With hit songs like "Summertime" and "It Ain't Necessarily So," Porgy and Bess would become a classic. But its 1935 opening in New York was disappointing. It ran for just 124 performances.
There were periodic productions through the 1940s and '50s, especially in Europe, where the opera became popular. In 1959, a film version starring Sidney Poitier and Dorothy Dandridge extended the reach of Porgy and Bess even further. By the 1960s, however, some African-Americans saw the opera in a bad light, offended by its use of black southern dialect.
DeMain, who is also conducting Porgy and Bess in Los Angeles, says the Houston production abandoned some of the Broadway elements that had been introduced to the opera, and focused on the story.
"And so we went back to just tell the story. And the other thing that we wanted to do it, we didn't want us, who were white and not intrinsically knowledgeable of a southern black experience, to impose our way of doing this piece onto the cast," he explains.
"We wanted to draw on the cast's experience so that the cast reclaim this work, so that the actors rediscover and own this work because they felt that they were accurately portraying a piece of their tradition."
One, Indira Mahajan, plays Bess in the Los Angeles production, and she is the daughter of an earlier lead. Mahajan performed in the opera herself at the age of nine, in a child's role. She is back in one of the key roles, and John DeMain says she does it the way he likes.
"And I said to her when I heard her singing Bess, because it was the first time we were doing Bess together, and I heard her sing it last week and said, 'You've learned this so well,'" he recalls. "It's exactly like I teach all the Besses. She said, 'I've been listening to you do it since I was nine years old.
'"
"And in a community, you have a lot of different people. You have your shady characters.
You have your religious people. You have your troublemakers. You have your lawbreakers.
You have your loose women. You have your loose men. And you have love, and you have jealousy - all of that," he notes.
As rehearsals got under way, conductor John DeMain said the Los Angeles production will reach a fresh audience, including many young people who are new to the opera. He says the story of Porgy and Bess, although set in the 1930s, could be drawn from today's headlines.
