THE GOLDEN COCKEREL Opens Friday, Oct. 25th

MEDIA RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Contact: Suzanne Calvin 214.443.1014
suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org
The Dallas Opera is Delighted to Present
THE GOLDEN COCKEREL
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Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s Brilliant Political Satire about Sex, War, and Power
OCTOBER 25 – NOVEMBER 2, 2019
Conducted by Music Director Emmanuel Villaume
Directed by Paul Curran
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Starring Nikolay Didenko (King Dodon), Olga Pudova (Queen of Shemakha), Kevin Burdette (General Polkan), Barry Banks (Astrologer), Lindsay Ammann (Amelfa), Viktor Antipenko (Prince Guidon), Corey Crider (Prince Afron) and Jeni Houser as the Voice of the Golden Cockerel
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DALLAS, OCTOBER 23, 2019 – The Dallas Opera’s 2019-2020 “Standing Ovation” Season scales new comedic heights this Friday with the opening of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s hilarious-yet-thought-provoking final opera, The Golden Cockerel.
The October 25, 2019 performance in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Conducted by Maestro Emmanuel Villaume (The Mrs. Eugene McDermott Music Director of The Dallas Opera) and directed by Paul Curran (The James R. Seitz, Jr., Stage Director), this rarely-performed work has not been seen on The Dallas Opera stage since 1973.
This opulent new co-production garnered rave reviews when it opened in Santa Fe during the 2017 summer opera festival. “Gary McCann’s vibrant and kitschy costumes,” wrote Arya Roshanian for OperaWire, “inspired by Russian matryoshka dolls, contain some of the most fabulous and original costumes of the season.”
Opera Warhorses praised Maestro Villaume’s “majestically-contoured, sensitive performance of Rimsky-Korsakov’s Orientalist score.” And Scott Cantrell of The Dallas Morning News had high praise for the score itself: “The orchestral writing mixes bright-colored Russian impressionism and echoes of Russian folk idioms. The Queen weaves her spell with showcase vocalism alternately slithery and flickering.”
Rimsky-Korsakov’s turn-of-the-century cautionary tale about lust and power (or the lust for power) may be more relevant than ever.
The Golden Cockerel, a three-act satirical masterpiece, premiered in Moscow in 1909 after initially being banned by government censors. The composer, Rimsky-Korsakov, did not live to see his work on stage.
Tickets for The Golden Cockerel may be purchased by phone (214.443.1000), online (dallasopera.org) or at the door, starting at just $19.
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Russian bass Nikolay Didenko (who, according to The New York Sun, “regularly steals the show with his seemingly effortless subterranean voice” will make his Dallas Opera debut as the delusional King Dodon.
Russian coloratura soprano Olga Pudova will be making her company debut as the exotic and sultry Queen of Shemakha. Ms. Pudova is an audience favorite at the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg, Russia, where this season alone, she sings the roles of Tytania in Benjamin Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Nanetta in Falstaff, Adina in L’elisir d’amore and the title role in Ruslan and Lyudmila.
Bass Kevin Burdette (Everest, Great Scott), described by The New York Times as “the Robin Williams of opera,” is the king’s loyal commander, General Polkan.
Renowned mezzo-soprano Lindsay Ammann sings the role of Amelfa, while English tenor Barry Banks, a favorite of Metropolitan Opera audiences, makes his TDO debut as the Astrologer who seems to know and (possibly) control all.
Russian tenor Viktor Antipenko in his Dallas Opera debut, and American baritone Corey Crider will sing the roles of Dodon’s backstabbing, bone-headed sons, Prince Guidon and Prince Afron.
Last but certainly not least, soprano Jeni Houser (currently appearing in TDO’s season opener, The Magic Flute, as the Queen of the Night) is the voice of the Golden Cockerel.
The other principals in this production are Jay Gardner and Christopher Harrison as Boyars. Samuel P.J. Lopez will sing the tenor solo.
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All four performances of The Golden Cockerel will be conducted by internationally-acclaimed Music Director Emmanuel Villaume, praised for the sensitivity of his conducting by Zachary Woolfe of The New York Times.
Wayne Lee Gay of Texas Classical Review noted in his analysis of last season’s Carmen, “Even in the opening phrases of the Overture…Villaume’s command of the nuance and unique musical language of Bizet signaled an outstanding performance in the making.”
This season, in his recent review of The Magic Flute, Dallas Morning News Classical Music Critic Scott Cantrell observed that “Villaume got well disciplined, suave playing from The Dallas Opera Orchestra. Ensemble singing in the first act was impressively precise.” Meanwhile, Gregory Sullivan Isaacs of TheaterJones.com wrote, “Emmanuel Villaume’s extensive research into the score presents a refreshing new take…that will delight those familiar with the music.”
Scottish director/choreographer Paul Curran, who made a dazzling 2015 Dallas Opera debut with the world premiere of Mark Adamo’s Becoming Santa Claus, is reviving his own production of Cockerel here in Dallas.
Set and costume designs are by famed British designer Gary McCann, whose jaw-dropping designs for The Dallas Opera’s 2015 world premiere of Mark Adamo’s Becoming Santa Claus were the talk of the town. Recent and upcoming projects include designing Der Freischütz and Macbeth for Vienna State Opera; Killology for the Royal Court Theatre; Carmen for Opera Philadelphia; and the sets for My Fair Lady for Teatro San Carlo in Naples.
Lighting design for this production is by Paul Hackenmueller with projections designed by Driscoll Otto. Wig and make-up designs are by Dawn Rivard.
As always, The Dallas Opera Chorus will be prepared by The Dallas Opera Chorus Master Alexander Rom.
Sung in Russian (the original language) with English supertitles projected above the stage, The Golden Cockerel can also be enjoyed at additional performances on October 27(m), 30, and November 2, 2019.
Dallas Opera evening performances begin promptly at 7:30 p.m., Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m. Student Rush Tickets are available at the box office 90 minutes prior to curtain – a valid student ID is required for each $15 or $25 ticket (price varies by seat location).
The complete season schedule, artist and production team bios, synopses and more can be found online, anytime, at dallasopera.org.
The Dallas Opera Wishes to Express Our Gratitude to Those
Whose Generous Contributions Made Possible
This 2019 Production of The Golden Cockerel:
The James R. Seitz, Jr. Stage Director in Honor of John Gage: Paul Curran
Additional Special Support Provided by:
Robert L. and Myra Barker Hull
James R. Seitz, Jr.
Joanna L. and T. Peter Townsend
ABOUT THE DALLAS OPERA:
One of the leading opera companies in the country, The Dallas Opera has an extraordinary legacy of world-class productions and thrilling premieres featuring the greatest operatic artists of our time. Inaugurated in 1957 with a concert featuring the incomparable Maria Callas, TDO is known for the notable U.S. debuts of a host of legendary artists including Plácido Domingo, Dame Joan Sutherland, Jon Vickers, Franco Zeffirelli, and Sir David McVicar. The company has long been an industry leader and innovator through groundbreaking initiatives like the Hart Institute for Women Conductors, free public simulcasts, acclaimed art song recitals, the national vocal competition, special concerts, and outstanding family and award-winning education programs. TDO’s home is the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House, a jewel in the Dallas Arts District. As one of the largest performing arts employers in North Texas, TDO is proudly committed to diversity, onstage and off, and is a major contributor to the economic vitality and international cultural reputation of this region.
