
Soprano Nina Evelyn in rehearsal for “To The People Like Us.”
Composer Jorge Sosa
Students from 826 Boston write opera about gentrification
“To The People Like Us,” the newest production from activist opera company White Snake Projects, is a little different from its usual performances. This opera was written by teenagers. Students from 826 Boston’s Youth Literacy Advisory Board conceptualized a production about their experiences with gentrification and wrote the libretto for the powerful premiere this month.
The students, 11 in total ranging from 15 to 18 years old, spent a semester ruminating on the topic of gentrification and the ways it intersects with climate change and development in Boston. Their words will be heard during the production, set to original music by Mexican American composer Jorge Sosa and performed by a quartet of singers and a classical music ensemble.
“I never thought that I’d be able to write an opera,” said Daniela Martinez of East Boston, one of the 826 Boston writers. “It seemed daunting. But, whenever I ran out of words, my writing partners filled in the blanks for me. Creating this opera showed me the brilliance of others firsthand.”
In “To The People Like Us,” audiences will find themselves in a neighborhood much like Roxbury or Dorchester. It’s populated predominantly by Latine residents and other people of color. Apartments and the local bodega are slated to be razed for development and the community is up in arms. In the show, young activists come together to fight these changes.
Sosa tried to channel the words of the young writers when composing the music
that would accompany them. Audiences will hear influences from
electronic music as well as classic Latin rhythms.
“The
story takes place in contemporary times and it’s about these young
activists, young people,” said Sosa. “I tried to create a style of music
that reflects on contemporary popular culture and popular trends.”
Despite
their hard work, the students haven’t yet heard the music and the
libretto together. They won’t until opening night of the show.
“It’s
probably the very first time that many of them have been to an opera,
and their families as well,” Sosa said. “I think it’ll be an exciting
moment to come to the theater and the very first thing that you see is
the one that you wrote.”
“To
The People Like Us,” will run at the Strand Theatre on June 28 for two
performances, at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Admission is pay-what-you-can.
The
production is part of White Snake Projects’ seasonlong focus on climate
change. It’s a timely piece made even more immediate through the words
of local youth who will be most directly impacted by the actions of
today. By giving the 826 students control over the production, its
themes and its words, White Snake Projects is giving them much needed
control and agency over their futures.
“Instead
of us trying to figure out what it is that young audiences want, we
instead decided to give them the opportunity to write whatever they
want, so that they have a stake in in the artistic product and the
artistic outcome,” Sosa said. “It’s an opportunity for them to express
their concerns and express their vision for what art and art activism
can look like.”
ON THE WEB
Learn more at whitesnakeprojects.org/to-the-people-like-us