Anthony Roth Costanzo censured himself at the Folly Theater on Saturday, December 18, after explaining that he and pianist Bryan Wagorn “met when we were nobodies.” After surveying the largely empty house, the countertenor exclaimed “we’re still nobodies!”
In truth, Constanzo is one of the world’s biggest opera stars. His celebrated turn in the title role of Philip Glass’ Akhnaten is among his prominent achievements. Yet he attracted what appeared to be less than 300 people in his Kansas City debut.
I took advantage of Midwestern indifference by purchasing a discounted front row seat to the concert on Cyber Monday. Positioned just 20 feet from the unamplified countertenor, I considered reaching for the earplugs I always carry with me.
The diminutive Costanzo applied startling heft to his piercing instrument. He and Wagorn repeatedly paused during a gorgeous reading of a Hector Berlioz song cycle to permit echoes of Costanzo’s powerful voice in the piano’s soundboard to reverberate.
A revealing interpretation of George Gershwin’s “The Man I Love” allowed me to hear the standard in an entirely new way. A pair of compositions he recently commissioned in his position as the current Artist-In-Residence of The New York Philharmonic were no less engaging.
Costanzo admitted his feelings are hurt when he’s asked if he’d prefer to have a “real voice.” He demonstrated his facility with voices of all types during a fascinating master class at Grant Recital Hall the next day. Even in the unglamorous setting, Costanzo shone like a certifiable celebrity.