JERRY HADLEY

tenor

VIEWER TRIBUTES

EMAIL THIS PAGE!

PROFILE
INTERVIEW
TRIAL BY FIRE 
OPERA IMAGES
ON SUTHERLAND & BONYNGE
DISCOGRAPHY

THE CONQUISTADOR:
CREATING THE ROLE
THE CAST  
OVERVIEW


FanFaire

welcomes submissions of
VIEWER TRIBUTES

If you have special memories of
JERRY HADLEY
or if you simply wish to give tribute -

CLICK HERE.




Web FanFaire.com


*REMEMBERING JERRY
THROUGH HIS MUSIC*
LISTEN to
selected excerpts from his vast repertoire of arias and songs
(CLICK on TITLE):
OPERA:
"Au fond du temple saint"
(with Thomas Hampson)
-
duet from The Pearl Fishers
by Georges Bizet
(from the CD "Famous Opera Duets")
"Ach, so fromm, ach, so traut"
-
from Martha
by Friedrich von Flotow

(from the CD "The American Opera Singer")
"Che gelida manina"
- from La Bohème
by Giacomo Puccini
(from the CD "Mad About Tenors"
"Já vím, zes Stevu Lúbila"
- from Jenufa
by Leos Janacek
"All right, I'll sing y' 'Jaybird'"
(with Cheryl Studer)
and

"It's about the way people is made"

-
from Susannah
by Carlisle Floyd
"Oh - There's a star"
-
from Desire under the Elms
by Edward Thomas
ORATORIO:
"Then shall the righteous shine forth"
-
from Elijah
by Felix Mendelssohn
"I know that to be thankful..."
-
from Liverpool Oratorio
by Paul McCartney
OPERETTA:
"It must be so" and "Make our garden grow"
- from Candide
by Leonard Bernstein
"Komm in den kleinen Pavilion"
- from Die lustige Witwe
by Franz Lehar
(from the CD "The World Is Beautiful")
"My heart belongs to you"
- from The Land of Smiles
by Franz Lehar
"Täubchen, das entflattert ist"
- from Die Fledermaus
by Johann Strauss
"Drink, drink, drink"
(from the CD
opera's Greatest Drinking Songs)
and
"Golden Days"

(from the CD
Golden Days)
- from Student Prince
by Sigmund Romberg
BROADWAY:
"Make believe "
- from Showboat
by Jerome Kern
"Stranger in Paradise"
- from Kismet
by Robert Wright
"How can you tell an American?"
(with Thomas Hampson)

- from Knickerbocker Holiday
by Kurt Weill
(from the CD Kurt Weill on Broadway)
"All I ask of you"
(with Marilyn Horne)
- from Phantom of the Opera
by Andrew Lloyd-Weber
(from the CD Marilyn Horne:
The Men in My Life
)

Sign up:
EMAIL UPDATE
FREE CD!

STORE



USA    UK    DE   FR

Buy sheet music


Jerry Hadley's




Trial by FIRE

(Reprinted by permission)

by F. Paul Driscoll


What's the most catastrophe-strewn company debut on record?

That dubious distinction may well belong to tenor Jerry Hadley, who on September 14, 1979, made his New York City Opera debut as Arturo in Lucia di Lamermoor on less than a week's notice, without any stage rehearsal. In an interview presented by the Metropolitan Opera Guild's Education Department, Hadley's story of his star-crossed first night was such a hit that Opera News thought it bore repeating.
JERRY HADLEY: June 16, 2024 - July 18, 2024
Let us remember him in our prayers. 

CLICK HERE
if you wish to post a TRIBUTE to JERRY HADLEY.
I vividly remember my City Opera debut. As my friends will tell you, I believe that any story worth telling is worth embellishing and improving with each passing year. However, in this instance, as Joe Friday used to say on Dragnet, I will tell you "just the facts."

[The night of my debut] rolled around. I hadn't really had a proper rehearsal, but by this time, I had developed a mantra. I would go home at night and chant, "I-am-a-professional-singer-I-know-my-part-everything-will-be-fine-I-am- a- professional-singer-I-know-my-part-everything-will-be-fine." When I showed up at the theater, it occurred to me that all I knew about the set was the tape marks. So I went up and found the stage manager. "Do you think it's going to be possible for me to walk on this set before I go on to sing?" He said, "Oh, yes! No problem! You're in the second scene of Act II. The curtain will come down we'll change the scene, and before everybody else walks onstage, I'll send for you. You can give it a look." I said, "Oh, thank you, thank you. That's great. O.K."

Sure enough, when the time came, they changed the set. I said "Now?" and he said, "Now!" I walked onstage to look things over and was out there for maybe five seconds when about eighty people charged onstage whom I had never seen before. In costume. I sort of froze, because I was definitely not in Kansas anymore, and then, thank God, Robert Hale [Raimondo] had the presence of mind to say, "Hey! Get up here! The curtain is going up!" So I ran up the stairs and got to the platform just as we heard, "DadumdaDUMDUM, DadumdaDUM." I looked out into that vast sea of humanity, and there was Beverly Sills sitting up [in the general director's] box. She gave me a kind of a thumbs-up wave as I was standing there, and that was that.