2019-2020 SEASON SPONSOR
The Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Family
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EVENTS, GUESTS AND ARTISTS SUBJECT TO CHANGE
The Dallas Opera is supported, in part, by funds from: Elsa von Seggern Foundation,
Texas Instruments, the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture,
The Texas Commission on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA).
American Airlines is the official airline of The Dallas Opera.
Lexus is the official vehicle of The Dallas Opera.
Advertising support from The Dallas Morning News.
All performances in The Dallas Opera’s 63rd International Season will take place in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center, unless otherwise indicated. Evening performances will begin at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday matinees begin at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise stated. English translations will be projected above the stage at every performance and assistance is available for the hearing impaired.
The Joy and Ronald Mankoff Pre-Opera Talk will begin one hour prior to curtain at most performances. Full and Flex subscriptions are designed to meet the needs of every budget. Prices range from just $57 (for three performances of your choice) to a top orchestra floor price of $777 for all five mainstage productions. Single tickets are priced from $19 to $289 (a few box seats may be higher). For additional information or to make your purchase, call 214.443.1000 or visit dallasopera.org.
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The Magic Flute Opens October 18th – Free Simulcast on Friday, November 1, 2019

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Tuesday, October 15, 2019
Contact: Suzanne Calvin 214.443.1014
suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org
The Dallas Opera is Proud to Present
THE MAGIC FLUTE
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Mozart’s Magical, Comical Celebration
Of the Human Spirit
OCTOBER 18 – NOVEMBER 3, 2019
Conducted by Music Director Emmanuel Villaume
Directed by Kyle Lang in his TDO Debut
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Starring Paolo Fanale (Tamino), Andrea Carroll (Pamina), Jeni Houser (Queen of the Night), Morris Robinson (Sarastro), and Sean Michael Plumb (Papageno)
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FREE, LIVE COMMUNITY SIMULCAST
FRIDAY, NOV. 1, 2019 AT KLYDE WARREN PARK
Curtain Time: 7:30 p.m.
DALLAS, OCTOBER 15, 2019 – The Dallas Opera opens its 2019-2020 “Standing Ovation” Season on a high note this Friday with The Linda and Mitch Hart Season Opening Night Performance of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s final operatic masterpiece, The Magic Flute.
The October 18, 2019 performance in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center will begin at 8:00 p.m. (please note the special curtain time) with subsequent performances at the usual times.
Conducted by Emmanuel Villaume (The Mrs. Eugene McDermott Music Director of The Dallas Opera) and directed by Kyle Lang (Ann Stuart Stage Director) in his company debut, The Eleanor Ford Penrose Mainstage Production boasts a superb international cast of singers who have captivated audiences from the Kennedy Center to Covent Garden.
Italian tenor Paolo Fanale and American soprano Andrea Carroll will make their house debuts as the spirited romantic leads, Tamino and Pamina, braving trials and separations in order to find love, wisdom and happiness together, at long last.
“Tamino demands a beautiful voice that radiates youthful ardor,” wrote Harper’s Bazaar, “and you’ll hear it from this ‘heart-throb Italian tenor (Paolo Fanale).” Meanwhile, Opera News noted that Miss Carroll is “a favorite of the Vienna State Opera, (lauded for her) vibrant soprano (with its) rich, low register and gleaming top.”
American soprano Jeni Houser will account for several of the performance’s high notes as the majestic Queen of the Night. She, too, earned exceptional praise from Opera News for her “focused expressive high soprano…nailing her killer Act II showpiece.”
The role of Papageno, a comic tour-de-force, marks the eagerly-awaited house debut of baritone Sean Michael Plumb, whose “elegant lyricism and responsive musicality” (The New York Times) have made this award-winning California native a welcome presence on many of the world’s most prestigious stages.
Dallas Opera favorite Morris Robinson, an American bass last seen on the Winspear stage as The Commendatore in our acclaimed 2018 spring production of Don Giovanni, “dominates the stage…with his firm, opulent tone that seems to pour forth from another world” (The Classical Review). He returns in the role of the mysterious Sarastro.
Casting the roles of the First, Second, and Third Lady is about choosing complementary voices capable of creating one of the great trios in opera. The Dallas Opera indulged in “luxury casting” across the board: The First Lady will be sung by American soprano Diana Newman, the Second Lady by American mezzo-soprano Samantha Hankey (The Charron and Peter Denker Rising Star), and the Third Lady by American contralto Hannah Ludwig – all in their TDO debuts.
The troubled Monastatos, will be portrayed by character tenor Brian Frutiger with soprano Abigail Rethwisch as the charming Papagena and bass David Pittsinger as The Speaker.
Rounding out this outstanding cast are the First, Second and Third Boy sung by Keiland Holleman, Lukas Palys, and Michael Blumenthal, respectively.
The First Man in Armor will be sung by Aaron Short. Ryan Kuster will portray the Second Man in Armor. Sam Parkinson appears in the role of the First Priest, with Michael Christopher as the Second Priest.
This eighteenth-century masterpiece premiered in Vienna in 1791, and mixes popular song with show-stopping coloratura and a lilting touch of glockenspiel.
Tickets for Mozart’s The Magic Flute may be purchased by phone (214.443.1000), online (www.dallasopera.org) or at the door, starting at just $19.
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This production, originally directed by the late Sir Peter Hall, was designed by British cartoonist and illustrator extraordinaire, Gerald Scarfe, best known for a half century of scathing political cartoons for The Sunday Times and for directing and designing the animation sequence for Pink Floyd’s film and concert versions of The Wall. Mr. Scarfe has designed sets and costumes for opera companies from Seattle to New Zealand, as well as creating numerous books, exhibits, and acclaimed one-man shows.
Lighting design for this production is by Thomas C. Hase. Wig and make-up design is by Dawn Rivard.
As always, chorus preparation is by Dallas Opera Chorus Master Alexander Rom.
Performances of The Magic Flute continue on October 20(m), 23, 26, and November 1 (The Enrico Foundation Performance) and November 3(m), 2019. Evening performances in the Winspear Opera House begin at 7:30 p.m., (except for the opening night performance mentioned above) and the curtain rises on TDO Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m. There is no late seating.
The Magic Flute will be performed in its original language, German, with English-language translations projected above the stage at every performance.
Student Rush Tickets are available at the box office 90 minutes prior to curtain – a valid student ID is required for each ticket.
Additionally, The Dallas Opera is Pleased to Announce its 18th Live Simulcast since 2010!
A FREE KLYDE WARREN PARK SIMULCAST
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2019
The Dallas Opera will present a free live simulcast of Mozart’s The Magic Flute at beautiful Klyde Warren Park. This special presentation takes place in the Dallas Arts District on Friday, November 1, 2019 (program begins at 6:00 p.m., curtain time – 7:30 p.m.) and is open to all.
This will be a live simulcast of that night’s performance in the Winspear Opera House, presented for park patrons on a large high-definition video screen.
