
Baritone Brian Mulligan on coming out with San Francisco Opera in style and song
For two decades, baritone Brian Mulligan has performed on many of the world's great stages, but his heart belongs to San Francisco.
Now, in a full-circle moment, the internationally acclaimed singer returns to make history as one of the featured soloists in San Francisco Opera's first-ever Pride Concert, set for Friday, June 27, at the War Memorial Opera House.
'San Francisco Opera is unquestionably the most important opera company in my life,' Mulligan, 46, told the Chronicle by phone from his native town of Endicott in upstate New York. 'They have taken chances on me and given me opportunities that no place else in the world has done. I consider it my home opera company.'
While the baritone snagged his first professional role at New York's Metropolitan Opera in 2003 when still a student at the Juilliard School, he's truly come into his own in San Francisco. Since making his debut at the War Memorial in 2008's ' La Bohème,' he's appeared there nearly two dozen times, singing everything from the title characters in ' Sweeney Todd ' and ' Nixon in China ' to a series of Wagner roles (mostly recently Telramund in 2023's ' Lohengrin ').
He is set to return in October to sing the role of Amfortas in a new production of Wagner's 'Parsifal.'
'I've had so many firsts in San Francisco,' he recalled fondly, listing his first major Verdi role as Count Anckarström in 2014's 'Un Ballo in Maschera' among them. 'It's incredible to go back and see people, faces who know me and have helped me over the years to deliver performance after performance.'
For the Pride Concert, Mulligan is slated to be joined by a few other San Francisco Opera favorites, mezzo-sopranos Jamie Barton and Nikola Printz, for a program featuring tunes by Harold Arlen and Jerry Herman, among others, as well as operatic fare by Tchaikovsky and Camille Saint-Saëns. Music Director Eun Sun Kim will share conducting duties with Robert Mollicone, while drag queen Sapphira Cristál serves as emcee.
Mulligan spoke to the Chronicle about Pride and his passion for the Opera ahead of the upcoming concert.
This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
Q: On the cusp of the city's 55th Pride Celebration, the San Francisco Opera is presenting its very first Pride Concert. What does that milestone mean to you?
There was a long time (when) I felt my sexuality was a liability as an opera singer. Because almost all of the roles I play are straight people, being gay isn't exactly a good calling card. (But) over the years, I've proven myself as an actor. That's what being an opera singer is all about — portraying somebody else.
Q: You've said that one of the reasons you leaned into opera growing up was because you were gay. Could you please elaborate on that?
A: I started taking voice lessons when I was 17, and at that age, I didn't know or understand my sexuality. I knew that I was different, and (by) taking a step toward opera, which was also different, I was establishing my otherness — because most people don't know or understand anything about opera.
Q: Fast-forward a few decades to this upcoming Pride Concert. Among the tunes you're preparing to sing are 'You Take My Breath Away,' Freddie Mercury's 1976 hit with Queen, as well as the aria 'I love you, dear' from Tchaikovsky's 'The Queen of Spades.' Did you make the selections?
A: I had a hand in choosing the songs, but they were largely suggested by (the company). They explained that they were trying to highlight gay composers, iconic gay moments in opera and theater.
(As) with any kind of recital program, it's about the order that you sing the pieces in. I'm starting with the Tchaikovsky; that will be most technically challenging because it's opera. After that, we'll move to the standard stuff.
Q: Your 2022 solo CD, 'Alburnum,' features works by Mason Bates, Missy Mazzoli and Gregory Spears. You've also sung in contemporary operas, including John Adams' 'Nixon in China.' What is your attraction to new music?
A: I often say to people, 'The greatest music may not have been composed yet.'
There's a lot of phenomenal music that's been composed, but I have to believe that there's music that we don't know about yet.
I really believe that one of the biggest draws for me in performing contemporary music is (that) often, it's written in English. I communicate best in English because it can (sometimes) be a struggle in other languages. No matter how good I get at German, French or Italian, I'm most powerful as a communicator in English.
