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  • Home > Keith Cerny

    Dallas Opera Appoints Ian Derrer to Newly Created Post

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
    Wednesday, June 25, 2014
    Contact: Suzanne Calvin 214-443-1014 Or Celeste Hart 214-443-1071
    suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org celeste.hart@dallasopera.org

    THE DALLAS OPERA ANNOUNCES
    THE APPOINTMENT OF A NEW
    ARTISTIC ADMINISTRATOR:
    IAN DERRER
    ~~~~
    Most Recently Served with Lyric Opera of Chicago and Santa Fe Opera; Appointment Effective Immediately

    DALLAS, JUNE 25, 2014 – In the wake of Jonathan Pell’s decision to step down after thirty years of distinguished service to The Dallas Opera, General Director & CEO Keith Cerny is delighted to announce the appointment of a new Artistic Administrator, Ian Derrer.
    Working closely with Dr. Cerny and Music Director Emmanuel Villaume, the Artistic Administrator will be responsible for supporting the planning and implementation of the company’s programming for future seasons. Going forward, the leadership team will also include Director of Production John Toia and Technical Director Drew Field. To ensure continuity, as previously announced, Mr. Pell will continue to serve as Artistic Advisor to the company until the end of the 2016-2017 Season.
    Following a comprehensive international search—which attracted nearly fifty highly qualified applicants from the U.S., U.K., Continental Europe, Russia, the Middle East, and Australia—General Director & CEO Keith Cerny has appointed Mr.Derrer to this newly created position. Mr. Derrer joins TDO from the Lyric Opera of Chicago.
    ~~~~
    Mr. Derrer grew up in North Carolina and, in 1996, completed a Bachelor of Music degree in Voice Performance from the Meadows School of the Arts at SMU. He then worked as a freelance Assistant Director and Stage Manager for Santa Fe Opera, The Atlanta Opera, Opera Carolina, Opera Pacific, and Washington Opera. From 1999-2005 he completed Masters Degrees in Opera Production, Voice, and Performing Arts Management from Northwestern University and Brooklyn College. During the summers of 2001-2003 he was also the Scheduling Coordinator for the International Institute of Vocal Arts in Chiari, Italy. Afterwards, he served as Rehearsal & Music Coordinator for the New York City Opera (2004-2006). Mr. Derrer also has invaluable experience in the field of orchestra and artist management. Immediately prior to joining the Dallas Opera, Ian held multiple positions at the Lyric Opera of Chicago (2006-2014), including Head of the Rehearsal Department, Rehearsal Administrator, and Director of Production, while, also, making time to serve as Rehearsal Director for Santa Fe Opera during the summer of 2012.
    ~~~~
    Regarding the selection of Mr. Derrer, General Director & CEO Keith Cerny noted: “In the midst of a superb group of candidates, Ian really stood out. I am delighted to add him to my senior artistic team. Ian is well-known in the opera world for his wide-ranging background as a performer, stage director and administrator, as well as being equally renowned for his superb teamwork and leadership skills. With this exciting appointment, I am pleased to have completed my artistic leadership team.”

    TDO’s Music Director, Emmanuel Villaume, commented, “I have known Ian for nearly ten years, and have worked with him both at the Lyric Opera of Chicago and the Santa Fe Opera. I have been consistently impressed with his ability to manage complex situations with diplomacy and tact; and I have developed great admiration for his knowledge of singers and their craft. I very much look forward to working with Ian in his new role.”

    Mr. Derrer begins work on a part-time basis immediately and will assume a full-time position on the Dallas Opera Senior Staff, as of mid-August.

    About the Dallas Opera:

    More than half-a-century of artistic excellence, technical innovation and community engagement have enabled The Dallas Opera to make a major contribution to the international cultural reputation of Dallas and add significantly to the economic impact of the performing arts across North Texas. The Dallas Opera has presented a host of international stars in their American debuts, including Dame Joan Sutherland, Montserrat Caballé, Jon Vickers, and Plácido Domingo, as well as designer-director Franco Zeffirelli. A champion of new work, The Dallas Opera has presented the American premieres of five operas and additional world premieres. Most recently, the company commissioned composer Jake Heggie and librettist Gene Scheer to create a tremendously successful new opera based on Herman Melville’s 19th century novel “Moby-Dick,” as well as forthcoming new operas by British composer Joby Talbot (“Everest”), Heggie and Terrence McNally (“Great Scott”), and American composer Mark Adamo, all slated to take center stage in 2015. The Dallas Opera has pioneered classical music simulcasts in North Texas at locations ranging from Klyde Warren Park to AT&T (formerly Cowboys) Stadium and continues to seek new ways to engage the entire community and bring the thrill of opera to people of all ages, educational levels and backgrounds.

