Betty Van Andel Opera Center

Get tickets here.

Sean Panikkar, star of Opera Grand Rapids upcoming Opera Unlimited recital, was recently profiled on GRMag.com. Read the full article below or on GRMag.com.


SEAN PANIKKAR PREPARES TO PERFORM AT VAN ANDEL OPERA CENTER

By John Kissane
Published on GRMag.com, January 3, 2019

Sean Panikkar treats his body well. Even when on the road, he makes time for running and lifting weights. He cooks his own food. Restaurant fare tends to be unhealthy and, besides, you never know who made it; it’s not worth the risk of getting sick.

After all, he’s an opera singer

He could rehearse three weeks or more for a show. He doesn’t want to put in that time only to miss a performance due to the common cold. Besides, performances pay. Rehearsals don’t.

Panikkar, the son of Sri Lankan immigrants, grew up in small-town Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. His parents made sure he studied music, not because they thought he would pursue it – “they never dreamed that I would,” he said—but because music is vital to a well-rounded education. He took up the violin at three years old and the piano at six. And he began to sing.

In middle school, music teachers told him that not only was he talented, but that he could make a career in music. But that wasn’t his dream. What was? “Owning a construction company. Building design fascinated me,” he said.

He was accepted into the University of Michigan’s engineering program. Hearing that the school offered a fine music program, he applied to that as well – and was accepted. There, he met a beautiful young woman who played piano and trumpet. Too shy to ask her out, he did the next best thing; he asked her to accompany him as he sang. It worked; he later married her.

As he learned to sing, he also learned to hear music. Bloomsburg hadn’t been a hotbed of opera obsessives. “I was in an opera before I saw an opera,” he said. Now, he dived into the form, finding through attending performances that opera was visual, visceral and moving. At a performance of “La Boheme,” he wept.

His interest in engineering dissipated. He decided to give music his all, and his all has led him to world-renowned stages; to incredible colleagues and teachers; and to what is perhaps more impressive than anything to his friends and family: the watchful gaze of Howard Stern and his fellow judges on “America’s Got Talent.”

A YouTube clip shows Panikkar, handsome and serious in a formal shirt and jacket, surrounded by two similarly-attired young men. “Unchained Melody” is the song. If the lighting and smoke don’t tip into schmaltziness, the instrumentation does; still, the power of the three classically-trained voices is undeniable, and the end result is thrilling.

In the classical world, this kind of performance can be frowned upon, as if it’s slumming. But Panikkar points out that, for many people in smaller towns, this may be their only way to encounter a classically-trained voice. And for some, it may be a gateway.

There are fewer gateways than there used to be. While there are still parents encouraging—or enforcing—musical education, school music programs are an easy-to-cut line item in badly-strained budgets. And in a world in which people frantically refresh apps, there are fewer opportunities to sit still and encounter something deep and beautiful.

Grand Rapids will host one of those opportunities on Thursday, Feb.7 at 7:30 p.m. At the Betty Van Andel Opera Center, Panikkar will sing a solo selection, accompanied by Rohan De Silva, a world-class pianist who has previously played with, among others, Itzhak Perlman.

“Teachers always tell you, ‘sing with your own voice,’” he said. “But some people don’t.” They try to emulate the singers they love. But everyone has different bodies, and thus different instruments. Imperfect instruments, at times, which he loves; in those imperfections, he can hear the beautiful moment in which a singer’s passion has carried him or her away.

Those who wish to hear Panikkar’s own passion, sung in a voice inarguably his own, are encouraged to set down their phones, step up into the venue and lose themselves to the music.

Tickets for the performance are available through Opera Grand Rapids.

*Photo by Kristina Sherk

 

OGR Takes Part in MLK Commemorative Celebration

Opera Grand Rapids was delighted to share the stage with some of Grand Rapids finest leaders and keynote speaker, Dr. David Stovall, at the 33rd Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commemorative Celebration. Hosted by Davenport University, Grand Valley State University, and Grand Rapids Community College, the program took place at Fountain Street Church on Monday, January 21st and was a Free Public Event. The Opera Grand Rapids chorus alongside Michigan-local baritone, Mark Rucker, took the stage to close the program with performances of “Va Pensiero” (Psalm 137) from Verdi’s Nabucco, “He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands, “ and the event’s signature anthem, “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”

ALEXANDER P. STOFFAN: Surgeon and Opera Lover

Opera Grand Rapids Board Member Spotlight

Where are you originally from?
North Muskegon, Michigan

What do you do for a living?
I’m a surgeon, specializing in general surgery, trauma and surgical ICU.