“The free fall simulcast in Klyde Warren Park has quickly evolved into one of our most popular traditions,” explains Dallas Opera Director of Marketing and Ticket Sales Carrie Ellen Adamian. “It’s not merely a grand night for opera, it’s a marvelous opportunity to celebrate community life with your loved ones, children, and friends.
“For those who may never have experienced opera before, The Magic Flute is especially delightful with its combination of gorgeous arias and a fantastic storyline that will keep you on the edge of your…blanket.”
Klyde Warren Park is located at 2012 Woodall Rodgers Freeway, Dallas, TX 75201. Sign up today for reminders and updates at www.dallasopera.org/simulcast. However, no reservations are required in order to attend the free November 1st simulcast, whether you’re coming alone or with 50 of your closest friends and family members!
The fun begins at 6:00 p.m. on Friday, November 1st with popular radio host Amy Bishop of WRR, “Classical 101” and Kristian Roberts, Education Administrator for The Dallas Opera. Activities include a trivia contest, behind-the-scenes interviews with the cast, and the high-definition screening of a 1950 classic cartoon, Rabbit of Seville (courtesy of WB Classics), directed by Chuck Jones and written by Michael Maltese. This short was voted #12 of the 50 all-time greatest cartoons ever created, in a survey of animation industry professionals.
The cartoon also “tips the hat” to our engaging season finale, The Barber of Seville (April 24th through May 10, 2020), Rossini’s hilarious comic masterpiece.
The public is encouraged to arrive with time to spare before the 7:30 curtain, and to bring blankets or low lawn-chairs to secure their spot on the lawn. A variety of nearby wining-and-dining options include Savor, serving New American cuisine and assorted food trucks.
Picnic baskets and pets are permitted, as well.
The 2019 Magic Flute Simulcast is made possible in part by The Enrico Foundation with additional support provided by Texas Instruments.
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The Dallas Opera Wishes to Express Our Gratitude to Those
Whose Generous Contributions Made Possible
This 2019 Production of The Magic Flute:
The Eleanor Ford Penrose Mainstage Production
Production Underwriters Cindy and Charlie Feld
Linda and Mitch Hart Season Opening Night Performance, Oct. 18, 2019
The Enrico Foundation Performance, Nov. 1, 2019
Charron and Peter Denker Rising Star: Samantha Hankey
Ann Stuart Stage Director: Kyle Lang
ABOUT THE DALLAS OPERA:
One of the leading opera companies in the country, The Dallas Opera has an extraordinary legacy of world-class productions and thrilling premieres featuring the greatest operatic artists of our time. Inaugurated in 1957 with a concert featuring the incomparable Maria Callas, TDO is known for the notable U.S. debuts of a host of legendary artists including Plácido Domingo, Dame Joan Sutherland, Jon Vickers, Franco Zeffirelli, and Sir David McVicar. The company has long been an industry leader and innovator through groundbreaking initiatives like the Hart Institute for Women Conductors, free public simulcasts, acclaimed art song recitals, the national vocal competition, special concerts, and outstanding family and award-winning education programs. TDO’s home is the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House, a jewel in the Dallas Arts District. As one of the largest performing arts employers in North Texas, TDO is proudly committed to diversity, onstage and off, and is a major contributor to the economic vitality and international cultural reputation of this region.
2019-2020 SEASON SPONSOR
The Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Family
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EVENTS, GUESTS AND ARTISTS SUBJECT TO CHANGE
The Dallas Opera is supported, in part, by funds from: Elsa von Seggern Foundation,
Texas Instruments, the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture,
The Texas Commission on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA).
American Airlines is the official airline of The Dallas Opera.
Lexus is the official vehicle of The Dallas Opera.
Advertising support from The Dallas Morning News.
All performances in The Dallas Opera’s 63rd International Season will take place in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center, unless otherwise indicated. Evening performances will begin at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday matinees begin at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise stated. English translations will be projected above the stage at every performance and assistance is available for the hearing impaired.
The Joy and Ronald Mankoff Pre-Opera Talk will begin one hour prior to curtain at most performances. Full and Flex subscriptions are designed to meet the needs of every budget. Prices range from just $57 (for three performances of your choice) to a top orchestra floor price of $777 for all five mainstage productions. Single tickets are priced from $19 to $289 (a few box seats may be higher). For additional information or to make your purchase, call 214.443.1000 or visit www.dallasopera.org.
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TDO’s First FALSTAFF Opens April 26th with a Once-in-a-Lifetime Cast!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Wednesday, April 3, 2019
Contact: Suzanne Calvin 214.443.1014
suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org
The Dallas Opera is Delighted to Present
Giuseppe Verdi’s Final Masterpiece
FALSTAFF
April 26 – May 4, 2019
The Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House
AT&T Performing Arts Center, Dallas, TX
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Conducted by Guest Conductor Riccardo Frizza
Directed by Shawna Lucey
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An Extraordinary International Cast!
Mark Delavan, Angela Meade, Quinn Kelsey, Stephanie Blythe, Mojca Erdmann, Airam Hernández, Megan Marino,
Alex Mansoori, Andrea Silvestrelli and Robert Brubaker
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Production Underwriters:
National Endowment for the Arts
And Stephen B. L. Penrose
Shawna Lucey – The James R. Seitz, Jr. Stage Director In Honor of John Gage
Angela Meade – The Marnie and Kern Wildenthal Principal Artist
Stephanie Blythe – The Phyllis A. McCasland & Thomas H. McCasland, Jr. Lead Soloist
Ticket Prices Start at Just $19
More Information at www.dallasopera.org/performance/falstaff/
DALLAS, TX, APRIL 3, 2019 – The Dallas Opera is delighted to give North Texas audiences a chance to experience one of the greatest comic operas of all time: Giuseppe Verdi’s FALSTAFF. In more than six decades of presenting opera at its finest, the occasion marks the first time this 1893 masterpiece has ever been produced on The Dallas Opera stage.
Verdi’s Falstaff will open for the first of four performances on Friday, April 26, 2019 at 7:30 p.m. in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center (with additional performances on April 28(m), May 1 & 4, 2019) conducted by Guest Conductor Riccardo Frizza and directed by Shawna Lucey in her company debut.
Ticket prices start at just $19 and can be purchased online at www.dallasopera.org or through The Dallas Opera Ticket Office at 214.443.1000.
This superlative international cast is led by American bass-baritone Mark Delavan in the title role of Sir John Falstaff. The star-studded cast also includes show-stopping soprano Angela Mead, as well as beloved mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe and renowned German soprano Mojca Erdmann in their eagerly-awaited company debuts.
Other principal singers in the impressive ensemble are baritone Quinn Kelsey, Spanish tenor Airam Hernández, mezzo-soprano Megan Marino, tenor Alex Mansoori, Italian bass Andrea Silvestrelli and tenor Robert Brubaker.
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Falstaff, an 1893 opera based on a much-loved comic character who appears in William Shakespeare’s The Merry Wives of Windsor and Henry IV (Parts 1 and 2) is set in “Merrie Olde” Tudor England. The storyline revolves around Falstaff’s efforts to woo a couple of wealthy wives capable of supporting his prodigious lifestyle. The ladies catch on and decide they must have payback for Falstaff’s brazen behavior and, thus, the games begin!