    ~~~~

    EVENTS, GUESTS AND ARTISTS SUBJECT TO CHANGE

    ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT “JUNE AT THE DALLAS OPERA”
    IS CONVENIENTLY AVAILABLE ONLINE, 24/7
    VISIT WWW.DALLASOPERA.ORG AND CHECK THE CALENDAR LISTINGS

    Ticket Information for the 2014-2015 Dallas Opera Season

    All performances are in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center unless otherwise described. Single Tickets range from $19 to $275 and Flex Subscriptions are on sale starting at $75. Family performance tickets are just $5. For more information or to make your purchase, contact The Dallas Opera Ticket Services Office at 214.443.1000 or visit us online, 24/7, at www.dallasopera.org.

    THE DALLAS OPERA 2014-2015 SEASON INFORMATION
    The Dallas Opera celebrates its Fifty-Eighth 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. The Joy and Ronald Mankoff Pre-Opera Talk will begin one hour prior to curtain, at most performances excluding FIRST NIGHT of the season.

    THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
    October 24, 26(m), 29, November 1, 7 and 9(m), 2014
    In a single crazy, romantic day, doors will be locked and unlocked, disguised donned, kisses exchanged and innermost hearts revealed—to some of the most memorable music Mozart ever composed.
    An opera in four acts first performed in Vienna on May 1, 1786
    Text by Lorenzo Da Ponte after the 1784 play La folle journée, ou Le mariage de Figaro by Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais
    Time: The late 18th century
    Place: Aguasfrescas near Seville, Spain, the Almaviva’s country house
    Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume
    Stage Director: Kevin Moriarty
    Production Design: John Bury*
    Lighting Design: Mark McCullough
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Choreography: Joel Ferrell*
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Starring: Mirco Palazzi (Figaro), Beate Ritter** (Susanna), Joshua Hopkins (Count Almaviva), Nicole Car** (Countess Almaviva), Emily Fons (Cherubino), Diana Montague* (Marcellina), Kevin Langan (Doctor Bartolo), Doug Jones (Don Basilio), Angela Mannino (Barbarina), Adam Lau* (Antonio) and Jon Kolbet (Don Curzio).
    Production Owned by Lyric Opera of Chicago

    SALOME by Richard Strauss
    October 30, November 2(m), 5, 8, 2014
    Once in a great while, the term “over the top” doesn’t seem nearly high enough.
    An opera in one act first performed in Dresden, Germany on December 9, 1905
    Hedwig Lachmann’s German translation of Oscar Wilde’s French language play
    Time: During the time of Jesus Christ
    Place: King Herod’s palace on the Sea of Galilee
    Conductor: Evan Rogister*
    Stage Director: Francesca Zambello
    Original Production: Francesca Zambello
    Scenic Design: Peter J. Davison*
    Costume Design: Anita Yavich
    Lighting Design: Mark McCullough
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Choreography: Yael Levitin*
    Starring: Deborah Voigt* (Salome), Robert Brubaker (Herod), Greer Grimsley* (Jokanaan), Susan Bickley* (Herodias), Scott Quinn (Narraboth), Heather Johnson* (Herodias’Page), Bradley Garvin (First Nazarene), Grigory Soloviov* (First Soldier), Jason Grant (Second Soldier), Joseph Hu (First Jew), Jay Gardner (Second Jew), John Robert Lindsey (Third Jew), Steven Haal (Fourth Jew), Patrick Guetti* (Fifth Jew), Tyler Simpson* (Second Nazarene), NaGuanda Nobles (A Slave) and Matthew Stump* (A Cappadocian).
    Production Owned by Washington National Opera

    PLEASE NOTE!

