Opera singer Larry Clawson peruses the score of Tosca. Practice is a near-constant activity in the days leading up to opening night.
Opera singer Larry Clawson peruses the score of Tosca. Practice is a near-constant activity in the days leading up to opening night.

โ€œDonโ€™t try it unless you plan on being addicted,โ€ says opera singer Larry Clawson. Heโ€™s talking about attending the opera.

โ€œItโ€™s multi-media,โ€ he says. โ€œWhere else could you go get a live orchestra, sets, chorus and sometimes even dancing?โ€ In the case of Nevada Operaโ€™s upcoming Tosca, he points out that audience members also get to learn some Italian. (The lines are sung in Italian, and English translations are projected above the stage.)

The silver-haired, goateed Clawson, rehearsing for the first act, doesnโ€™t match the stereotype of the imposing male opera singer with the deep-as-a-grave voice. Heโ€™s a broad, tall guy, but as he walks down the stairway of an almost finished, gothic-looking set, the grandiose scale of the opera makes him smaller.

Clawson sings in a conversationally-paced baritone. (Technically, heโ€™s a lyric/baritone, a tenor minus the lower registers. โ€œIโ€™m bi-sectional,โ€ he jokes.) His delivery is confident, and he rolls his Rโ€™s (sometimes luxuriously, sometimes humorously) and stretches out the Italian Oโ€™s as he practices his aria. He plays the sacristanโ€””kind of an aging priest/ custodian,โ€ he explainsโ€”in the tragic storyโ€™s only comedic role, and his concerned expression brightens accordingly as the music lilts.

Clawson, 57, trained as a singer in college and has sung with choruses and in churches all over the West. As most singers do, he worked in other professions to support the music habit. Heโ€™s been a Bible teacher and a real estate agent.

Heโ€™s retired now, which is more convenient, given the productionโ€™s demanding schedule. A recent weekday rehearsal lasted about 10 hours.

Clawson hasnโ€™t formally studied acting, but he says opera singers work hard on developing acting skills in an effort to meet the expectations of operaโ€™s modern audiences.

โ€œIn the third act, Iโ€™ll be the jailer. Iโ€™ve only got 31 notes to sing, but itโ€™s a presence,โ€ he says. โ€œYou can convey an awful lot through your facial expressions and body language.โ€

Acting is also one of the tools the Nevada Opera uses to try to attract a broader audience.

โ€œAudiences today want entertainment,โ€ he says. โ€œWhere the [actors] donโ€™t weigh 800 pounds, and they want the gal and the guy to be under 90 if theyโ€™re going to be love interestsโ€”and they want you to act. You just have to be everything.

โ€œThere are four deaths in it, two by suicide, one by murder, and one by firing squad. Itโ€™s like the news at night. It has a lot of trauma and a lot of drama. Of course, itโ€™s a love story as well, and itโ€™s rife with politics.โ€

Itโ€™s a solid case for Clawsonโ€™s theory that the opera is a one-stop entertainment shop.

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