91福利

You are now in the main content area

Two to tango

Connecting with audiences takes centre stage for the powerhouse duo behind Opera Atelier
By: Deborah Smyth
June 11, 2019
Jeannette Lajeunesse Zingg, left, standing on steps with her hand on a ledge; Marshall Pynkoski sitting beside her on the steps

Opera Atelier founding co-artistic directors Jeannette Lajeunesse Zingg and Marshall Pynkoski prepare for their exciting new season.

Getting a phone call in the Louvre announcing your appointment to the Order of Canada is remarkable enough. It鈥檚 even more remarkable for someone who doesn鈥檛 own a cell phone. Yet this is precisely what happened to Opera Atelier founding co-artistic directors Marshall Pynkoski and Jeannette Lajeunesse Zingg in December.

鈥淲hen we go on tour, our office gives us a phone in case of emergency, and suddenly this phone was ringing,鈥 says Pynkoski, who has no TV or computer at home. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not Luddites, we don鈥檛 think these things are awful,鈥 says Pynkoski. 鈥淲e just felt it was too much of a distraction to be able to think creatively.鈥

And creative they have been. Since founding their groundbreaking company in 1985, the same year they were married, Pynkoski and Zingg have built Opera Atelier into Canada鈥檚 premier opera/ballet company. It brings productions from the 17th and 18th centuries to life, in collaboration with Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra.

With Pynkoski stage directing and Zingg choreographing, they have toured some of the world鈥檚 greatest venues, including La Scala, the Salzburg Festival, the Rossini Festival and the Royal Opera House at Versailles.

The Order of Canada recognizes Pynkoski and Zingg鈥檚 contributions to opera and ballet in Canada, their mentorship of young artists at The School of Atelier Ballet for 33 years, and their commitment to live performance. They鈥檝e also received Dora Mavor Moore Awards, the Ordre des Arts et des lettres from France, and Alumni Achievement Awards.

鈥淭o connect with one another and to connect with what鈥檚 on stage and with people around you in a communal experience is tremendously important and very rare nowadays,鈥 says Zingg.

Pynoski agrees: 鈥淲e want people to come to our productions and become broadened, become more complete human beings as we expand their imaginations.鈥

Pynkoski and Zingg are collaborators in work and in life, finishing each other鈥檚 sentences like a verbal pas de deux. This is appropriate considering the two first met as students in Ryerson鈥檚 theatre performance program, and started dating while studying in Toronto with Russian ballet teacher Flora Lojekova.

鈥淲e had really great ballet teachers at Ryerson, such as John Marshall,鈥 says Zingg. 鈥淲e were very fortunate, our Ryerson teachers knew what ballet was in terms of its roots, in terms of an art form.鈥

This grounding in ballet鈥檚 history would serve them well as they travelled to Paris together to study further, financing their studies by performing two shows a night, seven days a week, at the Moulin Rouge.

Back in Toronto, they started performing at the Royal Ontario Museum, first alone, then with singers from the opera school. They began their collaboration with Tafelmusik and David Mirvish, who helped launch the company by adding them to his subscription series at the Royal Alexandra Theatre.

鈥淗e had been attending our shows, and said, 鈥榃hat you need is a real theatre.鈥 Within a few seasons we had grown so much, we moved to the Elgin Theatre,鈥 says Pynkoski. Opera Atelier鈥檚 upcoming season promises to be their most ambitious yet, featuring internationally acclaimed bass-baritone Douglas Williams as Don Giovanni next fall and an all-star Canadian cast in Handel鈥檚 The Resurrection in April 2020.

The secret of their success?

鈥淚 always say to people, if you start something, start small, grow slowly and never give up,鈥 says Zingg. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 exactly what we鈥檝e done.鈥

This story appears in the June edition of the Ryerson University Magazine. Read the . It's also available as an .

Share This

More News