Manitoba Opera capped its season on a high note with its latest production
of Rossini’s The Barber of Seville, sung in the key of
goofiness that has inspired even a certain “pesky wabbit,”
a.k.a. Bugs Bunny’s The Rabbit of Seville.
Author: Gary Hoffman
Manitoba Opera: The Barber of Seville
Cool beauty in Dutch National Opera’s Madama Butterfly
It is hard to imagine a more beautifully sung Cio-Cio-San than Elena Stikhina’s.
Kurt Weill’s Street Scene
Kurt Weill’s “American opera,” Street Scene debuted this past weekend in the Kay Theatre at the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center, with a diverse young cast comprised of students and alumni of the Maryland Opera Studio (MOS).
The Maryland Opera Studio Defies Genre with Fascinating Double-Bill
This past weekend, the Maryland Opera Studio (MOS) presented a double-billed performance of two of Kurt Weill’s less familiar staged works: Zaubernacht (1922) and Mahagonny-Songspiel (1927).
MartÌn y Soler: Una cosa rara
Una cosa rara, ossia Bellezza ed onest‡. Dramma giocoso in two acts.
Music composed by Vicente MartÌn y Soler (1754–1806). Libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte from the comedy La luna de la Sierra by Luis VÈlez de Guevara.
Boston Lyric Opera’s East Coast Premiere of The Handmaid’s Tale
Anne Bogart directs East Coast premiere of Ruders & Bentley’s take on Margaret Atwood’s novel.
Christina Scheppelmann appointed General Director of Seattle Opera
Scheppelmann heads to the Pacific Northwest following leadership roles in the U.S., Europe, and the Middle East
Akira Nishimura’s Asters: A Major New Japanese Opera
Opened as recently as 1997, the Opera House of the New National Theatre Tokyo (NNTT) is one of the newest such venues among the world’s great capitals, but, with ten productions of opera a year, ranging from baroque to contemporary, this publicly-owned and run theatre seems determined to make an international impact.
Leading Ladies: Barbara Strozzi and Amiche
I couldn’t help wondering; would a chamber concert of vocal music by female composers of the 17th century be able sustain our concentration for 90 minutes? Wouldn’t most of us be feeling more dutiful than exhilarated by the end?
Carlo Diacono: L’Alpino
“Diacono himself does not know what musical talent he possesses” – Mascagni