“Opportunity will come from crisis”: Polly Graham, Artistic Director of Longborough Opera, in conversation

It’s ingrained in theatre-makers: “Make a show.” As she prepares to announce some new events and performances that will take place in forthcoming weeks, as well as Longborough Festival Opera’s 2021 productions, Artistic Director Polly Graham reflects on the very difficult decision to cancel the 2020 Longborough Festival which she was forced to take.

The ReGeneration Festival 2020

Grand open-air celebrations in the Boboli Gardens of Florence’s Palazzo Pitti for this year’s transformed New Generation Festival

A family-friendly Friday Premiere – ROH and the Roundhouse presents ZooNation’s The Mad Hatter’s Tea Party

The Royal Opera House is proud to continue its #OurHouseToYourHouse programme throughout the summer, announcing the Friday Premiere screening of ZooNation’s The Mad Hatter’s Tea Party on Friday 31 July at 7pm BST.

Verdi’s Falstaff and Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress – new titles announced for Glyndebourne Open House

Glyndebourne has announced the next two opera titles in its virtual festival, Glyndebourne Open House – Verdi’s Falstaff and Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress (pictured above).

A Feast in the Time of Plague: Britain’s first new opera commission since lockdown, at Grange Park Opera

A brand-new opera – A Feast in the Time of Plague – will be performed by Grange Park Opera, live on the stage of the Theatre in the Woods on Sunday 13 September 2020 in front of an invited audience of 250 people.

Carlisle Floyd’s Prince of Players: a world premiere recording

“It’s forbidden, and where’s the art in that?”

Bizet’s Carmen Uncovered

https://boydellandbrewer.com/bizet-s-i-carmen-i-uncovered.html

Rimsky-Korsakov – Mozart and Salieri

Mozart and Salieri, an opera in one act consisting of two scenes.

Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908), composer. Libretto derived from Alexander Puskhin’s play of the same name.

First performance: 7 December 1898 in Moscow.

John F. Larchet’s Complete Songs and Airs: in conversation with Niall Kinsella

Dublin-born John F. Larchet (1884-1967) might well be described as the father of post-Independence Irish music, given the immense influenced that he had upon Irish musical life during the first half of the 20th century – as a composer, musician, administrator and teacher.

Haddon Hall: ‘Sullivan sans Gilbert’ does not disappoint thanks to the BBC Concert Orchestra and John Andrews

The English Civil War is raging. The daughter of a Puritan aristocrat has fallen in love with the son of a Royalist supporter of the House of Stuart. Will love triumph over political expediency and religious dogma?