NEW YORK —
Soprano Renée Fleming sauntered onstage in a
shimmering long-sleeve gown, perched on a chair and started to sing.
اضافة اعلان
For a renowned performer decades into her career, it might have
been an uneventful Wednesday evening at the Shed, the expansive performance
space in Hudson Yards. But after 13 months in a pandemic, a sea of faces was a
novel sight for the opera star and the trio accompanying her.
“Wow, applause!” she remarked after finishing the meditative
opening number. “Very exciting.”
Exciting, indeed — and no mean feat to pull off.
After the Shed and other flexible New York performance spaces
lobbied to let audiences in, it got the go-ahead to open its doors for a live
event April 2, after 386 days of shutdown. Fleming’s April 21 show there,
before a limited audience, was the fourth performance in a series co-sponsored
by NY PopsUp, a public-private program aimed at reviving the arts.
While the 85-minute show — a mix of classical, jazz and popular
music — went off without a hitch, it demonstrated that mounting indoor events
in New York at this stage of the pandemic will still be time-consuming,
unpredictable and expensive.
To get Fleming and the musicians onstage involved dozens of
hours of careful planning; hundreds of dollars in safety equipment like plastic
face shields and hand sanitizer; and nearly $2,500 in coronavirus tests. All
this for drastically reduced ticket revenue.
And while she may have been the headliner, pulling the show off
took a large cast of behind-the-scenes figures, some of whom hadn’t worked
regularly in the building for months.
Monday: 2 days to showtime
In normal times, the staff in a preshow morning production
meeting might be discussing last-minute program changes or the status of ticket
sales.
On April 19, it was where and when Renée Fleming would get her
rapid
COVID tests.
She would arrive to rehearse at 1:30 p.m. the next day, the
staff was told, and head to the sixth floor to the smaller Kenneth Griffin
Theater, where her dressing room was located. There, she would meet a medical
technician who would administer a nasal swab.
Alex Poots, the Shed’s CEO, had one big announcement to share
with the staff. The venue had not received state permission to expand the size
of the audience. In the days leading up to the concert, the Shed had asked to
double capacity to 300, which would still be only a fraction of the roughly
1,200 people the McCourt, its largest performance space, can seat.
But the state had essentially told them: Not so fast.
The concert had sold out in two hours. Audience members who
secured tickets had already received the first of four emails explaining the
coronavirus protocols they would need to follow.
Gone was the chance to rush to a concert after work and plop
down into your seat as the curtain rose. Before they entered the Shed,
concertgoers would need to check one of three boxes: show proof of full
vaccination; demonstrate a negative Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) test taken
within 72 hours of the event; or have taken a rapid antigen test, which is less
reliable, within six hours of showtime.
This was such a jumble of rules and dates that the
front-of-house staff would be provided cheat sheets for the day of the show.
Tuesday: 1 day to showtime
Guitarist Bill Frisell was surrounded by piles of sheet music —
some Handel, some Stephen Foster — laid out on the dining room table and the
living room floor of his Brooklyn home. He was writing out his parts in pencil,
referencing a list of songs that Fleming had sent to him, bassist Christian
McBride and pianist Dan Tepfer.
Pandemic restrictions meant only one in-person rehearsal before
the day of the show, and Frisell was in study mode. He had played alongside
Fleming before — they had recorded an album in 2005 — but never alongside
Tepfer or McBride.
“It adds a level of stress to the event, no question,” Fleming
said. “We still have a lot to figure out in terms of how we’re arranging
everything.”
As Frisell was reviewing the sheet music to Cole Porter’s “Down
in the Depths (on the Ninetieth Floor),” Fleming was up on East 57th Street,
visiting her longtime hair stylist, Michael Stinchcomb, at Vartali Salon.
Later that afternoon, Fleming arrived at the Shed for a
three-hour rehearsal, where she and the musicians discussed harmonies, tempos
and spots for improvised solos.
“A full rehearsal the day before a show?” McBride said. “That’s
a lot in the jazz world.”
Wednesday: 11 hours to showtime
José Rivera pointed at the space between two clusters of seats. “From
here to here, it’s 2m-1,” he announced, bending to scrutinize his yellow tape
measure. “From here to here is 2m-1/2.”
That made the grade: According to state rules, the distance
between audience members had to be over 2m.
He and another facilities employee, Steven Quinones, had been
arranging the chairs for some two hours, ensuring that the setup matched a
detailed paper diagram.
“And see, this is the big aisle that people walk through, so it’s
3m, 13cm,” Rivera continued, raising his voice to be heard over the whirring of
a third colleague zooming around the room on an industrial floor scrubber.
Five floors up, Josh Phagoo, an operations engineer, checked up
on one of the Shed’s most important technologies for COVID safety: the Heating,
Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) system. Massive air handlers and
chillers in the building’s engine room whirred constantly as Phagoo made sure
the machines that keep the air at roughly 21c and the humidity at 50 percent were
functional.
On the stage itself, the first piano notes of the day were
vibrating through the air, up to the McCourt’s 35m ceiling.
Stephen Eriksson had arrived at 11 am to tune the gleaming
Steinway grand piano. While he said his business had disappeared for the first
four months of the pandemic, now he is busier than ever.
Wednesday: 3 hours to showtime
Within 15 minutes after arriving at the Shed, Fleming — who was
scheduled for her second vaccine in New York the morning after the show — got
the rapid COVID test in her dressing room. Negative.
Afterward, she rehearsed onstage with the musicians, their
instruments positioned more than 6 feet apart from one another, while an audio
crew member in a mask and a face shield flitted around them, making sure
everything was working properly.
The six-person crew working the show was slightly smaller than
usual, according to Pope Jackson, the Shed’s production manager. Everywhere
they went, they brought along what Jackson referred to as a “COVID cart,” which
contained a stock of masks, gloves, sanitation supplies and brown paper bags,
which the musicians union requires so that players have a clean place to put
their masks while they perform.
Downstairs, a staff of eight security guards had their nostrils
swabbed to make sure that they tested negative.
This was the moment before a concert where the theater was alive
with preparation and nerves — a bustle missing in the city during the first
year of the pandemic.
“It’s like doing the electric slide, the moonwalk and the
bachata all at once,” Jackson said of the minutes before showtime. “But when
the lights go up, it all fades away.”
Showtime
The front-of-house staff had only 20 minutes to review the
audience members’ IDs and COVID-related documents, take their temperatures and
show them to their seats.
Icy gusts of wind just outside the doors weren’t making things
any easier.
But by 8:05 pm, 150 people had settled into their precisely
placed seats, able to snap a photo of the QR code on the arms of the chairs to
see the concert program.
In between performances of the jazz classic “Donna Lee” and “Touch
the Hand of Love,” which Fleming had once recorded with Yo-Yo Ma, the artists
chatted onstage about what they’d been doing with their lives for the past 13
months.
“Wishing this pandemic would be over,” McBride said.
Tepfer said he had been improving a technological tool that made
it easier for musicians to play in unison over the internet — a tool that he
and Fleming had used to rehearse together virtually.
Frisell had not performed for an indoor audience since the
beginning of the pandemic. “This is such a blessing,” he said.
The show ended with a standing ovation, and then the musicians
played an encore: “Hard Times” by Stephen Foster, which Fleming described as a
song that tends to resonate in times of crisis.
“Hard times,” she sang, “come again no more.”
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