Robert Craft, writing decades ago in the New York Review of Books, noted “Falstaff is not only a masterpiece of opera but…a comedy of pure fun and a great work of art.”
By condensing Shakespeare’s original plot and tightening the structure while at the same time adding particularly strong passages and Falstaff soliloquies from Henry IV, librettist Arrigo Boito (with encouragement from his friend, the composer) created a book that surpasses the original source material in its brilliance.
Maestro Riccardo Frizza is an award-winning Italian conductor and leading exponent of the bel canto repertoire who has collaborated with many of the world’s most iconic opera artists, from La Scala to the Metropolitan Opera. Equally in demand in the concert hall and recording studio, Frizza has worked with influential ensembles including the Leipzig Gewandhaus, the London Philharmonia Orchestra and the Tokyo Symphony. Recently, Maestro Frizza conducted productions of The Barber of Seville at Paris National Opera, Il pirata at La Scala, Semiramide at Bavarian State Opera and La traviata at the New National Theatre in Tokyo, Japan. Frizza also serves as music director of the Donizetti Opera Festival in Bergamo.
This L.A. Opera production, originally directed by the late Lee Blakeley, will be revived by Shawna Lucey (The James R. Seitz, Jr. Stage Director in Honor of John Gage), who assisted on the project and has mounted works at prestigious companies including Santa Fe Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, San Francisco Opera, and Moscow’s Bolshoi Theatre.
TDO’s production of Falstaff is generously underwritten by the National Endowment for the Arts and by Stephen B. L. Penrose.
“It seems fitting that the Bard’s greatest comic creation should become the subject of one of the greatest comic operas ever composed,” notes Ian Derrer, The Kern Wildenthal General Director of The Dallas Opera. “Verdi greatly admired Shakespeare’s plays and the character of Falstaff was one of his all-time favorites. His librettist, Arrigo Boito, was familiar enough with Verdi’s tastes to know that he would be unable to resist such a project, even as he contemplated retirement.
“And what a joy it is to be able to share Verdi’s ‘labor of love’ with a world in need of a good belly laugh!”
Heading the Dallas Opera cast is a singer of “incisive vocal power and fierce theatrical acuity,” Mark Delavan, known for the title role of Falstaff (one of his signature roles), The Flying Dutchman, and Rigoletto, as well as the roles of Scarpia, Iago, Jochanaan, and Amonasro. This frequent guest of the Metropolitan Opera has upcoming roles in Parsifal, Lohengrin, Salome and Cavalleria rusticana/Pagliacci. Mr. Delavan regularly appears in major houses in the title roles of The Flying Dutchman, Falstaff and Rigoletto—in addition to his signature roles of Iago in Otello, Scarpia in Tosca, Jochanaan in Salome and Amonasro in Aida. His appearance as Sir John Falstaff marks his Dallas Opera debut.
Angela Meade, “the most talked about soprano of her generation (Opera News) will portray Alice Ford. This recipient of both the Beverly Sills Award and the Richard Tucker Award has a wide-ranging repertoire from Mozart to bel canto to Verdi. Recent career highlights include appearances in the title roles of Rossini’s Semiramide and Bellini’s Norma at the Metropolitan Opera, Handel’s Alcina for Washington National Opera, and Cilea’s Adriana Lecouvreur for Oper Frankfurt. She has performed with conductors including James Levine, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Fabio Luisi, Plácido Domingo, Charles Dutoit, and Gustavo Dudamel. Ms. Meade appears as The Marnie and Kern Wildenthal Principal Artist.
Hawaiian-born baritone Quinn Kelsey, the 2015 recipient of the Beverly Sills Award, sings the role of Ford in his house debut. Specializing in Verdi, Puccini and the French repertoire in houses ranging from New York’s Metropolitan Opera to Covent Garden, Mr. Kelsey recently returned to Lyric Opera of Chicago to assume the title role in Rigoletto (in which he made his Paris National Opera debut); his Washington National Opera debut as Posa in Don Carlo; his Royal Opera House debut (U.K.) as Germont in La traviata (a role he also sang for Zürich Opera); and several roles for the Metropolitan Opera: Peter in Hansel and Gretel, Count di Luna in Il trovatore, and Enrico in Lucia di Lammermoor.
Mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe sings Mistress Quickly in her eagerly-awaited TDO debut. One of the most critically acclaimed artists of her generation, Ms. Blythe has sung the title roles in Carmen, Samson et Dalila, Orfeo ed Euridice, La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein, Tancredi, Mignon and Giulio Cesare—as well as Fricka in both Das Rheingold and Die Walküre, Waltraute in Götterdammerung, Azucena in Il trovatore, Ulrica in Un ballo in Maschera, Baba the Turk in The Rake’s Progress, Ježibaba in Rusalka and many other roles at major opera houses throughout the U.S. and Europe. At The Dallas Opera, Ms. Blythe is The Phyllis A. McCasland & Thomas H. McCasland, Jr. Lead Soloist.
Hamburg-born German soprano Mojca Erdmann, a renowned Mozartean who sparkles in a variety of repertoire from baroque to contemporary, portrays Nannetta in her TDO debut. BBC Music Magazine praises her as an artist who possesses “dramatic individuality as well as musical and vocal distinction.” She recently made her Houston Symphony debut, singing Dvorak’s Te Deum and Mahler’s Symphony No. 4. In demand both in the U.S. and overseas, Ms. Erdmann is also making a name for herself in the recording studio. She can be heard as Zerlina and Despina on Deutsche Grammophon’s recently released complete recordings of Don Giovanni and Così fan tutte conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin.
Spanish tenor Airam Hernández will be making his American debut as Fenton. Praised by Nicolas Blanmont of Opera (U.K.) as “an agile actor, whose virile presence was ideally balanced by the warmth and finesse of his singing,” originally trained as a French Horn player at a conservatory on his island home of Tenerife. His vocal studies eventually led him to Barcelona, where Mr. Hernández launched his operatic career at Gran Teatre del Liceu. He recently sang the role of Alfredo in La traviata in several European houses, Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor at Opéra de Lausanne, the title role of Faust for Ópera de Tenerife, Sardanapalo in the Weimar world premiere of Franz Liszt’s unfinished opera of the same name, as well as concert performances with Plácido Domingo and Jessica Pratt.
Mezzo-soprano Megan Marino, described by Opera News as “a gifted actress with a strong, appealing voice graced by a rich lower register,” will make her house debut as Meg Page. Other notable debuts for Ms. Marino this season include Olga in Eugene Onegin at Atlanta Opera and Anita in West Side Story for Opera Idaho. Ms. Marino returns to the Metropolitan Opera as Laura in Iolanta, the Nursing Sister in Suor Angelica and for the company’s production of La traviata.
Although tenor Alex Mansoori specializes in character tenor roles, his repertoire runs the gamut from Handel and Mozart to Bernstein and Sondheim. Recently, he appeared as Monostatos with the Orlando Philharmonic’s staged concerts of The Magic Flute. This season, Mr. Mansoori returned to Opera Orlando for role debuts as Beppe in Pagliacci and the Four Servants in Les contes d’Hoffmann. Last summer, he made his Tanglewood Festival debut in multiple roles in Bernstein’s Candide. His Dallas Opera debut will be in the role of Bardolfo.
