Alumnus is hitting all the right notes at the Met
You can find Tshombe Selby performing on stage and assisting backstage at Lincoln Center
When tenor Tshombe Selby, MM 鈥22, walks through the doors of the Metropolitan Opera House, no role is too large or too small for him. Whether he鈥檚 taking a solo bow on stage or guiding patrons to their seats as an usher, Selby takes pride in the job.
On a summer morning, workers have lowered the massive chandelier that usually shines over the grand staircase and its crimson carpet. Selby, 41, pauses and looks down to see how it鈥檚 going.
鈥淧eople take more pictures with the chandeliers than they take with the stars of the opera,鈥 he notes. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 their opportunity to be a part of the Met. So, when I was able to touch every one of those crystals and clean them, I was proud.
鈥淲hen I was an usher, you didn鈥檛 mess up in my area. There鈥檚 no talking. You will not have your cell phone out. You鈥檙e going to have respect for these people, respect for this house, respect for my section, respect for this art form. The same respect I have wearing my usher uniform is the same respect I have when I put on my costume: This is my opportunity. I鈥檓 going to do my job.鈥
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Growing up in Manteo, North Carolina, Selby sang in church and in school. He enrolled as an undergraduate at Elizabeth City State University (ECSU) with plans to become a high school principal and sing in the choir. School administrators start off in the classroom, so he thought he鈥檇 begin his career as a music teacher. At the time, he couldn鈥檛 read music.
At ECSU, Selby strengthened his fundamentals and soon mastered an aria for the first time: La donna 猫 mobile, a famous showcase for tenors like Luciano Pavarotti, from Giuseppe Verdi鈥檚 opera Rigoletto. It鈥檚 well known to American audiences from commercials for products ranging from pasta sauce to Axe body spray.
鈥淚 was listening to YouTube, and I heard Pavarotti singing the cadenza,鈥 Selby remembers. 鈥淚 went back to my teacher, and I was like, 鈥業 want to try this one.鈥欌
From that time on, Selby chased a dream of becoming an opera singer. He continued to travel back and forth to school after his father suffered a stroke, and when he took time away from classes after his father died, choir director Billy Hines allowed him to continue singing with the group.
He always hoped to make his way to the stage.
鈥淚 found my love for grandeur in church,鈥 Selby says. 鈥淭he choir would march in, that鈥檚 very grand. We鈥檙e Southern Baptists, so it was a lot of ceremonial things, something you don鈥檛 do every day. 鈥 And opera is not something you do every day. It鈥檚 make-believe, but it鈥檚 real lives. It drew me. I didn鈥檛 want to do something that everybody could do. So, I wanted to become an opera singer.鈥
That drive powered Selby through a period when he traveled two hours each way for voice lessons, and eventually took him to an outdoor theatrical production called The Lost Colony, which tells the story of the first attempt at English colonization in America.
Through his work in the cast of The Lost Colony, Selby met opera coaches Carol and Nico Castel, as well as theater director Charles Massey and his brother Bill Massey, an arts administrator. A team of friends and mentors encouraged Selby to go to New York to advance his career and Charles Massey helped him land a position as an usher at the Met in 2013 through a friend.
By 2015, Selby had his debut at Carnegie Hall. He kept improving his craft, performing with the Delaware Valley Opera in the Catskills and Opera NUOVA in Canada.
While working as an usher at the Met, he met Elinor Ross. She was in her late 80s by then, but Ross had once been a powerhouse soprano.
鈥淚 befriended her, and she was so kind to me and gave me guidance,鈥 Selby says.
Ross introduced him to Joseph Lawson, then the assistant chorus master at the Met. Lawson turned out to be a longtime friend of Carol Castel and agreed to coach Selby. Soon he had an audition and landed a spot in the chorus of Porgy and Bess.
One day, as he was driving down the New Jersey Turnpike, he received a call from the Met asking if he would like to be in 骋枚迟迟别谤诲盲尘尘别谤耻苍驳, part of Richard Wagner鈥檚 Ring cycle.
