FREDERICK BALLENTINE IN THE
news
the anonymous lover 2o23
The Anonymous Lover
THE ATLANTA OPERA
MAR/APR 2023
“The roles of Valcour and Léontine are handled by Frederick Ballentine and Marietta native Maria Valdes, respectively, and both were a pleasure to watch and hear. They each brought tremendous energy and shared an enthusiastic sort of high energy chemistry. Their voices are both stellar; there was a sense of youthfulness about them."
Arts ATL, Jordan Owen
“Ballentine has a fine romantic tenor voice that nicely expresses a broad range of emotions."
Ear Relevant, William Ford
the rhinegold 2o23
THE RHINEGOLD
ENGLISH NATIONAL OPERA
FEB/MAR 2023
“Leigh Melrose’s Alberich and Frederick Ballentine’s Loge, energies drove the entire show forward whenever they were onstage…Frederick Ballentine’s Loge is another show-stealer. He is a slighter physical and vocal presence than Relyea and cuts a nimble contrast with his luminous gloves, giving a mercurial performance. Diction is like cut glass, and the sheer crispness and clarity of his consonants showed just how utterly absorbing singing in the vernacular can be."
Opera Wire, Benjamin Moore
“Frederick Ballentine oozed wide-boy charm as Loge,…. and the easy glitter of Ballentine’s tenor just about whenever he sang a note."
Bachtrack, David Karlin
“There are two outstanding performances from a strong cast…Tenor Frederick Ballentine gives a wonderfully vivid portrayal of Loge, the God of Fire, played as a street-wise effete with sociopathic tendencies and lime-green gloves."
Culture Whisper, Séamus Rea
“Loge is always a character well-placed to steal the show. Frederick Ballantine’s quicksilver portrayal certainly did that, securely poised on what might otherwise be a tightrope between personability and tales of political alienation. Key to his success, and to that of many other cast members, was crystal-clear diction, enabling the truths of John Deathridge’s excellent new singing translation to hit home with force – the truth that Wagner requires us to think for ourselves, his text a springboard rather than our dramatic destination not the least of them."
Opera Today, Mark Berry
it's a wonderful life 2o22
It's a Wonderful Life
ENGLISH NATIONAL OPERA
NOV/DEC 2022
“Frederick Ballentine is given an awful lot of work to do vocally as George, and carries it well, with voice well-calibrated to character. His early scenes with wife-to-be Mary channel the raw strength and uninhibited character of his tenor into an authentic ardor and hunger for life; as things worsen it is equally effective a vehicle for desperation and despair."
Operawire, Benjamin Moore
“Heggie and Scheer water down the descent into despair, drunkenness and aggression experienced by Capra’s George when his dreams are thwarted by the needs of others, but Frederick Ballentine’s glowing tenor conveyed Bailey’s driving ambitions and essential goodness. His final confrontation with his nemesis, Michael Mayes’ callous, calculating Henry F. Potter, was thrillingly fierce and tense."
Opera Today, Claire Seymour
“But his tenor fills out Heggie’s long lines tirelessly and touchingly, especially when, after the music-less passage of his non-existence, he sings himself haltingly back to life."
The Guardian, Erica Jeal
“Frederick Ballentine leads with charisma and presence enough to fill a vast stage, his crystal clear tenor equally suited to the disappointment and despair as it is to the redemption and rejoicing that defines George Bailey’s narrative arc."
Broadway World
“George is sung by Frederick Ballantine, last at ENO as Sportin’ Life in Porgy and Bess. It’s a fantastic performance, warmly sung, deftly danced and taut with the conflict between desire and duty."
Culture Whisper, Claudia Prittchard
porgy & bess 2o19
Porgy & Bess
CINCINNATI OPERA
JUNE & JULY 2019
"We are introduced to... weaselly drug dealer Sportin’ Life, sung by mellifluous tenor Frederick Ballentine, Jr., whose delightful, oily slick performance reminded me of an evil Bruno Mars.
CityBeat, Leyla Shokoohe
"Fortunately, Gershwin filled “Porgy” with an abundance of richly drawn characters, particularly Sportin’ Life, a charismatic small-time drug dealer played by a deliciously sassy Frederick Ballentine..."
Cincinnati Enquirer, David Lyman
porgy & bess 2o18
Porgy & Bess
ENGLISH NATIONAL OPERA
OCT/NOV 2018
“When the aptly named Sporting Life, a dope peddler (the vibrant Frederick Ballentine), debunks a literal reading of the Bible in “It Ain’t Necessarily So,” even the churchgoers who find him objectionable laugh, carry on and sing along. “
New York Times, Anthony Tommasini
“Sportin’ Life’s numbers are highlights thanks to a sparky UK debut from Frederick Ballentine.”
The Guardian, Erica Jeal
SPORTIN' LIFE
GLIMMERGLASS FESTIVAL
porgy & bess
candide 2o18
Candide
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
MAY 2018
“Rounding out the cast, Frederick Ballentine turned in a superb performance as Candide’s sidekick, Cacambo, whose sweet tenor paired well with that of Shrader."
