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Jeremy
Peaker
Bass
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How
long have you been a member of Opera North and how
did you get involved?
I’ve been with the company from 1988 on and
off. Aida was my first show and I became a full time
member of the chorus in March 1995. I was working
for the National Coal Board as a Colliery Stores Manager
when I decided to get some opinions on my voice. My
Auntie worked with Jane Bonner's mother and Jane arranged
for me to meet John Pryce Jones who was Chorus Master
at the time in 1984. John said I should go to music
college and then come back and see him. Well after
music college I came back and was given Extra Chorus
work. I freelanced quite a lot in this period and
from 1988 to 1995 I was in a major tour of Chess the
musical for two years and I was a founder member of
the New D'Oyly Carte Opera Company for two years,
I did many solo roles for smaller companies untill
I joined the Opera North company full time in 1995.
Where are you from originally?
I’m originally from Shepley near Hudderfield
but moved to Barnsley when I was 10. I hated it at
first but would now consider, after 36 years, Barnsley
as my home and place I want to be.
How old where you when you started to sing
and why?
When I was a boy in Shepley my parents had always
been told by Mr Robinson from the Sunday School that
I had a good boy treble voice but I never did anything
with it. I started to sing as a boy treble when I
was around 13 because my piano teacher Gordon Pearce
heard me sing one day and thought I ought to enter
some local music festivals. When I was 14 I won the
rose bowl cup at Pontefract music festival with Lonely
Woods by Lully and was asked to sing it in the evening
festival final concert, but my voice literally broke
at tea time that day and I couldn’t sing a note.
I was so upset and didn’t sing again till I
was 17
Did you always plan to sing?
No not at all. I liked piano lessons but like most
youngsters the practice in between them was a chore
and a bore. I think I nearly drove my piano teacher
to despair and I owe him so much. Gordon Pearce -
now head of music for North Yorkshire Education Authority
- managed to get me through O-Level music after which
I nearly did go to Huddersfield College of Music to
study piano when I left school. I wanted to study
Percussion but my headmaster and the woman who came
to see me about going said that I couldn’t and
had to study piano and bassoon, so that was an end
to that. I said I wouldn’t go and got into terrible
trouble with my school headmaster for defying him.
Gordon
stuck with me and when the voice started to come back
he began to give me lessons. I was now working at
the colliery and joined a junior Gilbert and Sullivan
society in Barnsley (ironically a Society that has
spawned many professional singers), Huddersfield Choral
Society and South Yorkshire Opera. It was not until
the miners strike of 1984 that I decided to approach
colleges to see if I was good enough to go. Encouraged
by Gordon Pearce I got scholarships at three colleges
and chose Guildhall in London. It was a big wrench
after eight years to leave a secure job (or so we
thought) and take up a new profession at 24 which
may have failed but I've never regretted it or looked
back. It was the best thing that happened to me.
Where did you train?
The Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London
with my wonderful teacher Noelle Barker OBE.
What are your favourite operas?
I have so many for so many different reasons. I love
the big Verdi Operas: Aida, Rigoletto, Otello, Nabucco,
Giovanna D'Arco are so full of passion. I also love
Puccini for pure romantic genius. Rosenkavalier has
the best ending to an opera ever written and I can
listen to that for ever and Wagner for sheer power.
However my real passion lies in the lighter repertoire:
Barber of Seville, Ambrodgio was such a joy to play
(no lines or notes but a steal of a role), Marriage
of Figaro, Elisir D’Amore and my favourite passion
of all - Operetta and the works of Gilbert and Sullivan.
I was able to play the roles I love for the D'Oyly
Carte Opera Company and at the Savoy so I can say
I am a true Savoyard.
What are your favourite venues and why?
Having done many tours in my career with other companies
as well as Opera North, my favourite venue is Birmingham
Hippodrome because it's such a well run theatre. However
I do tour with my own company and favourites are some
of the smaller theatres because they are so friendly:
Whitley Bay Playhouse, Darlington Civic, Richmond
Theatre Royal in North Yorkshire, Newcastle Theatre
Royal, Blackpool Grand, Lowestoft Marina, to name
a few.
What hobbies do you have outside singing/playing?
I operate my own company (Much
Loved Productions Ltd) providing one night concerts
throughout Britain, which I started in 1994 and has
gone from strength to strength. We now have our own
orchestra The British Philharmonic Concert Orchestra
(Musical Director is Tony Kraus, the ex-Chorus Master
of Opera North) and provide concerts from large orchestral
to small two-man shows, using some of the best talents
in the UK in their field. It’s a constant thrill
to me to see a good concert come together and watch
an audience enjoying the experience.
