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The Review Is In

Where's the magic? Stellar singing can't redeem HGO's mundane Magic Flute

Joseph Campana
Jan 31, 2015 | 4:26 pm

Everyone wants to be over the moon.

When the iconic Queen of the Night, in Houston Grand Opera’s production of Mozart’s The Magic Flute, appeared beneath a large crescent moon, I asked myself, “Am I over the moon?" Sadly, I was not. In spite of some fine singing, this Magic Flute was less magic than mundane.

Fine singing usually makes up for nearly anything—a lackluster production, say, or clumsy acting, both of which afflicted this performance. And yet here it could not.

When the iconic Queen of the Night appeared beneath a large crescent moon, I asked myself, “Am I over the moon?" Sadly, I was not.

Magic Flute poses a test for a company. It is a greatly beloved, often-mystifying, often-hilarious, celestial wonder of an opera. Every company should stage a magnificent Magic Flute making audiences leave lighter than they entered and, at a minimum, humming, whistling, or failing to singing irrepressible classic moments, like the Queen of the Night’s aria or Papageno and Papagena’s charming birdsong duet. Infectious joy seemed to have opening night off.

Much of the problem was in the timing. Conductor Robert Spano offered a sensitive interpretation of the score and created great balance, preventing the orchestra from playing over the singers, which happens too often at the HGO. But the insistently lethargic tempo—from the overture all the way to the bitter end—created monotony. Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde from just a few years ago felt shorter, and the second half of this Magic Flute left me longing for the five-hour Götterdämmerung to come.

The choice to stage The Magic Flute in Jeremy Sams’ English translation, rather than the original German, created a series of unexpected problems. I am not, myself, a purist about such matters. Companies seem to be experimenting with translation of late, especially for an opera like The Magic Flute, which contains so much spoken dialogue. And yet the timing of the language and the music never quite seemed quite aligned, which made the sluggish tempo more pronounced.

Also, although perhaps it should not, weak acting often feels forgivable through the veil of another language, without which this Magic Flute too often felt like high school theater.

Voices to admire

There were, however, many voices to admire. David Portillo made a fine HGO debut as a sweet and charming Tamino and paired particularly well with Nicole Heaston’s powerful and affecting Pamina. The pairs in the opera worked beautifully. The sweet concord of Michael Sumuel’s Papageno and Pureum Jo’s Papagena made for marvelous moments in spite of the ill-advised hamming up of the disguised Papagena, whose matronly lunch-lady left much to be desired.

The pairs in the opera worked beautifully.

Sumuel was a wonderful Papgeno. One of the pleasures of the last few seasons at the HGO has been to watch this singer flourish, first as an HGO Studio Art and then in powerful subsequent performances in Don Giovanni, Die Fledermaus, and La bohème. Bravo, HGO, for nurturing such talent.

With respect to singing, some of what should be the most celestial moments seemed at sixes and sevens. The Magic Flute features two threesome—three ladies in the employ of the Queen of the Night and three Spirits who serve as guides. The ladies struggled to sing together and the spirits often strained, introducing unintended discord into the evening.

This is an opera structured around oppositions between good and evil, reason and sensuality, and men and women, which are embodied by Sarastro and the Queen of the Night. Morris Ray’s powerful Sarastro suffers from the odd nasal quality he brought to his previous HGO performances in Showboat and Don Giovanni while Kathryn Lewak proved a compromised Queen of the Night.

This was, in part, a consequence of production choices. Bob Crowley’s costuming made her a strange and unpleasing creature of the night. She looked like a peacock-blue amalgam of Stevie Nicks, Elvira, and a zombie, a clumsiness echoed in the odd costuming of her ladies who made their magic with bizarre feather-dusters. The second of the Queen of the Night’s greatest vocal moments, when she soars into the opera’s iconic coloratura passage, felt accurate but forced. Perhaps this resulted from the direction to manhandle her daughter throughout the scene, a choice that robbed this moment of celestial music.

