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Music

Meet the Jewish opera singer taking the role of a Pharaoh

Counter tenor Anthony Roth Costanzo takes on the title role of "visionary" Pharaoh Akhnaten at the ENO

February 7, 2019 11:44
Anthony Costanza Roth (left) as Akhnaten

By

Jessica Duchen,

Jessica Duchen

3 min read

The sound of a counter-tenor is extraordinary at the best of times: high, pure, somewhat unearthly. Even so, Anthony Roth Costanzo takes its impact to remarkable levels. His tone cuts and soars, with a real ‘ping’ to its precision, powered by an open-hearted depth of feeling. Now this celebrated Jewish American singer is returning to English National Opera to star as the eponymous Egyptian pharaoh in a revival of Philip Glass’s Akhnaten.

Costanzo bounds out of a rehearsal, a slight, lithe figure with a megawatt presence. He is 36, but this is, astonishingly, his 25th year on stage; he has sung professionally since the age of 11. First he appeared in Broadway shows, but at 13 he sang the role of Miles in Benjamin Britten’s The Turn of the Screw and was enchanted with the opera’s complexity. Moreover, despite having passed puberty he could still sing in a high register; some of the cast, he recounts, suggested he might be a counter-tenor. He never looked back.

He was born in North Carolina, the son of two psychology professors: his mother was Hungarian Jewish and his father Italian Catholic (“Lots of food and lots of guilt!” he jokes). “I’m not a particularly religious person, but there’s a certain ritual and daily discipline to performing that somehow connects to the rituals of Judaism for me, in an abstract way,” he says. “We all have our own version of spirituality and for me this ritual creates a sense of comfort and meaning.”

The somewhat niche repertoire for counter-tenor has helped to make him into more than “just a singer for hire,” he reflects. “I realised I had to generate some of the projects I wanted to do, bringing together artists from different disciplines and expanding beyond the world of classical music. I grew up doing film and Broadway, and when I was studying at Princeton University cross-discipline and cross-pollination was critical to my development. I’ve always looked for ways to expand opera outwards and bring other disciplines into ours.