Italian bass Andrea Silvestrelli (TDO’s Pistola) prompted “wild cheers” (Chicago Sun-Times) for his terrifying portrayal of Sparafucile in Rigoletto, and returned to Lyric Opera to sing Nourabad in The Pearl Fishers and Timur in Turandot. Other recent highlights include the Grand Inquisitor in Don Carlo for Washington National Opera and appearances as Fasolt in Das Rheingold and Hagen in Götterdammerung in San Francisco Opera’s 2018 Ring Cycle. Dallas Opera audiences just thrilled to his company debut as the manipulative Geronte di Revoir in TDO’s semi-staged Manon Lescaut.
Tenor Robert Brubaker made unforgettable appearances with TDO as Herod in Salome (2014) opposite Deborah Voigt, and as Laca in the 2004 production of Jenufa. Recent engagements include a host of roles at the Metropolitan Opera: Mime in Siegfried and Das Rheingold (conducted by Fabio Luisi), Maletestino in Francesca da Rimini, the Witch in Hänsel und Gretel, Monostatos in The Magic Flute and Chairman Mao in Nixon in China (conducted by the composer himself and recently released on DVD). In Falstaff, he performs the role of Dr. Caius.
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Falstaff, Verdi’s final opera, responds in “unprecedented detail to the verbal element of the drama,” writes British musicologist Roger Parker. “In much of the score…the listener is bombarded by a stunning diversity of rhythms, orchestral textures, melodic motifs and harmonic devices…and a large number of these fresh ideas spring in a direct and literal way from the words…Here, in the comic context, it furnishes an important means of filling the musical space with an endless variety of colours.”
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London-based Set and Costume Designer Adrian Linford also designed productions of Verdi’s Rigoletto and Offenbach’s The Grand Duchess of Gerolstein for Santa Fe Opera, Gluck’s Orfeo ed Eurydice for Minnesota Opera, and productions of The Bald Soprano and Maids in New York. Overseas, Mr. Linford has designed sets and costumes for a wide range of productions including Sunday in the Park with George in Paris; The Rake’s Progress, Eugene Onegin and Così fan tutte in London; Il turco in Italia in France and Luxembourg; and numerous productions in England and Scotland—most recently including Street Scene, Albert Herring, Tamerlano, Katya Kabanova and Die Fledermaus.
The original lighting design is by British-based American designer Rick Fisher, winner of a 2009 Tony Award (and Drama Desk Award) for Billy Elliot: The Musical on Broadway and a two-time Olivier Award winner for Best Lighting. The lighting designer for this revival is Eric Watkins, who previously worked with TDO on our critically acclaimed 2016 production of Show Boat and whose work has also illuminated productions of The Property, a “Lyric Unlimited” world premiere at Lyric Opera of Chicago; Centerentola, Il re pastore, The Rake’s Progress and The Marriage of Figaro for San Francisco’s Merola Opera; Alcina for the Boston Conservatory; and A Streetcar Named Desire at Opera Santa Barbara and Kentucky Opera.
Wig and make-up designs are by Emmy Award-winner Dawn Rivard, whose work was seen in Broadway productions of Ragtime, Sunset Boulevard and Show Boat—and on the big screen in film and television productions including Mike Myers’ The Love Guru, Hairspray, Crimson Peak, The Handmaid’s Tale and City of Bones. In addition to her work throughout the Dallas Opera season, Ms. Rivard works regularly with Canadian Opera Company, Jeff Daniels’ The Purple Rose Theatre Company and many other presenters.
Dallas Opera Chorus Master Alexander Rom began his association with TDO in 1990 but has also served as an opera coach for the Metropolitan Opera, Houston Grand Opera, the Ravinia Festival, Savonlinna Opera Festival and Cincinnati Festival; he is also an honorary Visiting Professor at the Sibelius Academy-Helsinki Conservatory.
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Tickets and information are available, 24/7, at dallasopera.org. You may also consult the friendly specialists in The Dallas Opera Ticket Office at 214-443-1000 during regular business hours. Pricing for single tickets begin at just $19.
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2018-2019 SEASON SPONSOR
The Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Family
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ABOUT THE DALLAS OPERA
Founded in 1957, The Dallas Opera is an internationally-recognized innovator dedicated to the overall advancement of the operatic art form and the support of established and emerging artists, as well as the education and development of new opera audiences in North Texas—and beyond. These goals are achieved by commissioning and producing world-class opera; through ground-breaking institutes, national competitions and topical programs; and by presenting opera in both traditional and non-traditional formats and venues in order to attract patrons of every age, background, educational level, and ethnicity—while engaging with more than 87,000 people in our community each year. TDO is equally committed to the task of responsible stewardship and is managed with efficiency and accountability, to the highest possible standards.
~~~~
EVENTS, GUESTS AND ARTISTS SUBJECT TO CHANGE
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT THE DALLAS OPERA
IS AVAILABLE ONLINE, 24/7. VISIT WWW.DALLASOPERA.ORG
FOR HIGH-RESOLUTION PHOTOGRAPHS
Contact Suzanne Calvin, Director of Media and PR at suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org
The Dallas Opera is supported, in part, by funds from: Elsa von Seggern Foundation, Texas Instruments Foundation, the City of Dallas Office of Cultural Affairs; the Texas Commission on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). American Airlines is the official airline of The Dallas Opera. Lexus is the official vehicle of The Dallas Opera.
Advertising support from The Dallas Morning News.
The Dallas Opera Family Performances are generously supported by
Texas Instruments, Lockheed Martin, and
The Betty and Steve Suellentrop Educational Outreach Fund
TDO Family Performances are a part of the
Perot Foundation Education and Community Outreach Programs
TICKET INFORMATION FOR THE 2018-2019 DALLAS OPERA SEASON
All performances are in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center unless otherwise indicated. Flex Subscriptions are on sale now; single tickets range from $19 to $289 (excluding boxes). Family performance tickets are just $5. For more information or to make your purchase, contact The Dallas Opera Ticket Office at 214.443.1000 or visit us online, 24/7, at www.dallasopera.org.
THE DALLAS OPERA 2018-2019 MAINSTAGE SEASON: SPRING
The Dallas Opera celebrates its 62nd International Season in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center in the Dallas Arts District. Evening performances will begin at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday matinees begin at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise stated. English translations will be projected above the stage at every performance and assistance is available for the hearing impaired. With the exception of FIRST NIGHT, The Joy and Ronald Mankoff Pre-Opera Talk will begin one hour prior to curtain, at most performances.
MANON LESCAUT by Giacomo Puccini
Semi-Staged Concert, March 1, 3 (m), 6, 9, 2019
Featuring images of select art works from the collections of The Dallas Museum of Art!
The woman who has everything discovers too late that she has nothing – without true love!
