Photo/Neilson Barnard "What's the point of having an obsession unless it damages you?" With such an insightful comment not just about art, but love, playwright Tom Rowan could have made his new play
The Second Tosca into a drama or a comedy. Thankfully, he chose the latter. The story is filled with hopes, aspirations, and charismatic yet technical banter about opera, but the pace remains light on its feet. In opera lingo, the show is presented with
spinto tonality: that is, it rests somewhere between the dramatic soprano and the lyric,
soubrette, soprano, and it has mastered the
portamento, a technique of gliding smoothly from pitch to pitch.
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