.. The Understudy by Morgan Richter (2025)
To paraphrase that corny old joke about opera.......it's not over til someone drops dead.
Pitch perfectly trained young opera singer Kit is on the verge of her big breakthrough and first starring role. Her New York based opera company, famous for its startling choices of adaptive material, has cast her as the campy, sexy sci-fi heroine Barbarella. (Barbarella belting out arias as she defends the galaxy in outrageous skin-tight costumes? The mind boggles......how come Masterpiece Theater never got around to this......)
Kit's singing may be technically superb, but her acting is strictly mediocre connect-the-dots, lacking true fire, emotion and conviction. Which leads the company to lean toward her strikingly beautiful understudy Yolanda. Yolo's got nowhere near Kit's precision vocal talents, but she radiates the pure sexual combustion the role of Barbarella requires.
Even worse news for Kit.......Yolanda's not only more suited for the role, she's potentially a treacherous sociopath, who won't let anything or anybody stand in the way of her path to stardom. And anyone she considers a roadblock......uh-oh.
At this point, I would not want to spoil all the many ways in which Kit and Yolanda's toxic frenemy situation goes spiraling out of control in multiple disturbing directions. Let's just say that Kit's determination to unravel her understudy's tortuous backstory and motives lead her into one surprise after another........including someone wielding a wicked knife.
I'm not sure I could fully swallow the bumpy turns of plot this book takes and its final revelation is no great surprise either. What I did thoroughly enjoy (being something of a lifelong theater geek), was the fascinating look into opera as the most distinctive and challenging of musical art forms. Author Morgan Richter takes us on a juicy tour of backstage politics, and the arduous, demanding vocal training that Kit must endure to reach the pinnacle of her chosen form of creative expression.
Combining Kit overcoming her own personal deficiencies with Yolanda's strangely dangerous life makes for one engrossing package put together. And it's not over till Barbarella sings....
4 stars (****)
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