Libretto by Domenico Oliva and Luigi Illica
Time: Late 18th century
Place: France and America
Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume
Director: Edward Berkeley
Costume Designer: Tommy Bourgeois
Lighting Designer: Krista Billings
Wig & Make-up Designer: Dawn Rivard
Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
Starring: Kristin Lewis* (Manon Lescaut), Musa Ngqungwana (Lescaut), Gregory Kunde (Chevalier des Grieux), Andrea Silvestrelli (Geronte de Ravoir), Jonas Hacker* (Edmondo), Mark S. Doss (Innkeeper), Alyssa Martin (Singer), Matthew Grills* (Dance Master), Clay Hilley* (Lamplighter), Mark McCrory (Sergeant of the Royal Archers) and David Leigh* (Naval Captain).
LA BOHÈME by Giacomo Puccini
March 15, 17 (m), 20, 23, 29, 31 (m), 2019
The most timeless love story in all of opera returns to break your heart!
Libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica
Time: 19th century
Place: The Latin Quarter of Paris, France
Conductor: Giuliano Carella
Director: Tomer Zvulun
Set Designer: Erhard Rom
Costume Designer: Peter J. Hall
Lighting Designer: Robert Wierzel
Wig & Make-up Designer: Dawn Rivard
Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
Starring: Jean-François Borras* (Rodolfo), Pumeza Matshikiza** (Mimi), Anthony Clark Evans* (Marcello), Sara Gartland (Musetta), Will Liverman* (Schaunard), Nicholas Brownlee* (Colline), and Samuel Ramey (Benoit/Alcindoro).
FALSTAFF by Giuseppe Verdi
April 26, 28 (m), May 1, 4, 2019
Shakespeare’s uproarious comedy brought to musical life!
Libretto by Arrigo Boito
Time: During the reign of Henry IV of England
Place: Windsor
Conductor: Riccardo Frizza
Original Director: Lee Blakeley
Revival Director: Shawna Lucey*
Set and Costume Designer: Adrian Linford*
Lighting Designer: Rick Fisher*
Wig & Make-up Designer: Dawn Rivard
Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
Starring: Mark Delavan* (Sir John Falstaff), Angela Meade (Alice Ford), Quinn Kelsey* (Ford), Mojca Erdmann* (Nanetta), Airam Hernández** (Fenton), Stephanie Blythe* (Dame Quickly), Megan Marino* (Meg Page), Alex Mansoori* (Bardolfo), Andrea Silvestrelli (Pistola), and Robert Brubaker (Dr. Caius).
* Dallas Opera Debut
** American Debut
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“The Flying Dutchman” Opens TDO’s “Swept Away” Season on October 12
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Wenesday, October 3, 2018
Contact: Suzanne Calvin 214.443.1014
suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org
THE DALLAS OPERA IS PROUD TO PRESENT
THE COMPANY’S EPIC SEASON OPENER!
RICHARD WAGNER’S SWEEPING 1843 MASTERPIECE
THE FLYING DUTCHMAN
LIBRETTO BY RICHARD WAGNER AFTER HEINRICH HEINE’S
Aus den Memoiren des Herren von Schnabelewopski
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CONDUCTED BY DALLAS OPERA MUSIC DIRECTOR
EMMANUEL VILLAUME
DIRECTED BY CHRISTOPHER ALDEN
STARRING ACCLAIMED BASS-BARITONE GREER GRIMSLEY AS THE DUTCHMAN AND SENSATIONAL GERMAN-ITALIAN SOPRANO ANJA KAMPE IN HER TDO DEBUT AS SENTA
ALSO STARRING JAY HUNTER MORRIS AS ERIK
MARK S. DOSS IN HIS TDO DEBUT AS DALAND
LURETTA BYBEE AS MARY
AND ANDREW STENSON IN HIS COMPANY DEBUT AS THE STEERSMAN
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THE LINDA AND MITCH HART SEASON OPENING NIGHT PERFORMANCE:
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2018 AT 8:00 PM (Please note special curtain time)
WITH ADDITIONAL PERFORMANCES
AT 7:30 P.M. AND 2:00 P.M. (SUNDAY MATINEE)
Oct. 14(m), 17 & 20, 2018
The Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House
AT&T Performing Arts Center
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This Production Made Possible by
HOLLY AND TOM MAYER
RICHARD AND ENIKA SCHULZE
JOANNA L. AND T. PETER TOWNSEND
DALLAS, OCTOBER 3, 2018 – The Dallas Opera is extremely proud to present the season opener of the company’s grand 2018-2019 “Swept Away” Season: Richard Wagner’s haunting nineteenth-century masterpiece, The Flying Dutchman (Der fliegende Holländer), a work not seen on The Dallas Opera stage since January of 1994.
The Flying Dutchman will open on Friday, October 12, 2018 in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center in the Dallas Arts District. The Linda and Mitch Hart Season Opening Night Performance has a special curtain time of 8:00 p.m.
This compelling production from Canadian Opera Company in Toronto will be directed by Christopher Alden. The Mrs. Eugene McDermott Music Director Emmanuel Villaume will be at the podium for all four performances—kicking off his sixth season at TDO with his first Wagner performance in Dallas!
A world-class international cast of notable Wagnerians includes American bass-baritone Greer Grimsley as the Dutchman; German-Italian soprano Anja Kampe in her house debut as Senta; American tenor Jay Hunter Morris as Erik; American bass-baritone Mark S. Doss in his TDO debut as Daland; American mezzo-soprano Luretta Bybee as Mary, and Korean-American tenor Andrew Stenson in his company debut as the Steersman.
Subsequent performances of The Flying Dutchman will take place on October 14(m), 17, and 20, 2018, with generous underwriting support provided by Holly and Tom Mayer, Richard and Enika Schulze, and Joanna L. and T. Peter Townsend.
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Renowned American director Christopher Alden, (The Ann Stuart Stage Director) returns to The Dallas Opera with a production of the same opera he guided in his 1978 company debut, Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman. He revisited TDO in subsequent seasons to stage a groundbreaking production of Alban Berg’s Wozzeck in 2000, and Mozart’s masterpiece, Le nozze di Figaro. Mr. Alden works regularly with many of the world’s most distinguished companies, including English National Opera Opera, San Francisco Opera, New York City Opera, Canadian Opera Company, Houston Grand Opera, Deutsche Oper Berlin, Santa Fe Opera and The Festival d’ Aix en Provence.
Mr. Alden’s English National Opera production of Handel’s Partenope received the Olivier Award for Best UK Opera Production as well as Australia’s Helpmann Award and his staging of Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream with the Stanislavsky Theater in Moscow won the Golden Mask Award for Best Russian Opera Production.
“What we love about Wagner’s operas is that Wagner took the operatic art form…to new extremes in talking about human beings and society,” Christopher Alden told Arts and Culture Texas in a newly-published feature.
“Wagner was a rather dark person himself—a dark, narcissistic, monomaniacal, amazingly focused artist,” the director added. “He wrote pieces that go to the deepest, darkest places about human beings, and reach down into the deepest aspects of the human psyche. That’s why people are so compelled by them and so obsessed by them.”
The Dallas Opera’s globe-trotting music director, Emmanuel Villaume, in addition to celebrating his Fifth Anniversary with the company, has just released a critically-acclaimed recording of piano concertos with pianist Andrew von Oeyen and the PKF-Prague Philharmonia on the Warner Classics label. The review in London’s Sunday Times praised Villaume’s “magical sense of rhythm and texture in Ravel’s Mother Goose Suite and, especially, in Bizet’s youthful Symphony in C, a toe-tapping joy throughout.”
