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An Evening of Opera and Shakespeare

By Abigail Bates ('26)

Houghton University’s Lyric Theatre will perform “An Evening of Opera and Shakespeare” in the CFA Recital Hall both this Friday and Saturday.

Beginning at 7:30 p.m., the show will include excerpts from plays, operas and even a few musicals. Emily Quick (‘25) explained that although Prof. Amanda Cox is Lyric Theatre’s director, several scenes have been led by guest directors. Quick has collaborated on scenes with Rachael McVeigh (Class of ‘23), and professors Dr. Kimberly Prins Moeller (Associate Professor of Voice) and Prof. Luke Odgen (Graduate Music Coordinator and Part-time Music Faculty).

Quick explained that while people tend to equate Shakespeare and opera to the words “boring” and “dull,” the directors and cast members have tried to make the performance fun for all audience members.

“In reimagining some of the iconic scenes in this show, we’ve incorporated our own twists; in addition to the expected drama,” she said, “we have fun science experiments, bubbles, and no shortage of comedic moments.”

Warren Torraca (‘26) explained that cast members have multiple roles. He will be playing scenes as Lysander from “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, Beadle Bamford from “Sweeney Todd”, Benedict from “Much Ado About Nothing” and Malvolio from “Twelfth Night”. Despite how fast they had to prepare for a show in the first month of the semester, Torraca is excited to be able to act in a variety of different roles.

“Each scene,” he said, “is a new moment in a story; Professor Cox also allowed us to not be bound by the classical interpretation of each scene.”

Melanie Grace, a senior graduating in ‘27, said her favorite roles—out of many she’s performing—are Beatrice from “Much Ado About Nothing”, Hansel in “Hansel and Gretel”, the third witch in “Macbeth” and what she considers “the silliest role I’ve ever had the pleasure of doing”: the “little boy old man fairy spirit” from “The Magic Flute”.

“For me, fleshing out every character was probably the most difficult but always some of the most fun,” she said.

Grace has enjoyed acting alongside her fellow cast members in many long rehearsals, and watching how “everyone tries different things with their characters.” She disclosed that they have all been working hard to make their many characters seem like normal people that someone “might talk to today, [with] just a little bit of a different way of speaking.”

“Each character has such depth and motivation behind their actions that, in most cases, has been building over the course of the show.” Evelyn Simanowski (‘25) said that because they are only performing short scenes, “[their] job as performers has been to bring [out] as much of that developed character … Bringing the characters out of their original context and still making them real people with believable stories has been a challenge, but one that has only made me grow as an actress.”

Simanowski is performing Rosalinde from “Die Fledermaus”, Beatrice from “Much Ado About Nothing” and Sibella from “A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder”. She is excited to share all the different scenes the cast has been preparing with their audiences.

“One of my favorite things about live theatre,” Simanowski said, “is that it’s a collaborative art form that requires the collaboration of the audience with the performers, not just between performers.”

Simanowski added that “the scenes that we’re presenting are so deeply human that they really bring the art down to earth and are relatable to everyone. They remind us what it’s like to laugh, and cry, and really just feel deeply.”

Tickets to the show are $5, and are available online at “Tickets: An Evening of Opera and Shakespeare” or at the door. An ASL interpretation will be available at the Friday performance. Contact Amanda Cox (amanda.cox@houghton.edu) with any questions. ★

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Campus News

Lambein’s Got Talent

By Isabella Bratton ('26)

Lambein’s Got Talent will take place on Saturday, Feb. 17, from 8-9 p.m. in the CFA Recital Hall.

11 Lambein Hall residents will be showcasing their unique talents with the potential to win up to $100. At the end of the show, the audience will have the opportunity to choose a winner to receive the prize. 

Senior Nuri Park (‘24), the Assistant Resident Director, explained that they took the name “Lambein’s Got Talent” from both the famous show “America’s Got Talent” and “Britain’s Got Talent.” The talent show was started last 2022-2023 school year by the male Resident Assistants (RA) of Lambein.

All of Lambein’s RAs have been involved in the preparation process in different ways; advertising, emailing, hosting and judging.

Park said that, although the audience will be choosing the winner, the RAs have a part in making sure it’s a fair competition. 

“The RA’s,” Park stated, “mediate the votes to make sure there is no audience bias, but the audience ultimately decides the winner.”

The performers will provide a wide variety of entertainments for the audience, such as singing, poetry recitation, dancing, playing instruments, a weather forecast and more. Park mentioned an exciting act called “Master of balance,” although he wouldn’t divulge the details about it. At last year’s show, Junior Ethan McCarthy (‘25) remarked that groups played kazoos, the piano and danced.

“Guys are excited to show off to the school,” McCarthy, a judge for the event, said, “we have put a lot of work into this, and it will be a fun night.”

It won’t just be one person walking away with $100. There is a second place award of $50 and third place will receive $25.

Students are highly encouraged to attend, and the hosts are sure audience members will walk away entertained. 

“I think the campus needs an event where people can just have fun and relax,” Park stated. ★

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Campus News

Senior Recital: Lucas Myers

By Olivia Kleinau ('24)

On Monday Jan. 29 at 8 p.m., Lucas Myers (‘24) will perform his Senior Recital in the Center For the Arts Recital Hall. 

Myers, a pianist, explained that most of his preparation is a mix of practice as well as studying music scores. He will be performing a broad variety of pieces at his recital, including works by Ludwig van Beethoven, Claude Debussy, Johannes Brahms, Robert Schumann, Frédéric Chopin and Philip Glass. Myers’ pieces include aspects of German Romanticism, French Impressionism and Contemporary Minimalism. 

​​Fellow piano major, Katrina Kauffman (‘26) shared, “I’m super excited for his upcoming recital, I have always really admired his playing. He is definitely someone I look up to as also a piano major.”

Myers shared his excitement for this upcoming recital as it is his first real attempt in creating a themed recital. He will be combining piano repertoire with other art forms to create an overarching storyline tying all the pieces together. The theme Myers’ chose for the recital centers around the idea of rebirth. 

The recital itself will center around the theme of rebirth, and will explore the way in which we as people often go through an internal death while going through times of intense hardship only to be reborn again,

“[The recital] will explore the way in which we as people often go through an internal death while going through times of intense hardship only to be reborn again,” Myers explained, “finding a deeper capacity for love and joy as well as a heightened capacity to appreciate the beauty of life when we reemerge into the land of the living.”

Myers also stated that he finished his coursework last semester, giving more time to prepare for this upcoming recital. Last semester he was taking 19 credits on top of commuting from Rochester, NY to Houghton University. He had to find as many pockets available in his schedule to practice as he could manage, and on top of that make sure he was intentional in balancing heavier practice sessions with periods of rest on the weekends. One benefit of the commute was that it gave Myers the opportunity to do a lot of listening and mental practice.

Myers expressed that overall he is, “super pleased with the way it is shaping up.” ★