fallujah: heather raffo talks about her hopes for the opera
heather raffo talks about her hopes for the opera (00:00:50)
“My hope for this opera is that it is a conversation. That it builds a conversation. Particularly for people who aren't talking to each other. So let's say like in this opera, a mother and son who's returned from war, family members that have returning servicemen and women that see this, that wanna go home and begin that conversation. But I think beyond that, what really needs to happen, particularly in America, is a conversation between civilians and military; a conversation between Middle Eastern, Arab Americans and Western Americans, between Iraqis and Americans … This is a particular way into having this conversation, and really understanding what other people are going through … Art is the best way to get a conversation going.”
-
topic: opera
-
location: vancouver
fallujah: heather raffo talks about her hopes for the opera
Fallujah: The First Opera on the Iraq War USMC Sergeant (ret) Christian Ellis was a machine gunner in Iraq whose platoon was ambushed, leaving him with a broken back and only one of a few survivors. He returned home to join millions of Americans who struggle with piecing their lives together in the shadows of post-traumatic stress. After four suicide attempts and with the help of a philanthropist, an acclaimed New York librettist of Iraqi descent, an accomplished composer and City Opera Vancouver, Christian helped turn the demons of war into Fallujah: the first opera on the Iraq war.
“My hope for this opera is that it is a conversation. That it builds a conversation. Particularly for people who aren't talking to each other. So let's say like in this opera, a mother and son who's returned from war, family members that have returning servicemen and women that see this, that wanna go home and begin that conversation. But I think beyond that, what really needs to happen, particularly in America, is a conversation between civilians and military; a conversation between Middle Eastern, Arab Americans and Western Americans, between Iraqis and Americans … This is a particular way into having this conversation, and really understanding what other people are going through … Art is the best way to get a conversation going.”








Close