Maestro Villaume not only conducts the first two productions of the season, The Flying Dutchman and Carmen, he will return to Dallas in the spring to conduct performances of Puccini’s Manon Lescaut. Villaume will be the guest of the Metropolitan Opera in November, where he will conduct eagerly-anticipated performances of Georges Bizet’s The Pearl Fishers.
Louisiana native Greer Grimsley, one of the reigning Wotans of the Modern Era, remains one of the most prominent Wagnerian singers of our day. His interpretations of Wagner roles have earned Grimsley repeat engagements at many of the world’s most prestigious opera houses from Berlin to Santa Fe. He even sang the role of Wotan in Robert Lepage’s landmark “machine” production of Der Ring des Nibelungen at New York’s Metropolitan Opera.
This past summer, Grimsley triumphed in his Bayreuth debut—singing the title role of the Dutchman, as well as Wotan in Die Walküre.
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer reviewing Grimsley’s Dutchman proclaimed “Not only does he move well and possess genuine presence, he has sure musical instincts that support a voice of remarkable depth and lyric breadth. His Dutchman was intelligent and impassioned.”
And The Huffington Post summed him up thusly: “He sings…well…like a god.”
Anja Kampe makes her thrilling Dallas Opera debut in the role of Senta. Her portrayals of several roles have set a new standard, including her Sieglinde at the Bayreuth Festival, Isolde at Ruhrtriennale, Katerina Ismailova at Bavarian State Opera (Munich), and Brünnhilde in performances of Die Walküre at the Salzburg Easter Festival.
Peter Reed of Classical Source wrote that Kampe’s Senta “pinned you to your seat with its intensity and risk-taking abandon” and praised her “gripping mixture of rawness and radiance” in the role.
Ms. Kampe opened last season with concert performances of Fidelio at Teatro San Carlo in Naples, Italy, conducted by Zubin Mehta. She then returned to the stage of the Bavarian State Opera to reprise her explosive performance as Lady Macbeth in Dmitri Shostakovich’s 1934 masterpiece. Other recent career highlight include Isolde in a new production in Berlin, and as Kundry in Parsifal at both the Vienna State Opera and Paris National Opera.
Jay Hunter Morris as “Erik” makes a welcome return to The Dallas Opera after a brilliant revival of Jake Heggie and Gene Scheer’s Moby-Dick in which he sang the role of mad Captain Ahab. Earlier, Morris tackled the daunting role of Paul in TDO’s 2014 production of Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s Die tote Stadt (“The Dead City”).
He sang the role of Siegfried with the San Francisco Opera in 2011 and, perhaps most famously, at the Metropolitan Opera in a Grammy-winning production by Robert Lepage. Senior Critic Anthony Tommasini of The New York Times wrote: “the biggest surprise of the Met’s cast, the hearty, youthful-sounding tenor Jay Hunter Morris.”
Other recent successes include his first Tristan in Valencia with Zubin Mehta, and Schoenburg’s Guerre-Lieder at the Vienna Konzerthaus with Kent Nagano in a stellar career that has taken Morris from Budapest to Beijing.
Grammy Award-winner Mark S. Doss has sung with major orchestras in San Francisco, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Chicago and Toronto, while also performing close to a hundred roles with more than 60 major opera companies around the world: Milan’s Teatro alla Scala, the Vienna State Opera, London’s Covent Garden, San Francisco Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, Santa Fe Opera and the Canadian Opera Company (to name a few).
Recent roles have included Sujskij in Dvorák’s Dimitrij at Odessey Opera in Boston, Méphistophélès in Faust with Ópera Oviedo in Spain, Amonasro in Aida with the Teatro Regio in Turin, Jochanaan in Salome in Mallorca, and the title role in Verdi’s Macbeth with the Dorset Opera Festival. The role of Daland marks Mr. Doss’s Dallas Opera debut and he will return in March for Manon Lescaut.
Remarkable range and versatility are the hallmarks of mezzo-soprano Luretta Bybee on the opera and theatrical stage. In addition to singing opera, she is continually exploring the realm of musical theater and character acting and singing, which has led to roles such as Madame Armfeldt in A Little Night Music with the Pine Mountain Music Festival, Little Buttercup in H.M.S. Pinafore, and her role debut as Golde in Fiddler on the Roof at Shreveport Opera. Ms. Bybee has also been seen as Mrs. Lovett in Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd at Vancouver Opera, Glimmerglass Opera, and New Orleans Opera.
This season, in addition to the role of Mary in TDO’s The Flying Dutchman (opposite her real-life husband, Greer Grimsley), Ms. Bybee will perform the concert “On Broadway” with the Springfield Symphony.
Andrew Stenson launches the 2018-2019 Season with his Dallas Opera debut as the Steersman. He also joins the Minnesota Opera as Fadinard in The Italian Straw Hat, as well as Utah Opera where he will sing Tamino in Die Zauberflöte.
Last season, Stenson returned to the Lyric Opera of Chicago as Ferrando in Così fan tutte, sang the title role of Candide with the San Francisco Symphony, and made his company debut with Opera Theatre of St. Louis in An American Soldier, attracting national attention and acclaim in the role of Danny Chen.
Mr. Stenson is the first prize winner in both the 2015 Giulio Gari International Vocal Competition and 2016 Gerda Lissner Foundation Competition. He is also the recipient of a 2011 Sara Tucker Study Grant.
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Allen Moyer designed both sets and costumes for this COC production; OBIE Award-winner Anne Militello is the lighting designer and Emmy Award-winner Dawn Rivard designed wigs and make-up for The Flying Dutchman. This production marks Moyer and Militello’s exciting TDO debuts.
The Dallas Opera Chorus is prepared by acclaimed Chorus Master Alexander Rom.
Performances of this early Wagner masterpiece will continue on October 14(m), 17 & 20, 2018 in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House, selected by Southern Living as the best new venue for opera and praised by the U.K.’s Opera magazine as the finest opera house in North America. All evening performances will begin promptly at 7:30 p.m. (with the exception of Opening Night); Sunday matinees begin at 2:00 p.m.
Full season subscriptions are still available, beginning at just $100, and single tickets start at the low, low price of $19. Student Rush Best Available Tickets may be purchased at the Winspear Box Office for $15 or $25 (depending on the section) ninety minutes prior to curtain. Contact the Dallas Opera Ticket Services Office at 214.443.1000 or make your purchase online at dallasopera.org.
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Tickets for the Dallas Opera’s 2018 Opening Night Celebrations, FIRST NIGHT, presented by Hall Arts Residences and Chaired by Shelle and Michael Sills, are available through Special Events Manager Tracy Mott at tracy.mott@dallasopera.org.
A free, pre-performance lecture (“The Joy and Ronald Mankoff Pre-Opera Talks”) will be conducted one hour prior to curtain at most performances—excluding the “Linda and Mitch Hart Season Opening Night Performance.” The Dallas Opera Guild also hosts “Opera Insights,” a lively panel discussion featuring artists, directors and designers, on a Sunday afternoon prior to opening. For specific dates and more details, visit dallasopera.org.