    A RARE DALLAS OPERA DOUBLE BILL:

    LA WALLY by Alfredo Catalani
    January 30, February 1(m), 4 and 7, 2015
    The Climactic Final Act!
    First performed in Milan, Italy on January 20, 1892
    Text by Luigi Illica after Wilhelmine von Hillern’s story, Die Geyer-Wally
    Time: Around the year 1800
    Place: The Austrian Alps
    Conductor: Anthony Barrese
    Stage Director: Candace Evans
    Scenic Design: TBD
    Costume Design: TBD
    Lighting Design: TBD
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Starring: Latonia Moore (Wally), Carl Tanner* (Giuseppe Hagenbach) and Jennifer Chung (Walter)
    A Brand-New Dallas Opera Production!

    With EVEREST by Joby Talbot
    January 30, February 1(m), 4 and 7, 2015
    A Dallas Opera World Premiere!
    Text by Gene Scheer
    Time: Modern Day
    Place: In the Death Zone on Mount Everest
    Conductor: Nicole Paiement
    Stage Director: Leonard Foglia
    Scenic Design: Robert Brill
    Costume Design: TBD
    Video Design: Elaine J. McCarthy
    Lighting Design: TBD
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Starring: Andrew Bidlack (Rob Hall), Sasha Cooke (Jan Arnold), Kevin Burdette* (Beck Weathers) and Craig Verm* (Doug Hansen).

    LA BOHÈME by Giacomo Puccini
    March 13, 15(m), 18, 21, 27 and 29(m), 2015
    A passionate and timeless masterpiece in a beloved period production
    An opera in four acts first performed in Turin, Italy on February 1, 1896
    Text by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica after Henry Murger’s novel Scènes de la vie de bohème
    Time: mid-19th century
    Place: The Latin Quarter of Paris, France
    Conductor: Riccardo Frizza*
    Stage Director: Peter Kazaras
    Scenic Design: Jean-Pierre Ponnelle
    Costume Design: Peter J. Hall
    Lighting Design: Thomas C. Hase
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Children’s Chorus Master: Melinda Cotton
    Starring: Ana Maria Martinez (Mimi), Bryan Hymel (Rodolfo), Davinia Rodriguez* (Musetta), Jonathan Beyer (Marcello), Alexander Vinogradov* (Colline), Stephen LaBrie (Schaunard) and Stefan Szkafarowsky (Benoit).
    One of the Dallas Opera’s Most Popular!

    IOLANTA by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
    April 10, 12(m), 15 and 18, 2015
    A rarely performed Tchaikovsky gem, set in Medieval Provence!
    First performed in St. Petersburg, Russia on December 18, 1892
    Text by Modest Tchaikovsky based on the Danish play King Rene’s Daughter by Henrik Hertz
    Time: The 15th century
    Place: Provence, a mountainous region in Southern France
    Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume
    Stage Director: Christian Räth
    Scenic Design: TBD
    Costume Design: TBD
    Video Design: Elaine J. McCarthy
    Lighting Design: Thomas C. Hase
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Starring: Ekaterina Scherbachenko* (Iolanta), Sergey Skorokhodov* (Count Vaudémont), Joanna Mongiardo* (Brigitta), Lauren McNeese (Laura), Tamara Mumford* (Marta), Andrei Bondarenko** (Robert, Duke of Burgandy), Mikhail Kolelishvili (Renè, King of Provence), Andrew Bidlack (Alméric), Vladislav Sulimsky** (Ibn-Hakia) and Jordan Bisch (Bertrand).
    Another New Dallas Opera Production

    * Dallas Opera Debut
    ** American Debut
    __________________________________________________________________________________________
    The Dallas Opera is supported, in part, by funds from: Texas Instruments Foundation, TACA, 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. A special thanks to the Elsa von Seggern Foundation for its continuing support.