Q: As is the case with most successful opera singers today, your travel schedule is something akin to a rock star's. In the last few weeks, you were in Leipzig, Germany, before which you made your debut with the Philadelphia Orchestra. Where do you go to rejuvenate, and how do you keep it together on the road?
A: Because I'm working more than 85% of the year, a few years ago I moved back to upstate New York, where my entire immediate and extended family lives — and I actually get to see them. So I come home to the absolute country. It's quiet. This morning, I opened the windows and I could hear all of the birds. It's incredible. I love living here.
I have a small Norwich Terrier, Beauregard, who just turned 7, but he's still a puppy in many ways. He has a European passport, and he's been traveling with me everywhere — except Asia or the U.K. — since he was a baby, so he's completely used to it. I've found now that my life is centered around him, and wherever I go, I make sure it's near a place that's beautiful where we can walk. … He's improved my life, and since I need to (rest my voice) when I'm not performing, it's all silence with him.
A: It's funny because I was thinking maybe I should wear some kind of glittery, sparkly, crazy Pride thing. But as time went on and I thought about it, Pride is actually more about being yourself and just owning who you are, and who I am is a simple tux kind of guy.
I'm wearing a black tux with pink accessories — a pink tux shirt for part of the show and a pink pocket square.
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San Francisco Chronicle
2 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
S.F. Opera's first Pride concert fills the house with color and community
Every June, the exterior columns of the San Francisco War Memorial Opera House become a symbol of LGBTQ Pride as they're illuminated in a rainbow scheme. Now, for the first time, the interior of the historic auditorium is a canvas. For the San Francisco Opera's first Pride Concert on Friday, June 27, stage artist Tal Rosner created immersive projection experiences that leapt off the stage. Rosner and San Francisco Opera General Director Matthew Shilvock were both excited by the technology's possibilities. 'Its an old building, it's beautiful and intricate,' said Rosner. 'Everything I do is part of the emotional journey of the audience, but we're also really celebrating the architecture of the building in a fun way. All these different songs have different environments.' The Pride Concert was presented in partnership with San Francisco Pride (the organization that organizes the parade and Civic Center festival) and showcased music by LGBTQ composers and songwriters. The night's singers were baritone Brian Mulligan, who is gay; mezzo-soprano Jamie Barton, who is bisexual; and Nikola Printz, who is trangender and nonbinary. San Francisco Opera Music Director Eun Sun Kim and Robert Mollicone conducted the San Francisco Opera Orchestra, while 'RuPaul's Drag Race' Season 16 runner-up (and classically trained opera singer) Sapphira Cristál emceed. The night included a bevy of community co-partners: The Tenderloin Museum, the National AIDS Memorial, Compton's Cafeteria Riot, the Marigold Project, the GLBT Historical Society and the Castro landmark the Twin Peaks Tavern. Among the special happenings were a pre-show discussion with S.F. Pride director Suzanne Ford, a display of the AIDS Memorial Quilt and queer history art installations and exhibitions. 'When times are bad, you find out who your real friends are,' said Horn, who is also the president of the War Memorial Performing Arts Center. 'We have seen so many people who we thought were our allies disappear, the corporations, some of the nonprofit organizations, our lawyers. But the San Francisco Opera is proud to stand up.' Shilvock said there was never a question that the concert would go on. 'This is what the arts are for, to be in community, to allow us to be who we are,' said Shilvock. 