Parking onsite will be available in the Lexus Red Parking beneath the Winspear Opera House and the Lexus Silver Parking adjacent to the Wyly Theatre. Should those reach capacity, additional paid parking is available at nearby One Arts Plaza and in several surface lots. Prices range from $5 to $25 per vehicle.
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ABOUT THE DALLAS OPERA
Founded in 1957, The Dallas Opera is an internationally-recognized innovator dedicated to the overall advancement of the operatic art form and the support of established and emerging artists, as well as the education and development of new opera audiences in North Texas—and beyond. These goals are achieved by commissioning and producing world-class opera; through ground-breaking institutes, national competitions and topical programs; and by presenting opera in both traditional and non-traditional formats and venues in order to attract patrons of every age, background, educational level, and ethnicity—while engaging with more than 87,000 people in our community each year. TDO is equally committed to the task of responsible stewardship and is managed with efficiency and accountability, to the highest possible standards.
~~~~
2018-2019 SEASON SPONSOR
The Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Family
~~~~
EVENTS, GUESTS AND ARTISTS SUBJECT TO CHANGE
Additional Information About The Dallas Opera is Available Online at
www.dallasopera.org
FOR HIGH-RESOLUTION PHOTOGRAPHS
Contact Suzanne Calvin, Director of Media and PR at suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org
The Dallas Opera is supported, in part, by funds from: Elsa von Seggern Foundation, Texas Instruments Foundation, the City of Dallas Office of Cultural Affairs; the Texas Commission on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). American Airlines is the official airline of The Dallas Opera. Lexus is the official vehicle of The Dallas Opera. Advertising support from The Dallas Morning News.
The Dallas Opera Family Performances are generously supported by
Texas Instruments, Lockheed Martin, and
The Betty and Steve Suellentrop Educational Outreach Fund
TDO Family Performances are a part of the
Perot Foundation Education and Community Outreach Programs
TICKET INFORMATION FOR THE 2018-2019 DALLAS OPERA SEASON
All performances are in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center unless otherwise indicated. Full and Flex Subscriptions are on sale now; single Tickets range from $19 to $289. Family performance tickets are just $5. For more information or to make your purchase, contact The Dallas Opera Ticket Office at 214.443.1000 or visit us online at www.dallasopera.org.
THE DALLAS OPERA 2018-2019 MAINSTAGE SEASON
The Dallas Opera celebrates its 62nd International Season in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center in the Dallas Arts District. Evening performances will begin at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise stated. English translations will be projected above the stage at every performance and assistance is available for the hearing impaired. With the exception of FIRST NIGHT, The Joy and Ronald Mankoff Pre-Opera Talk will begin one hour prior to curtain, at most performances.
THE FLYING DUTCHMAN by Richard Wagner
October 12, 14 (m), 17 & 20, 2018
The season sets sail with Wagner’s sweeping, romantic masterpiece – not seen in Dallas since 1994!
Time: the German Expressionist 1920s
Place: the coast of Norway
Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume
Director: Christopher Alden
Set Designer: Allen Moyer*
Costume Designer: Allen Moyer*
Lighting Designer: Anne Militello*
Wig & Make-up Designer: Dawn Rivard
Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
Starring: Greer Grimsley (The Dutchman), Anja Kampe* (Senta), Jay Hunter Morris (Erik),
Mark S. Doss* (Daland), Luretta Bybee (Mary) and Andrew Stenson* (Steersman).
CARMEN by Georges Bizet
October 19, 21 (m), 24, 27, November 2 & 4 (m), 2018
The woman who won’t be possessed by any man returns to The Dallas Opera stage!
Libretto by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy
Time: 19th century
Place: Seville, Spain and the surrounding countryside
Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume and Pierre Vallet (10/24 and 11/2)
Original Director: Sir David McVicar
Revival Director: Jack Furness**
Set Designer: Michael Vale*
Costume Designer: Sue Blane*
Lighting Designer: Clare O’Donoghue*
Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
Original Choreographer: Andrew George
Revival Choreographer: Andrzej Glosniak*
Starring: Stéphanie d’Oustrac* (Carmen), Stephen Costello (Don José), Vanessa Vasquez* (Micaëla), Alexander Vinogradov (Escamillo), Sarah Tucker* (Frasquita), Lindsay Metzger* (Mercédès), Rafael Moras* (Le Remendado), Corey Crider* (Le Dancaïre), Ben Wager (Zuniga), Gideon Dabi* (Moralès).
MANON LESCAUT by Giacomo Puccini
A Semi-Staged Concert – March 1, 3 (m), 6, 9, 2019
The woman who has everything discovers too late that she has nothing – without true love!
Libretto by Domenico Oliva and Luigi Illica
Time: Late 18th century
Place: France and America
Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume
Director: Edward Berkeley*
Set Designer: Tommy Bourgeois
Costume Designer: Tommy Bourgeois
Lighting Designer: Krista Billings
Wig & Make-up Designer: Dawn Rivard
Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
Starring: Kristin Lewis* (Manon Lescaut), Musa Ngqungwana (Lescaut), Gregory Kunde (Chevalier Renato des Grieux), Andrea Silvestrelli* (Geronte di Revoir), Jonas Hacker* (Edmondo), Mark S. Doss (Innkeeper), Alyssa Martin (Singer), Matthew Grills* (Dance Master), Clay Hilley* (Lamplighter), Mark McCrory (Sergeant of the Royal Archers) and David Leigh* (Naval Captain).
LA BOHÈME by Giacomo Puccini
March 15, 17 (m), 20, 23, 29, 31 (m), 2019
The most timeless love story in all of opera returns to break your heart!
Libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica
Time: 19th century
Place: The Latin Quarter of Paris, France
Conductor: Giuliano Carella
Director: Tomer Zvulun
Set Designer: Erhard Rom*
Costume Designer: Peter J. Hall
Lighting Designer: Robert Wierzel*
Wig & Make-up Designer: Dawn Rivard
Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
Starring: Jean-Francois Borras* (Rodolfo), Pumeza Matshikiza** (Mimì), Anthony Clark Evans* (Marcello), Sara Gartland* (Musetta), Will Liverman* (Schaunard), Nicholas Brownlee* (Colline), and Samuel Ramey (Benoît/Alcindoro).
FALSTAFF by Giuseppe Verdi
April 26, 28 (m), May 1, 4, 2019
Shakespeare’s uproarious comedy brought to musical life!
Libretto by Arrigo Boito
Time: During the reign of Henry IV of England
Place: Windsor
Conductor: Riccardo Frizza
Original Director: Lee Blakeley
Revival Director: Shawna Lucey*
Set Designer: Adrian Linford*
Costume Designer: Adrian Linford*
Lighting Designer: Rick Fisher*
Wig & Make-up Designer: Dawn Rivard
Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
Starring: Mark Delevan* (Sir John Falstaff), Angela Meade* (Alice Ford), Quinn Kelsey* (Ford), Mojca Erdmann* (Nanetta), Airam Hernández* (Fenton), Stephanie Blythe* (Dame Quickly), Megan Marino* (Meg Page), Alex Mansoori* (Bardolfo), Andrea Silvestrelli (Pistola), and Robert Brubaker (Dr. Caius).
* Dallas Opera Debut
** American Debut
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