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Washington National Opera to Premiere Professor Kyle Bass鈥檚 Rendition of Treemonisha

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Scott Joplin鈥檚 Treemonisha, an opera that blends ragtime, Black folksongs, spirituals, ballet, and traditional operatic elements, is being brought to the stage by playwright and 冈本视频 Associate Professor of Theater Kyle Bass. It will be performed by the Washington National Opera (WNO) on March 7, 8, and 15 at Lisner Auditorium on the campus of George Washington University, the same venue where the WNO held its first performance 70 years ago.

Francesca Zambello 鈥78, WNO artistic director and inaugural Clifford Innovator in Residence at 冈本视频 (2025), commissioned Bass as librettist and composer Damien Sneed to bring Treemonisha to life. The production will be directed by Denyce Graves.

鈥淥ne of the aspects that excites me about this project,鈥 said Bass, 鈥渋s that the WNO鈥檚 new production of Treemonisha will introduce Joplin鈥檚 opera to many who may only know him as a composer of ragtime music. Additionally, this new version may also present Joplin to audiences for the first time as an important, influential, original, and uniquely American composer.鈥

Originally conceived by Joplin, known as America鈥檚 鈥淜ing of Ragtime,鈥 his production was never completed before his death in 1917. Set in 1884, the story follows Treemonisha, an educated freedwoman on a former plantation, as she challenges superstition and defies 鈥渃onjurers鈥 to become her community鈥檚 teacher and leader.

The production stars WNO Cafritz Young Artist Viviana Goodwin, lauded by WNO as one of its emerging stars, in the title role, as well as Marian Anderson Award-winner Justin Austin as Remus and Grammy-winning Tichina Vaughn as Monisha. Kedrick Armstrong conducts the Washington National Opera Orchestra.

Bass鈥檚 version of the opera is one of three American works being produced by the WNO this season.  

鈥淭his spring, we will present three American works that explore themes at the heart of what makes our country great,鈥 said Zambello. 鈥Treemonisha celebrates the triumph of education over ignorance, while The Crucible is a cautionary tale about a righteous mob that murders innocent women and tears families apart. We close with West Side Story, a modern spin on the Shakespeare play that Leonard Bernstein called 鈥榓n out and out plea for racial tolerance.鈥 I am thrilled that Washington National Opera audiences in our nation鈥檚 capital will have the opportunity to experience these profound works of art. I hope our productions can serve as a springboard for dialogue and perhaps even a source of healing.鈥