The first thing I had to do was sing my little aria to Enrico - "Per poco fra le tenebre," right? - and I realized I had no earthly idea which one of those people was Richard Fredricks, who was Enrico. So I turned to Bob Hale and whispered, "Where ishe?" He said, "Right over there. The blond." Well, Richard's not blond in real life, but I found him, sang my aria, got the high note and thought, "Ha. That's not so hard."

Well, God heard that. He set out to prove I was mortal. Because the next thing that had to happen was a cross to stage left for Fredricks and me. We were supposed to be talking about the impending marriage. So there was a chair - and I had a goblet in one hand and my other hand on my scabbard- and I sat down and tried to look real macho. Somehow, the scabbard got itself lodged in the rungs of my chair, and I didn't realize it. So I sat there, singing "M'è noto. Si! M'è noto!" He got up and walked across the stage, and I followed him, dragging my chair with me. Even to the novice audience member, that looked wrong. So a couple of the supers came over and very nicely took the chair off the sword and - I don't know what made me do this, but I glanced up to see how the boss was taking all this, and I couldn't see Beverly anymore. What I could see was this shock of red hair leaning on the front rail of the bow. She was laughing so hard she couldn't sit up!

By now I felt like Jim Ignatowski in Taxi. I was in a different zone from the rest of the world. Then these three supers approached me, and one of them said - I swear this is a direct quote - "Come with us. We're your friends." They took me up to sign the marriage contract, which I did, and by now I was in a position to see Lucia come down the stairs. I stood up and tried to regain my composure. All of a sudden, out of nowhere, my head was grabbed from behind. It absolutely snapped back. I turned around, and there was one of these guys who had just told me that he was myfriend. I said, "What are youdoing?" He said, "Don't worry. It's out." I said, "What?" He answered, "Thefire." The plume on my hat had gotten too close to the candelabra and had caught fire, and I was the only one in the State Theater who didn't know it.

So now, I see Lucia coming down the stairs. My bride. Do you realize how short this scene is? Normally, the Arturo scene goes like a snap. Well, for me that night it was like Götterdämmerung! Here was Lucia coming down the stairs, Gianna Rolandi, laughing so hard there were tears streaming down her face, and her teeth weregritted, she was trying so hard to keep it together. I was supposed to walk over to her and bow very gallantly. I got over, and she hissed, "Don't make me laugh!"

Now I was supposed to bow to her and doff my hat. Because I was wearing a wig and because the hat had been pinned onto the back of my head in such a way that I had no peripheral sense of where I was, I didn't know that when they put my fire out they had pulled on my wig so hard the hat had fallen off. Again I was the only person in the State Theater who was not aware of this. So I bowed as instructed and reached for a nonexistent hat. Where's my hat? No hat. So instead I substituted something Veronica Lake might have done - I sort of flipped my long hair at her.

Edgardo came on, and I thought, "Great. Now they'll watch him." When it was time for the sextet, I got as far downstage as I could, thinking, "I'm gonna sing really loud now. I'm not going to let this opportunity pass me by." This is a pointless strategy when you're singing the inner voice in the ensemble. But everything seemed to work out fine. We were almost done.

When the music was drawing to an end, and the last note had been sung, I was supposed to draw my sword and turn upstage threateningly to Edgardo as he exited. Well, I was standing in the wrong place, and I didn't know that four guys - my friends - near me were also going to draw their swords as they turned upstage en masse. I wasn't prepared to move out of their way, so - according to my wife, who was sitting in the second row - the last thing people saw, as the music cut off and the curtain began to come in, was that I drew my sword, turned upstage - just as my friends did with their swords drawn - and got at least two of their swords right where it hurts. And I jumped. I left the stage - straight up in the air - as the curtain came down.

After the curtain hit the floor there was long pause backstage - maybe a second of silence, I guess, but it felt like an eternity. Everybody looked at me and then dissolved in laughter. Everybody chortling, "That was really funny. Welcome to the company, man!" So I went back to my dressing room, thinking the worst. "Well, I've sung at the City Opera once. That's better than nothing." Then Beverly came backstage, and when she knocked at my door, I could see she was prepared to put a good face on the whole thing to cheer me up - you know, singer to singer. Well, she took one look at me and went, "HAAAAAAAAAhahahahaHHHHAAAA!" Don't worry! We'll talk! We'll talk!"

That was my debut. I actually got good notices! After that, everything else was a piece of cake! That really did happen, and I only embellished it in one spot, I swear.

[This article appeared in the February 8, 2024 issue of Opera News (Vol. 61, No.10, p. 22) and is reprinted by permission of Jerry Hadley and F.Paul Driscoll, Picture Editor of Opera News.]



VIEWER TRIBUTES

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PROFILE     INTERVIEW     TRIAL BY FIRE    OPERA IMAGES     ON SUTHERLAND & BONYGE 
THE CONQUISTADOR:   CREATING THE ROLE     THE CAST       OVERVIEW



about FANFAIRE
        AUDIOFILES    NEW RELEASES      FOOD & MUSIC        EMAIL UPDATE






Design and Original Content: FanFaire LLC © 1997-2007. All rights reserved.