
Mutual admiration
Eduardo Diazmuoz (right), artistic director of the opera program, and renowned tenor Jerry Hadley are collaborating on a production of Leonard Bernstein’s musical adaptation of Voltaire’s satirical comedy “Candide,” which will be staged Feb. 24-27 in the Tryon Festival Theater, Krannert Center for the Performing Arts.
Photo by Kwame Ross
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If ever there were a pair of creative collaborators who could be accused of having way too much fun working together, it would have to be Eduardo Diazmuñoz and Jerry Hadley.
Diazmuñoz joined the School of Music faculty last fall as artistic director of the UI opera program and director of the New Music Ensemble, bringing with him a musical career that has spanned three decades and a reputation as one of Mexico’s leading composers and orchestral conductors. Hadley, who graduated from the music school in 1977 and has performed extensively worldwide in concert, on stage and in three Grammy Award-winning recordings, is one of this country’s most celebrated operatic tenors.
In residence at the UI since late January, Hadley has been working closely with Diazmuñoz on the UI opera program’s production of Leonard Bernstein’s musical adaptation of Voltaire’s satirical comedy “Candide.” Diazmuñoz is conducting the production’s orchestra; Hadley has traded the role of Candide – which he has recorded and sung in concert many times – for four parts, including the role of the seasoned philosopher Dr. Pangloss. Together, they are collaborating with director Stephen Fiol, choreographer Jean Korder and the student cast of the production, which will be staged Feb. 24-27 in the Tryon Festival Theater, Krannert Center for the Performing Arts.

Battle of wits
Jerry Hadley, left, and Eduardo Diazmuoz tossed anecdotes and one-liners back and forth recently at Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. The two are collaborating on a UI production of “Candide.”
Photo by Kwame Ross
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During a recent break from rehearsals, the pair tossed anecdotes and one-liners back and forth with such ease and familiarity that anyone passing their table at Krannert Center’s Intermezzo may have mistaken the dynamic, dashing duo for a comedy team polishing their latest stand-up routine. Or, perhaps, just a couple of old friends who fit together like a pair of comfortable old loafers.
“The thing is, I’ve always admired this guy,” Diazmuñoz said, gesturing to Hadley.
“See, there’s no accounting for taste,” quipped the singer, before confiding that their relationship – much to their mutual amazement – resembled that of blood brothers, separated at birth. Or, as Hadley phrased it, they seemed to be “reunited for the first time.”
“He’s just such a great musician, and a fantastic tenor,” said Diazmuñoz, trying as best as he could to recover the floor, along with some degree of seriousness … before reaching across the table and playfully inserting his finger in Hadley’s ear.
“Well,” said the consummate performer, not missing a beat, “that’s what did it for me!”
“I’ve always found this odd,” Hadley said, “but people like myself are often treated with a great deal of deference, and that’s always made me crazy because I’m not really that different than I was (before achieving fame in the opera world). Do you know how Webster defines ‘star’? A star is a flaming ball of gas which floats in the darkness and eventually consumes itself.”
After the laugh track stopped again, Hadley said, “The point is, I’m just not wired that way. I take my work very seriously, but I don’t take myself seriously at all.”
“That’s what makes him a giant,” Diazmuñoz interjected.
“And you know, when I first met Eduardo, this man could teach us all about manners and etiquette. He was so sweet and deferential, and finally I had to say, ‘Eduardo, I’m very low maintenance. It’s fine.’ I think we’re having too much fun, actually, don’t you?”
“Well,” said Diazmuñoz, “I’ve learned through my lifetime, and I know Jerry probably has, too, that great people, great artists, great scientists become giants for their simplicity, for their humanity.”
And speaking of giants, blood-brothers Diazmuñoz and Hadley are linked by their membership in a fairly elite musical fraternity. Both enjoyed the privilege of working closely with one of the 20th century’s most notable musical talents, the legendary Bernstein.
Diazmuñoz met Bernstein in 1979, when he was associate conductor of the Mexico City Philharmonic, and Bernstein made a guest appearance with the orchestra. After working together in Mexico, Bernstein invited Diazmuñoz to join him at Tanglewood as a conducting fellow. They maintained their relationship for nearly 10 years through correspondence, occasional dinners and informal get-togethers at various festivals throughout the world. Diazmuñoz conducted many of Bernstein’s compositions over the years, including the Mexican premiere of “Candide” with the National Opera Company in 2002.
Hadley, who has sung the title role of Candide in countless concert performances and on Bernstein’s classic Deutsche Grammophon recording, said he estimates that he has performed in 80 to 100 concerts conducted by Bernstein. And in addition to “Candide,” he made two other recordings with the maestro: “La Boheme” and a Mozart Requiem.
Hadley said his first encounter with Bernstein was not unlike the stuff of dreams. And at the time, it felt like something of a nightmare for Hadley, who now regards the incident as just one of many memorable Bernstein stories he’s fond of telling and retelling – complete with his own inimitable impersonation of the man he refers to as “Lenny.”