'We've always been a part of Pride and in the parade since the 1980s. The Pride community has always been linked to the Opera, now let's bring the festivities in here.' The program, curated by San Francisco Opera's managing artistic director Gregory Henkle, opened with Leonard Bernstein's overture to 'Candide' conducted by Kim. The 1956 musical has some of Bernstein's best theatrical music, and as Kim approached the delicate excerpts from the song 'Glitter and Be Gay,' there were knowing titters. Explosions of color reminiscent of painter Marc Chagall filled the auditorium, while points of colored light highlighted the architecture of the opera house. Printz warmly sang San Francisco composer Jake Heggie's 'Vesuvio, il mio unico amico' from his 2015 opera 'Great Scott,' the story of an opera diva, Arden Scott, returning to her hometown. Heggie, who is gay, agreed that the LGBTQ community has long had an association with the opera world as both artists and ardent fans. 'It's highly emotional, dramatic, and a way to see something you were feeling inside expressed on the stage,' said Heggie, whose opera 'Dead Man Walking' returns to San Francisco Opera this fall with Barton in the lead. 'Historically, gay men and women could find each other at the opera house,' he said. 'Queer people didn't have a lot of places they could go and experience that.' Mulligan's fine delivery of Yeletsky's aria from Tchaikovsky's 'Pique Dame' and Barton's dark and rich 'Mon coueur s'ouvre á ta voix,' from Saint-Saëns' 'Samson and Dalila,' were treats before the rousing Bachanale from the same opera. The pop half of the program took flight with Barton and Printz' delightfully light, yet soulful, 'Closer to Fine' by the Indigo Girls. Singing the hit, re-popularized in 2023 by the ' Barbie ' movie, there was no 'opera singer doing pop music' stiffness. Among the night's best projections were the Saul Bass-meets-mass transit abstractions as the San Francisco Opera Orchestra took on Billy Strayhorn's jazz hit 'Take the 'A' Train.' Another visual highpoint was the sweeping images of San Francisco's queer history from the GLBT Historical Society Museum as Barton gave a moving take of Melissa Etheridge's 'Uprising of Love.' Mulligan's finest moments of the night were dramatically different: a tender, haunting version of Freddie Mercury's 'You Take My Breath Away' that contained layers of nuance about repressed queer desire. He let that emotion out in Jerry Herman's anthem 'I Am What I Am' in the boundary-breaking 1983 drag musical 'La Cage aux Folles.' The audience went there with him, cheering as he sang 'it's time to open up your closets.' Printz closed the night with 'I was Born his Way' (not the Lady Gaga song, Cristál joked) but the gay disco hit made famous by gospel artist Carl Bean, culminating in a dramatic burst of color overtaking the house. Following the performance, patrons were invited to a dance party in the lobby with San Francisco drag mother Juanita More spinning. The sounds of San Francisco disco queen Sylvester bumped from the speakers as operagoers bumped into each other on the dance floor. Regardless of what politics bring, plans are already underway for next year's Pride concert, Shilvock said. Surveying the crowd, San Francisco drag legend Donna Sachet remarked: 'This is proof we exist, even as the government is trying to erase us.'


San Francisco Chronicle
3 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Sapphira Cristál to host San Francisco Opera Pride Concert
Calling all opera queens: San Francisco Opera is hosting its first ever Pride Concert. The celebration features the San Francisco Opera Orchestra, conducted by Music Director Eun Sun Kim and Robert Mollicone, with soloists mezzo-sopranos Jamie Barton and Nikola Printz and baritone Brian Mulligan. Hosted by Sapphira Cristál, the immersive setting will utilize animations by Tal Rosner, historic images from past Pride celebrations and milestones projected onto the walls of the auditorium, plus a post-show dance party. The 80-minute musical program will include selections from queer opera composers Leonard Bernstein, Jake Heggie, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and Camille Saint-Saëns; as well as gay cultural classics from the film 'A Star is Born' (1954) and Jerry Herman's Broadway hits 'Mame' and 'La Cage aux Folles.' Other queer artists to be covered include Freddie Mercury, the Indigo Girls and Melissa Etheridge. Activations and exhibitions will occur throughout the night, concluding with a dance party with DJ Juanita More.


