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Street-smart symphony with Washington National Opera
Washington National Opera is DC's flagship company at the Kennedy Center, known for grand opera and, in recent seasons, bold American musical titles.
Opera house meets Broadway streets
Tackling West Side Story shows its cross-genre aim, pairing operatic voices with Broadway pacing and dance. After the long pandemic pause, the company has leaned harder into projects that welcome new audiences without lowering musical standards. Expect a full narrative arc with keystone numbers like America, Tonight, Maria, and Somewhere anchoring each act.Songs that anchor the night
The crowd skews mixed, from subscription holders in neat jackets to younger theater fans comparing choreography and snapping softly during quiet moments. A neat bit of lore is that the show began life as East Side Story, a different cultural clash, before shifting to the Jets and Sharks. Another detail to listen for is Bernstein's re-use of dance cues that later became the concert Symphonic Dances from West Side Story. Note that any song order and staging details here are educated guesses, not confirmed plans. With a pit this size, the brass bite and Latin percussion should color the room even at gentle volumes.Washington National Opera: the scene in the hall
The scene feels like a meeting point for opera subscribers and musical theater regulars, with outfits ranging from cocktail dresses to clean sneakers and blazers.
What you see and hear
You will hear soft bravo calls after big finishes, and quick applause for show-stopping dance breaks. People study the choreography lineage, comparing Robbins-inspired gestures with any fresh patterns the new team inserts. Merch trends tilt classic, with cast posters, program books, and minimalist tees using the Jets and Sharks color split. Pre-show talk centers on which numbers land best live and which voices cut through the hall, and intermission buzz often circles the brass and the woodwind solos.After the bows
After the curtain, fans linger to hum the whistle motif and debate whether the production leans more opera warm or Broadway crisp. It is a respectful, focused crowd that saves phones for the lobby and gives space for quiet moments to land.Washington National Opera: sound and staging craft
Vocals lean toward open, ringing tone, but the best moments keep the street feel by clipping consonants and keeping lines nimble.
Groove in the pit
The orchestra usually plays the original Ramin and Kostal charts, which layer bright trumpets, crisp woodwinds, and battery percussion for a dance-forward groove. Expect tempos a touch brisker than a symphonic concert so the choreography breathes, with the strings digging in rather than floating. A common live tweak is dropping a half-step here or there to fit a lead's range, which tightens the blend without dulling the punch. Rhythm sections in these productions often hide a trap set inside the pit to drive the mambo hits cleanly.Voices up front, story first
Lighting tracks mood more than spectacle, trading flashy cues for warm pools in duets and saturated reds and blues in the rumble scenes. A lesser-known detail is that some houses restore woodblock and bongo patterns cut in later editions, so the Dance at the Gym accents pop. Listen for the dry, almost whispered start of Cool before the band snaps into a sharp, finger-click pulse.For Washington National Opera fans: kindred stages
If you follow Audra McDonald, the blend of legit vocal craft and Broadway drama here will click. Fans of Josh Groban often enjoy big melodies delivered with clear diction and a cinematic sweep, which this score supplies.