The Center for the Performing Arts at Penn State recognizes women in the arts. The center's 2018–19 season features women of all ages, cultures, genres and disciplines in leadership and supporting-artist roles. The scheduled events represent the success women artists and allies have found through determination, despite hardship and with the help of supporters. When you support women artists, you recognize their challenges, validate their talents and help them to advance their achievements. Learn more about “I Am Woman.”
If opera star Isabel Leonard’s life were to be captured in a song, it would require many verses to sing it.
In the past, the multiple Grammy Award-winning vocalist has performed a number of “pants roles”—a woman vocalist portraying a young male character, such as Cherubino in “Le Nozze di Figaro” and Ruggiero in “Alcina.” During the Metropolitan Opera’s 2018–19 season, she throws herself into the minds of a few of opera’s majorly flawed females— Marnie (in a character case study of the same name earlier adapted by Alfred Hitchcock), Mélisande (in “Pelléas et Mélisande”) and Blanche de la Force (in “Dialogues des Carmélites”).
Despite the accolades heaped upon her by opera critics, Leonard’s high mezzo won’t be constrained. The self-described perfectionist also sings on some of the world’s most prestigious stages with lauded symphonies and conductors. But the mother in her has also steered her to sing with Murray Monster on “Sesame Street”; and the humanist in her to sing the praises of Ruth Bader Ginsberg, a frequent Met patron (“She’s truly a force to be reckoned with,” Leonard told Vogue magazine).
Leonard’s “gorgeous, bright voice; strong musical instincts; and exemplary acting” (The Classical Review) have brought her loyal new fans among theatergoers, as well as among her fellow performing artists. In 2017, Leonard released “Alma Española,” a collection of songs in Spanish featuring guitarist Sharon Isbin. In December, Boston Symphony Orchestra released on DVD “Bernstein at 100: The Centennial Celebration at Tanglewood,” followed by an anniversary tour.
Leonard will perform with the Czech National Symphony Orchestra, led by conductor John Mauceri, in “100 Years of Leonard Bernstein” Feb. 27 at Eisenhower Auditorium. The program will celebrate the American composer’s wide-ranging musical contributions to twentieth-century classical, film and stage canons.
In a Center for the Performing Arts interview, the native New Yorker took time to provide insight into pants roles, role models and her most intensely private role — motherhood.
Question: You often speak of strong, influential women throughout your life and career (your mother, vocal trainers Christine Jordanoff from Duquesne University and Edith Berg) who provided career and life tips to ensure your success. What was the most pointed and influential piece of advice, life lesson or training technique to your career?
Isabel Leonard: There really is not one piece of advice. I think it creates so much pressure to think there may be that one life lesson that we need to hear or learn in order to be able to succeed. Life has so much to teach, and lessons come at different times and differently for every individual person. You may or may not be ready for a lesson that is in front of you in a moment, and it isn’t until later that it dawns on you what you learned. Experience is its own teacher. The best advice that I can deign to give is to make sure, as a singer, that you have a solid technique.