Washington Classical Review, Grace Jean
“Frederick Ballentine, a tenor in the Domingo-Cafritz program, had a breakout moment with Cacambo, Candide’s loyal servant in Act II.“
Washington Post, Anne Midgette
“Even more significantly, Frederick Ballentine plays Cacambo not as a Stepin Fetchit caricature but as he pointedly says, “I’m a quarter Dutch, a quarter German, and one hundred percent African!” His character comes across as filled with dignity and even level-headed heroism."
DC Theatre Scene, Susan Galbraith
champion 2o17
Champion
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
MAY 2017
“Frederick Ballentine, another Domingo-Cafritz artist, was promising if a little stiff as Luis, Griffith’s adopted son, who cares for him in his old age. “
Washington Post, Anne Midgette
“Frederick Ballentine as old Emile’s caretaker proved moving with his growing conflicting feelings of frustration and gentle loving.”
DC Theatre Scene, Susan Galbraith
“Tenor Frederick Ballentine sings beautifully and is exceptional as Luis Griffith, the elderly Emile’s caregiver.”
Metro Weekly, Kate Wingfield
“Tenor Frederick Ballentine as Luis Griffith was well-cast and naturally compelling.”
DC Metro Theater Arts
champion
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
LUIS
wno 2o17
RBG at the OPERA
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
2017
Aida
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
2017
20 Minute Operas
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
2017
“Not that levity was always appropriate. Frederick Ballentine, a promising tenor, had especially heavy lifting with “E lucevan le stele” from Tosca, the Seguidilla scene from Carmen and a painful aria from Philip Glass’s Appomattox, the opera presented here so successfully in 2015, recounting the Ku Klux Klan’s slaughter of a hundred black militiamen. (Ginsburg introduced this segment by outlining her dissent in the 2013 decision revising the Voting Rights Act.) Ballentine’s voice is still growing toward the final
measure of heroic “ping” for the Puccini, but he had every bit of the dramatic and musical heft to bring across the biting scene from Glass’s work, which held up very well against the other excerpts”
Washington Post, Anne Midgette
Ruth Bader Ginsburg at the Opera
“Finally, mention must be made of Frederick Ballentine, who in his brief moment as the Messenger, reveals a gorgeously shiny tenor.”
Metro Weekly, Kate Wingfied
Aida
“But, as the enigmatic, willing to please, but still-learning Adam, Frederick Ballentine excelled the mark in his deeply complex role, as he interpreted a still evolving character attempting to sort out the conflict between his full-blown military prowess and his still child-like human antecedent as his developing personality tries to sort out what it all means."
Communities Digital News, Terry Ponick
20 Minute Operas
the crucible 2o16
THE CRUCIBLE
GLIMMERGLASS FESTIVAL
2016
“Tenors Frederick Ballentine and Ian Koziara sang their respective roles as the overly-concerned-with-his-social-position clergyman Samuel Parris and the odious bailiff Ezekiel Cheever with verve and vastly distinct vocal character, one’s pinging and intense, the other’s as slippery as Judge Danforth’s."
Blasting News, Richard Carter
rbg at wno
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
appomattax 2o15
Appomattox
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
2015
“Standouts among the really wonderful cast, apart from those already mentioned, included...Frederick Ballentine. Ballentine sang some of the most painful arias in the opera: a description of the murder of Jimmie Lee Jackson, a civil rights activist, in Act II, and an account of the Colfax massacre of 1873, in which dozens of black men were slaughtered in cold blood.”
Washington Post, Anne Midgette
“Frederick Ballentine also stands out with two wonderful stirring portraits of activists. As T. Morris Chester, Freeman and Philadelphia African American journalist in the 1860’s, and then the civil rights leader John Lewis, he was able to show the arc throughout history of the seething drive to overcome the inequities and the lack of retribution for murders of his people that sadly continues."
DC Theatre Scene, Susan Galbraith
“Frederick Ballentine wielded his vibrant tenor expressively as black Civil War correspondent T. Morris Chester and made a strong impression, too, as Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee chairman John Lewis.”
Opera News, Tim Smith
roll call 2o15
INTERVIEW:
ROLL CALL
2015
Interview: OPERA TENOR CHANNELS YOUNG JOHN LEWIS IN 'APPOMATTAX'
"...Los Angeles-based tenor Frederick Ballentine has the particularly daunting task of portraying Lewis, a leader of the seminal march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., that sparked passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965. 'He seems just like some of my friends from back home, because I looked at him from back when he was 25,'
Ballentine told CQ Roll Call about Lewis. 'I had to just turn him into the voice of young black people at the time, and that is essentially what he was, I think...'
​
Read Mr. Ballentine's full interview with Neils Lesniewski/Roll Call here.
appomattax
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
T. MORRIS CHESTER/
JOHN LEWIS