BROOKLYN, N.Y. - Seasoned composers have written far worse operas than Rufus Wainwright's maiden effort, Prima Donna. Much of the music is simply beautiful. Never does it sound like a cheap pop opera or a series of strung-together songs. It is a true opera.
Yet Prima Donna's U.S. premiere this week by the New York City Opera is generating an operatic tempest with no critical consensus in sight. Popular, charismatic, and breezily audacious, singer/songwriter Wainwright, 38, is either a hero or an interloper, depending on who's listening. But if nothing else, the four well-sold performances at the Brooklyn Academy through Saturday, which attracted teeny-boppers, out-of-town families and hardened Manhattan opera types, are jump-starting the financially beleaguered New York City Opera's current season more than did last week's reportedly tepid season-opener, La Traviata.