Hobbies?
I enjoy playing the piano, singing, cooking, reading, playing tennis and currently working on getting back into shape.

Where is your favorite place to travel? Why?
Favorite place is back home on Lake Michigan because of all the memories of home, family and friends, although I am looking forward to an upcoming surgical mission to Peru.

What/Who got you involved with OGR? (Past and Current)
A good friend and neighbor, Cassandra Hayes, told me about the opera and I attended a production of OGR last season.

What do you like about Opera?
I have loved opera since I was young, probably thanks to exposure to it from my grandfather. I love nearly every genre of music but opera is often the highest dedication and lyrical expression of the art, in my opinion.

Who/what brought you into the world of Opera?
My first opera was watching a recording of Handel’s Dido and Aeneas by Purcell in middle school for music class when talking about baroque music. I think I was the only one who liked it! In later years, though, I continue to be inspired by all kinds of opera.

What is your favorite form/piece of art? (symphony, opera, painting, book, etc.) Why?
Different forms of art are different types of expressions and I couldn’t imagine picking one. We are lucky to be surrounded with all kinds of art and seeking to understand and appreciate different forms, styles, etc. makes life rich.

Why do you think it is important to have an Opera company in our community?
Opera is such an amazing art and because of its history and long amount of training required it can be inaccessible to many communities. The more opportunities we, as a community, can bring opera to more people to inspire, entertain and expose people to opera will help keep Grand Rapids a vibrant and stimulating community.

 

Opera Unlimited: Opera Grand Rapids’ new Diversity and Inclusion Series

The Opera Unlimited Series is a collection of special recitals, events, and educational presentations that are designed to broaden the scope of opera opportunities in our community, support music education, and emphasize diversity and inclusion. This unique series of performances was developed following Opera Grand Rapids’ most recent community diversity collaborations: the presentation of the Spanish language opera, Maria de Buenos Aires (2016-17) and the I Dream premiere performance at the annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commemorative Celebration (2017-18).

Presentations in the Opera Unlimited Series that have taken place already this season include an appearance by Opera Grand Rapids at the Grand Rapids Hispanic Festival (August 2018), a Season Kick-off Party highlighting local talent (September 2018), and 2 Masterclass presentations by Opera Grand Rapids’ Artistic Director, James Meena.

Below, Maestro Meena shares why this series was created and what makes it important for West Michigan.

Why was the Opera Unlimited Series created and how can it impact our community?

Opera Grand Rapids is a mission driven organization. This translates into our creating opportunities to engage all of our citizens through the power of music and opera. By using the universal qualities of music and opera, Opera Grand Rapids can bring people from diverse backgrounds together for a shared, positive experience. This is good for Opera Grand Rapids and good for our community. This is not about selling tickets, it is about transforming the way we interact with the public, and by our opera company playing an appropriate role in building a civil society for all residents of Greater Grand Rapids.

How have your broad experiences shaped your ideas for inclusion through music and opera in particular?

I have always believed in the universality of music, and that organizations like Opera Grand Rapids underestimate their power to go beyond the confines of selling tickets and preaching to the choir, as it were. The experience I have had which reinforced this the most was when I was first at the national symphony in Taiwan, a ballet performance of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring. The orchestra was Chinese, the ballet company, French Canadian, and here I was, the American conductor who spoke no Chinese and could only communicate with the dancers in French. Yet, when the music began, we all understood each other completely – music and dance transcended verbal communication.

Check out these Up-coming Opera Unlimited Performances!


Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commemorative Celebration Performance

Monday, January 21, 2019 | 6:00 PM | Fountain Street Church

Local opera treasure Mark Rucker and the Opera Grand Rapids Chorus will perform to close this year’s annual event, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commemorative Celebration at Fountain Street Church, with “Va Pensiero” (Psalm 137) from Verdi’s Nabucco, “He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands, and the event’s signature anthem, “Lift Every Voice and Sing”.


An Evening with Sean Panikkar

Thursday, February 7, 2019 | 7:30 PM | Betty Van Andel Opera Center

Hailed by Opera News as a performer who “employs [his voice] with maximum dramatic versatility,” American tenor of Sri Lankan Heritage, Sean Panikkar, has graced stages in both the United States and Europe. Following his riveting performance as a member of opera cross-over sensation, Forte, at Opera Grand Rapids’ 50th Anniversary Night with the Opera gala, Sean will be returning to Grand Rapids to perform a recital accompanied by world-renowned pianist Rohan de Silva.