Other
hobbies include sci-fi, especially Dr Who ( I know,
I’m a big kid), and I like nice cars and reading
biographies.
Do you teach or have any other job?
My other job is MD of Much
Loved Productions Ltd. I have taught in the past
but it was unrewarding at the time, I taught someone
who just didn’t want to learn and didn’t
want to work at it (I got my come uppance there from
not doing piano practice for my teacher when a teenager)
so I've not returned to it.
Who are your musical/theatrical idols?
I'm not really a typical opera singer so I can’t
say I was really inspired by anyone as a singer. I
don’t get too worked up about other people in
the profession. I love Pavarotti and Sutherland but
I also enjoy Meat Loaf and Queen. Although I listen
to Classic FM, I also like Radio 2. I'm happy for
anyone that gets on and up the ladder in this industry
as I know how hard it is. I just hope when they do
get there they remember where they came from and encourage
others on the way up.
I think there are geniuses like Mozart, Wagner, Verdi,
Puccini and Rossini, but I love Gilbert and Sullivan,
Lehar, Strauss, (did I say Gilbert and Sullivan) Rodgers
and Hammerstein, Lerner and Loewe, Sigmund Romberg,
Edward German and of course Gilbert and Sullivan I
suppose. I do like Renato Bruson as a Baritone singer.
I don’t really favour the higher voices that
much, I prefer to hear the lower voices.
I much prefer comedy to serious opera as the
comic operas are so much fun.
I love comedy in all walks of life. I'm particularly
fond of quirky speciality acts, odd acts that you
can’t see anywhere else and that are a peculiar
and unique skill. I love ventriloquist acts - what
a skill that is. I think I was born too late as I
love variety theatre and there’s something so
skilful about it that’s lost today. Slapstick
is such fun, again another dying art I think as comedy
today is too politically correct and vulgar. There’s
something innocent about the greats Morecambe and
Wise, Norman Wisdom, Ronnie Barker, Rob Wilton, Les
Dawson, and the wonderful Tommy Cooper and Larry Grayson
(The Generation Game was never as good).
I love sit-coms with real slapstick feel about them
and double entendre - Keeping Up Appearances, Are
You Being Served, Frank Spencer and the like.
What do you enjoy about being in a professional
chorus?
Working with my fellow choristers. They are incredibly
hard working people who always pull out the stops
to make the show happen. They make it look so easy
but there’s a lot of real hard work going on
on the stage. They are so versatile as a chorus, and
can adapt and change to most styles really easily,
I know they are well respected by the directors who
work with them and that’s what makes it worthwhile
- to know you are part of a respected team.
In your time with Opera North you must have
enjoyed some funny moments?
There have been so many and I suppose most of them
you needed to be there. Some are unrepeatable. My
friend Anthony Baines Davis, who sadly died last year,
probably provided most of them. Tony was always a
joker and a fantastic impressionist. ‘Never
let him have the beret’ was a note on wardrobe
files or Frank Spencer would be in the production.
There was a time when he managed to make the whole
chorus laugh when he walked behind a wall on stage
and made it look as though he was going down some
stairs and disappeared, although the stage was flat.
Anthony always sang the line Billy’s A Stammer
in Billy Budd with his hand to his mouth and in the
voice of Zippy from Rainbow.
When I was playing Ambrodgio in Barber of Seville
and Gary Magee was playing Figaro, Little Britain
had just come out and Gary was dressed in disguise
in women’s clothing in the scene. As he entered
I said to him ‘But I'm A Lady!’ Poor Gary
corpsed terribly.
Peter Field who played Parpinol on roller skates in
La Boheme hit a nail while skating towards the wings
and made a rather undignified exit. I was a spear
carrier in Giovanna D'Arco and was at the front of
the stage. Philip Prowse, the director and a really
lovely man, asked me to move a little to the right,
which I did. After about two minutes he asked me to
move a little further to the right, again I did. Another
two minutes went by and he asked me to move a little
further to the right at which point I was very close
to the wings. After another couple of minutes he said,
‘Jeremy could you please just bugger off the
stage?’ I complied, it was very funny. There
are lots more but they are not really repeatable.

Jeremy
Peaker in The Marriage of Figaro.
Posted
16th July, 2007.
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