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Opera Librettist Mark Campbell

Mark Campbell

The Librettist

Mark Campbell (Thtr'75)

Itā€™s a rare thing to be a full-time librettist today. Mark Campbell (Thtrā€™75) would like to make it less so.Ģż

ā€œOne reason I mentor is to find other writers to help do all this work ā€” itā€™s getting hard to keep up,ā€ he says with a laugh at a favorite wine bar in his Manhattan neighborhood.

One of the best-known librettists in American opera, Campbell has written the words for more than 15 operas, including Silent Night, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 2012. His newest, with music composed by Paul Moravec, is based on Stephen Kingā€™s novel The Shining and premieres thisĢżMay.Ģż

Campbellā€™s entry to opera was roundabout. His family was somewhat musical but never exposed him to opera. Initially he didnā€™t take to it either. But he also didnā€™t care for the self-promotion necessary for an acting career. After graduating from CU, he began writing lyricsĢżforĢżmusicals.ĢżDespiteĢżearly success, including an award from Stephen Sondheim, Campbell was wary about where contemporary musicals were heading.Ģż

ā€œI started watching opera and seeing the potential of the form,ā€ he says. ā€œAnd I thought: ā€˜this is where I want to be.ā€™ā€

In 2004 he teamed with composer John Musto on his first full-length opera, Volpone, which the Washington Post deemed ā€œa masterpiece.ā€ Not bad, for a start.

It took him a while to give up his day job in advertising, but he finally did at his husbandā€™s encouragement, shortly after Silent Night, written with composer Kevin Puts, won the Pulitzer. Heā€™s kept busy since: Four of his operas debut this year, with four others scheduled for 2017, including one about Steve Jobs for the Santa Fe Opera.

Opera may be old, but itā€™s thriving. According to Opera America, professional opera companies in North America have produced 950 new operatic works since 1900. More than half are from the 21st century.

Still, misconceptions abound. Since itā€™s opera, people ask him, does he write everything in Italian? (No, only in English.)

Last year, Campbell returned to CU for the first time since graduation to work with students.Ģż

He says heā€™s heartened by CUā€™s New Opera Workshop (CU NOW), one of few places for aspiring librettists to train.

Always he emphasizes to students why the audience is there.

ā€œWe go to Sweeney Todd because we could never commit that kind of revenge in our own lives, and we can never fall in love as intensely as Tosca does,ā€ he says.

That means distilling the story down to the charactersā€™ passions and ambitions, making them bigger than life for song.

At CU, he says, ā€œI learned where a story can go and how to examine the arc of a character. One thing I hope Iā€™m doing in my writing is helping Ģżbreak down the publicā€™s perceptions of contemporary opera as pretentious and boring. Like many of my colleagues, I care about my audienceĢżabove everything else.ā€

Photo courtesy Mark Campbell