鈥淚 said, 鈥極h yeah, I do.鈥 They said, 鈥榃ell, be at rehearsal tomorrow.鈥 So, there I went one day from being an usher to being on stage, being in rehearsal at the Met and being a singer,鈥 Selby says.
In one sense, he wasn鈥檛 that nervous: He had already spent so many hours in the building. But walking on stage for rehearsal evoked a new feeling.
鈥淢y legs were like jelly because I was walking where Pavarotti and Leontyne Price walked,鈥 Selby remembers.
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Selby鈥檚 career was starting to take shape at this point, but he was still searching for intellectual validation. That鈥檚 what brought him to the Master of Music in Opera Program at Binghamton, where he received a Clifford D. Clark Fellowship.
Selby describes Christopher Bartlette, an associate professor of music, as a 鈥渢heory god鈥 who helped him strengthen his understanding of the technical and historical elements of opera.
鈥淗e worked with me and really catered to every student鈥檚 strong points,鈥 Selby says. 鈥淎nd then, in their weak points, he would cultivate that so it wouldn鈥檛 be so weak anymore.鈥
Thomas Goodheart, associate professor of voice at Binghamton, remembers Selby as an exceptionally upbeat student, a hard worker as well as a leader.
鈥淗e really had a profound impact on our vocal program in the two years he was here,鈥 Goodheart says. 鈥淗e was a very positive, very supportive person. That鈥檚 also how he was in our lessons and in performing.鈥
Selby鈥檚 time on campus coincided with the pandemic, so he did not have a traditional student experience. Still, he performed with Tri-Cities Opera in The Elixir of Love and did coursework in diction, foreign languages and history in addition to vocal lessons.
Goodheart has worked with other Binghamton students who went on to success at opera鈥檚 highest levels, notably soprano Caitlin Gotimer 鈥15 and mezzo-soprano Lindsay Kate Brown, MM 鈥16. He says it鈥檚 not enough for a performer to have a great voice; drive and dedication as well as other qualities can help singers stand out. Selby, he notes, brings a pathos and understanding to his roles and somehow retains a kind of vulnerability on stage.
鈥淵es, he has a lovely voice, but he expresses everything he has experienced in his life through his singing,鈥 Goodheart says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not something you learn. That鈥檚 something you have in your personality. Listening to him sing is different. You鈥檙e drawn to that.鈥
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Before Selby had finished his last class at Binghamton, he returned to the city, where he performed at the Met in two Terence Blanchard operas: Fire Shut Up in My Bones and Champion.
Selby also continued working as an usher, which is where he met Philip Volpe, a master electrician who offered him a job running the opera titles. (Opera titles are like subtitles for a foreign film: They鈥檙e projected above the stage and allow the audience to read in English and follow the storyline while performers are singing in another language.)
鈥淭hat鈥檚 how I became a stagehand. I ended up in the titles booth,鈥 Selby says. 鈥淎nd then last season, I needed some more work. So, I also became a spotlight operator.鈥
Through it all, Selby remains positive. One season, he was in 11 shows; the next he had parts in just three.
鈥淚 was running the spotlight, and I had a moment to think,鈥 he remembers. 鈥淚 said, 鈥榊ou know, I鈥檓 working the spotlight now that was shining on me.鈥 And in that moment, you could feel like, 鈥極h, I鈥檝e really downgraded.鈥 But I鈥檓 working.鈥
Whatever the task, Selby says, he asks questions and stays humble. Just as he spends time reviewing a score for a performance, he has taken rope home to practice tying knots to improve his work as a stagehand.
鈥淧eople in the Met sometimes call me the mayor, because I鈥檓 always around just doing everything,鈥 Selby says. 鈥淭here is not a job that I won鈥檛 try, because work is work. And there鈥檚 nothing wrong with making an honest day鈥檚 wage.鈥