“I was in Los Angeles at the Hollywood Bowl singing a semi-staged ‘Oedipus Rex,’ by Stravinsky. And Bernstein’s protégé Michael Tilson Thomas was conducting. I didn’t know Lenny was there in the audience. We finished our performance. I went back to my dressing room and I was literally standing in my underwear. And the door to my dressing room flings open. In comes Lenny, wearing a white jump suit with a cape, and he’s smoking a cigarette from a long cigarette holder. And I’m going … that’s Leonard Bernstein … and I’m practically naked!
“And he walks in and sings the first line that I had sung as Oedipus. And then, without, ‘Hello, I’m Leonard Bernstein’ … of course, he figured I knew who he was … he comes over and puts his arms around me and gives me a hug, and gives me a big, sloppy, wet kiss right on the mouth. And I’m thinking, you know, I had hoped to meet Leonard Bernstein one day, but I thought it would be different than this!
“He said, ‘That was really great, kid. We’re going to have to talk sometime.’ And he left.”
Hadley said they did talk – about six months later. Bernstein called and asked him to audition for his casting of his opera, “A Quiet Place,” but afterwards, Hadley said he told him, ‘You know, you’re just a little too good for this part. I’d rather do something that really uses your talents.’ So after that, he started hiring me to do all these concerts with him.”
Since Bernstein died, Hadley said he’s been in many situations where those who have worked with him “often get into this one-upmanship thing and say, ‘Yes, but I did this, I did this.’ ” But that doesn’t happen, he said, when he and Diazmuñoz compare notes.
“We’ll be reminded of something and we’ll share it, and it usually makes us laugh,” Hadley said, adding, “I wish I had appreciated him when I was in his presence the way I appreciate him now. There’s been so much written about Lenny, and probably there hasn’t been anything written about him that was not true – all the good things, and all the not-so-good things. But you can’t really take the measure of the man by either of the extremes because he was all of those things. And he lived a life that was five or six lifetimes in one, don’t you think?” Hadley asked, looking at Diazmuñoz, who nodded in agreement.
“And his genius,” Hadley said, “is the fact that he was this larger than life, eccentric, debauched person, who nevertheless would step onto the podium and it’s almost as if he was possessed by angels. And he would become this vessel for the most incredible stuff. He would make everybody feel – by his presence – like there was nothing there was that we couldn’t do.”
“That’s part of why we call him a genius,” Diazmuñoz said. “He was able to make us do our best, to excel.”
Hadley said he thinks Bernstein achieved this through his ability to get artists to loosen up and not be so obsessed with trying to please others. When he first met Bernstein, Hadley said, he was only a few years out of college, where he’d been “the stereotypical good student.”
“I always did what the professor asked me to do. I was very concerned about pleasing the teacher. And I think it’s a necessary part of what we do as students, to develop that discipline. However, I don’t think that’s what our teachers want us to do. They never voice this, but I think what they want is for us to take what they give us, and then jump out of the nest and fly on our own.”
And that, he added, was the important push Bernstein provided for him.
“When I began to work with Lenny, it just changed everything in an instant because he gave me permission to say, ‘My instincts are fine. So I’m going to have fun.’ That’s why I wanted to be a musician in the first place. There’s this attitude in academia that fun and serious approach or serious preparation don’t go hand in hand. But they do.”
“They must,” Diazmuñoz inserted.
And when all the coaching sessions, the long nights of rehearsals, and the final performances of “Candide” have come and gone, that’s perhaps the single, most important lesson Hadley and Diazmuñoz hope to have passed along – by example – to the production’s student cast.
“Because if it isn’t fun,” said Hadley, “what’s the point?”
Hadley to perform March 7
When cold and flu season hits, the bugs don’t discriminate. Even opera stars are vulnerable to attack.
One of the bugs plaguing the citizens of Central Illinois this winter managed to target the hole in Jerry Hadley’s defense shield, launching a strategic attack on the tenor just prior to his Feb. 4 performance with the Champaign-Urbana Symphony at the UI’s Krannert Center for the Performing Arts.
After taking the stage, Hadley’s world-famous vocal chords failed him right out of the chute.
“I only had about three good notes, and I used them up right at the beginning,” he said. “It was an interesting evening because I went from Mario Lanza to Marcel Marceau just like that.”
Fortunately, C-U Symphony-goers won’t be left holding just a ticket stub. The magnanimous singer immediately stepped up to the plate and began making plans to make amends to his audience.
With his health restored and his voice rested, Hadley has scheduled a make-up performance at 7 p.m. on March 7 at the First United Methodist Church, 210 W. Church St., Champaign. Hadley said the program will include a variety of selections – from art songs and oratorio to Broadway tunes.
The performance will be free and open to the public, although the C-U Symphony requests donations from those who did not hold tickets to the Feb. 4 performance. No proof of attendance will be required; rather, an honor system will be employed. With seating limited to about 800, those planning to attend are advised to arrive early to avoid being turned away if attendance exceeds capacity.