San Francisco Chronicle
3 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Fourth of July 2025: The best parades, festivals and fireworks across the Bay Area
Light up the sparklers! Whether the fog rolls in or not, San Francisco's official Fourth of July fireworks display off of Pier 39 is scheduled to go on, starting around 9:30 p.m. on Friday. Arrive early to watch the city's pyrotechnical display at Fisherman's Wharf, the Ferry Building, along the Marina Green or Tunnel Tops park. Or avoid the big city crowds by attending one of the many local fireworks and lit drone shows happening outside of San Francisco. Not interested in the big booms? With pancake breakfasts and parades, fairs, live music in parks and more to choose from, there are many ways to celebrate. Check out the fun with the Chronicle's regional guide to Independence Day events. Fourth of July Celebration: Steel Beach BBQ Relax on the flight deck with live DJ sets from Dave Stebbins, games, barbecue and nonalcoholic drinks. View a flyover by the Memorial Squadron and explore the site and its Apollo artifacts and exhibits. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday, July 4. $20-$38.77. USS Hornet Museum, 707 W. Hornet Ave., Alameda. 510-521-8448. Enjoy an old-fashioned neighborhood parade and party at the city's newest oceanfront park. The route makes its way from Noriega to Kirkham streets with marching bands, fire trucks, community groups and more. Post-parade festivities at Kirkham Street will include children's activities, live music, food and drinks. Golden Gate Park Band: American as Apple Pie, Ribs and Tacos Celebrate all things American as German Gonzalez conducts the band in an Independence Day pops program. 1 p.m. Friday, July 4. Free. Golden Gate Park Music Concourse, 50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Drive, S.F. 415-596-1741. S.F. Mime Troupe's 'Disruption: A Musical Farce' Michael Gene Sullivan directs the 66th incarnation of the left-leaning musical theater group's traveling summer production, which poses the political question: As the U.S. moves toward authoritarianism, will San Francisco resist, or become a 'suburb of Silicon Valley'? Written by Sullivan and Marie Cartier, with music by Daniel Savio. 2 p.m. Friday, July 4. Continuing at various Bay Area locations through Sunday, Aug. 3. Free-$20. Dolores Park, 19th and Dolores streets, S.F. 415-285-1717. Queer as Fourth: Radical Resistance fundraiser Celebrate queer joy, resistance and liberation at a party set to include live DJ sets from Charles Hawthorne, Hauna Bauna and Nice 4 Life, food, and sexy dancers. A portion of proceeds will benefit Lyric SF center for LGBTQ+ youth. 3-8 p.m. Friday, July 4. $10-$20. El Rio, 3158 Mission St., S.F. 415-282-3325. S.F. Fourth of July Pub Crawls and Hot Dog Eating Contest The lower Polk Street-centered pub crawl will include stops at Westwood, Silver Cloud, Wizards & Wands, Comet Club, and others. Pie and hot dog eating contests will be held at Jaxson. 4-10 p.m. Friday-Saturday, July 4-5. $5-$38.09. Check-in at Rick and Roxy's, 2125 Lombard St., S.F. 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North Bay Marin County Fair: Bug-tastic Set on Frank Lloyd Wright-designed grounds, the fair offers exhibitions, farm animals, carnival rides, "Star Wars" characters, a food and vendor marketplace, a community stage, roaming entertainment, and mainstage concerts from the Legendary Wailers, the Skatalites, TLC, Petty Theft, Zepparalla, Chris Housman and others. Fireworks shows occur nightly around 9:30 p.m. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Wednesday-Sunday, July 2-6. Free-$30. Marin County Fair, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. 415-473-6400. Sausalito Fourth of July A downtown parade will be followed by a picnic featuring family activities and live music in Dunphy Park. Gather at Gabrielson Park in the evening for live music, food trucks and fireworks. Parade at 10 a.m.; picnic noon-4 p.m.; evening festival 6:30-9:45 p.m. Friday, July 4. Free. Dunphy and Gabrielson Parks, Sausalito. 