Perhaps the greatest flaw of this production rests not in its identifiable flaws but in the fact that it felt merely adequate. The Magic Flute cracks open the walls of the ordinary world to reveal something mystical beneath: an ancient struggle between light and darkness plays out as lovers defeat monsters and endure brutal trials. Where was the sense of transport?

This is a question worth asking about the current season. A very fine Otello preceded a lackluster Cosí fan tutte and a recycled Madame Butterfly viewers saw, with the same Cio-Cio San, just a few years ago. Not all hopes can be pinned on the likely-magnificent Wagner to come.

After all, a Magic Flute without much magic is still just a lump of wood.

Carolyn Sproule, Michael Sumuel, Megan Samarin and D'Ana Lombard in a scene from The Magic Flute.

Houston Grand Opera HGO The Magic Flute January 2015 Carolyn Sproule as Third Lady, Michael Sumuel as Papageno, Megan Samarin as Second Lady and D'Ana Lombard as First Lady
Photo by © Lynn Lane
Carolyn Sproule, Michael Sumuel, Megan Samarin and D'Ana Lombard in a scene from The Magic Flute.
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Get inspired

Noted Houston street artist paints vibrant new mural at downtown venue

Jef Rouner
Dec 15, 2025 | 4:29 pm
GONZO247 poses in front of his new mural, "Houston is Inspired" inside Hobby Center
Photo courtesy of Hobby Center for the Performing Arts
GONZO247 poses in front of his new mural, "Houston is Inspired" inside Hobby Center

Visitors to the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts can now see an incredible new mural by one of Houston's most iconic street artists.Mario Enrique Figueroa, Jr., known as Gonzo247, debuted his piece, "Houston is Inspired" on Friday, December 12.

“This piece is all about capturing the energy that makes Houston, Houston," said the artist in a statement. "It’s that raw, vibrant hustle — the music, the culture, the stories we’ve been telling for generations. I wanted to create something that pulls people in, gets them hyped for what they’re about to experience. Every color, every shape, every detail is telling a story, a vibe. This ain’t just a mural or a piece of art — it’s a journey. It's about the grind, the growth, and the inspiration we pass on to each other, on and off the stage.”

The piece is called "Houston is Inspired," after the program at Hobby meant to showcase local performers by offering them week-long residencies on a prestigious stage. This season includes CJ Emmons's one-man comedy musical show I'm Freaking Talented; a rhythmic interactive storytelling experience called Our Road Home by Jakari Sherman; and Lavanya Rajagopalan's combination of music, dance and verse, Kāvya: Poetry in Motion. Information about all three shows, including ticket prices and availability, can be found at TheHobbyCenter.org.

The last show (debuting May 1) was a particular inspiration to Gonzo247. Viewers may notice a pair of hands in a traditional Indian dance pose, a direct reference to Rajagopalan's show.

The Houston is Inspired program was launched launched in the 2023-2024 season. In addition to the residency in Zilkha Hall, artists are given a $20,000 stipend for production and marketing costs. It is now a permanent fixture of the Hobby season. Applicants for future seasons can submit here.

Known for his original "Houston is Inspired" mural in downtown's Market Square, Gonzo247 has been an active force in Houston art for 30 years, including producing the video series Aerosol Warfare about the street art scene in the 1990s and 2000s as well as founding the Graffiti and Street Art Museum. He also served as the artist liaison for Meow Wolf's Houston installation. If anyone's visual vision is perfect to welcome audience members to shows highlighting homegrown talent, it's him.

“Art’s all about telling stories, but it ain’t just what you see — it’s what you feel," he said. "This piece speaks to the heart of everything we’re about: culture, rhythm, struggle, and triumph. When you walk into the space, you gotta feel the anticipation, the energy building up. That’s what I wanted to capture — the vibe of the whole city, the passion in the work, and that next-level hunger to rise up and create something fresh. It’s like the beat drops, and everything just connects.”

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