Breaking the Waves was widely seen by critics as a major success. It won the inaugural
Best New Opera Award from the
Music Critics Association of North America, and was shortlisted for "Best World Premiere" Prize at the International Opera Awards. "Missy Mazzoli's
Breaking the Waves, which had its world premiere at Opera Philadelphia on Thursday, is savage, heartbreaking and thoroughly original. The 1996 Lars von Trier film on which it is based has a disturbing undercurrent of violent misogyny, but the operatic Bess McNeill, for all her frailties, is no victim. Classic tragic opera heroines may weep and die, but Bess, as conceived by Ms. Mazzoli and librettist Royce Vavrek, and sung by the extraordinary Kiera Duffy, is an evolving, unforgettable character". Heidi Waleson,
The Wall Street Journal "...the desperate scenario of self-destruction and redemption seems to be a projection of Bess's will to believe, her reshaping of the fabric of the world. Mazzoli’s score supports that dynamic by wedding strong lyric invention to an unsettled, insidiously dissonant chamber-orchestra texture that evokes the jagged beauty both of Skye and of Bess's inner landscape. Benjamin Britten is a palpable influence, particularly in thrashing orchestral tempests and some melismatic, Peter Quint-like writing for tenor. Yet Mazzoli absorbs these and other elements into her own spare, propulsive voice".
Alex Ross,
The New Yorker "It is not easy to find new operas that command attention, tell their story lucidly and create a powerful, permeating mood. Dark and daring,
Breaking the Waves does all this with sensitivity and style".
Zachary Woolfe,
The New York Times. At its European premiere, in a new production directed by
Tom Morris for
Scottish Opera and
John Berry's Opera Ventures at the
Edinburgh International Festival, the work again was praised including a five star review in
The Scotsman calling it "operatic gold". Soprano
Sydney Mancasola was awarded a Herald Angel Award for her performance as Bess, a prize awarded by
The Herald, Glasgow, to stand-out contributions among all of the summer festivals in the Edinburgh. ==References==