415-289-4152. 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Corte Madera Town Park, 498 Tamalpais Drive, Corte Madera. Parade at 10:30 a.m. kicks off from Redwood High School, 395 Doherty Drive, Larkspur. 415-924-0441. Calistoga Star-Spangled Parade and Social: American Dream The festivities begin with a morning parade followed by a festival that's set to include a maker's market, children's activities, food trucks, live music, magic and an after-dark laser lights show. Parade begins at 11 a.m.; festival 2-8 p.m.; live music 2-10 p.m. $15-$25. Pioneer Park, 1308 Cedar St., Calistoga. 707-403-5024. Call of the Sea Independence Day Sails Enjoy an afternoon or evening fireworks sail aboard the 132-foot-long wooden brigantine Matthew Turner tall ship, decorated in patriotic colors. 3:30-6 p.m. and 7:15-10 p.m. Friday, July 4. $49-$195, reservations required. Bay Model Visitor Center, 2100 Bridgeway, Sausalito. 415-331-3214. S.F. Sail on the Bay cruise Board the 80-foot gaff-rigged coastal Schooner Freda B, for an afternoon or a sunset fireworks viewing cruise on the bay. Onboard bar with refreshments available. 3:45 and 7:15 p.m. Friday, July 4. $99-$316.63, reservations required. Schooner Freda B, Slip 465, 100 Bay St., Sausalito. 415-331-0444. Green Music Center Fourth of July Spectacular Troy Quinn will conduct a pops concert featuring the Santa Rosa Symphony and Transcendence Theatre Company followed by a fireworks display. A family festival with carnival games, children's zone, food vendors and more begins at 4:30 p.m. Indoor and outdoor seating options available. 4:30 p.m.-10 p.m. Friday, July 4. $46-$76. Weill Hall and Lawn, Green Music Center, 1801 E. Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park. 707-664-4246. South Bay Half Moon Bay Ol' Fashioned Fourth of July Parade and Party The parade is set to include horses, floats, classic cars, community groups and marching bands. 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California's Great America Fourth of July celebration After an afternoon of amusement and water park fun, enjoy barbecue and a fireworks show, complemented by a patriotic soundtrack. 10 a.m.-11 p.m.; fireworks at 9:45 p.m. Friday, July 4. $57-$65. California's Great America, 4701 Great America Parkway, Santa Clara. 408-988-1776. Pacifica Fourth of July The city of Pacifica will host its annual Independence Day picnic with live music, carnival rides, games and family-friendly activities. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Friday, July 4. Free. Frontierland Park, 900 Yosemite Drive, Pacifica. 650-738-7300. Palo Alto Fourth of July Festival and Chili Cook-off Enjoy free chili tasting, live music, food trucks and children's activities during the town's annual festival and cook-off. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Friday, July 4. Free. Mitchell Park, 600 E. Meadow Drive, Palo Alto. 650-463-4900. San Mateo Fourth of July Concert Join the city of San Mateo's holiday celebration with family-friendly activities and live music from Club 90. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Friday, July 4. Free. Central Park, 50 E. Fifth Ave., San Mateo. San Francisco Symphony Fourth of July Fireworks Spectacular Edwin Outwater is scheduled to conduct the orchestra in a program of patriotic and theatrical works, featuring vocal soloist-ukulele virtuoso Taimane. The event includes a post concert fireworks display. Gates 7 p.m.; concert 8 p.m. Friday, July 4. $26-$138. Shoreline Amphitheatre, 1 Amphitheatre Way, Mountain View. 415-864-6000. Sacramento A's versus Giants with after-game fireworks The A's are scheduled to duke it out with the San Francisco Giants on Independence Day, followed by a fireworks display and drone lights show in honor of the holiday. 7 p.m. Friday, July 4. $206-$303. Sutter Health Park, 400 Ballpark Driv., West Sacramento.