    ###

    Dallas Opera Announces Historic Gift

    Steve and Betty Suellentrop_0059It is a phenomenal gift creating the “Betty and Steve Suellentrop Educational Outreach Fund.”  More details follow:

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

    Wednesday, June 4, 2014

    Contact: Suzanne Calvin 214.443.1014                            Or Celeste Hart at 214.443.1071

    suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org                                    celeste.hart@dallasopera.org

                                                                   

    THE DALLAS OPERA RECEIVES $2.5 MILLION MATCHING GIFT

    ESTABLISHING THE BETTY AND STEVE SUELLENTROP

    EDUCATIONAL OUTREACH FUND

     

    DALLAS, June 4, 2014 – The Dallas Opera is proud to announce the largest corporate gift in the opera’s 57-year history; a landmark $2.5 million lead gift from Betty and Steve Suellentrop, and Hunt Consolidated, Inc., intended to inspire other major gifts in support of opera-based education, family performances and community outreach.

     

    Steve Suellentrop is the incoming chairman of the board of directors of the Dallas Opera. He also is the president of Hunt Oil Company.

    The historic gift creating the “Betty and Steve Suellentrop Educational Outreach Fund” is designed to provide support for TDO’s multifaceted and nationally recognized education and community outreach programs, including effective new approaches to audience development and continuing patron engagement.

     

    Steve Suellentrop said that, “in an era where fewer resources are available to schools to expose and educate our children about the arts, it’s important for arts organizations to play a leading role in making access to all of the classical art forms a reality. Every child deserves the opportunity to experience the joys of music and the excitement of opera.”

     

    Programs include educational outreach to 19 North Texas school districts, homeschoolers and other providers serving more than 20,000 teachers and students each year by providing hundreds of on-site performances; Metropolitan Opera high-definition broadcasts, school visits and master classes with internationally renowned composers, singers and designers. In addition, the company provides teacher training sessions that equip educators with the tools to maximize the impact of these special experiences for their students, even as they enhance learning outcomes in core subjects.

     

    The Dallas Opera also strives to provide budget-minded family programming in the form of abridged classics (The Elixir of Love), age-appropriate short operas (Doctor Miracle), and fresh contemporary takes on fun and familiar tales (Billy Goat’s Gruff and Jack and the Beanstalk) in venues ranging from local after-school programs and summer camps to the elegant Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center.

    “The Dallas Opera is already receiving national and international recognition for its undisputed commitment to making opera more engaging and accessible through free public simulcasts, innovative family programming and teacher-friendly education programs,” explains Dallas Opera General Director and CEO Keith Cerny.

    “This remarkable gift from Betty and Steve Suellentrop and Hunt Consolidated enables the company to secure the future of these dynamic programs that rally the community, support our schools, build the next generation of opera lovers and inspire our donors. We are thrilled to have their enthusiastic support for our service to the entire North Texas community,” he added.

     

    Each of these programs reflects the Dallas Opera’s continuing commitment to the community at large; a commitment TDO made with its first school performances in 1961. Last year alone, these proactive programs allowed the Dallas Opera to touch the lives of more than 50 thousand people.

     

    ~~~~

    Programs Served by the Betty and Steve Suellentrop Educational Outreach Fund:

    Dallas Opera Student Matinees

    Student Touring Opera

    Curriculum Support and In-Service Teacher Training

    TDO in a Suitcase

    campTDO

    TDOSneakPeek and TDO Sightlines

    Young Artists Professional Development Program

    TDO Family Performances

    TDO Family Concerts

    Page 2 Stage

    Community Outreach Simulcasts

     

     

     

    For additional information about Dallas Opera Educational, Family and Community Outreach Programs and how you can secure matching funds that will double the impact of your generous gift; contact TDO Director of Development

    Gae Whitener at gae.whitener@dallasopera.org

    ~~~~

    For more information or to purchase tickets, contact The Dallas Opera Ticket Services Office at 214.443.1000 or visit us online, 24/7, at www.dallasopera.org.

     

    ###

    Keith Cerny on “Turning the Tide”

    Our General Director and CEO’s latest monthly column for “Theater Jones” delves into the questions raised for the industry by the dramatic turn of events at San Diego Opera.  No arts organization is immune to financial difficulties, whether caused by uncontrollable outside circumstances or unforeseen internal challenges; however, there’s a lot to be said about how a company responds or fails to respond when the “going gets tough.”

    An article well worth your attention.

    Suzanne Calvin, Dir. of Media and Public Relations

    Dallas Opera and Dallas Holocaust Museum explore Korngold

    It’s a panel discussion next week that shouldn’t be missed! The Dallas Opera and Dallas Holocaust Museum are the proud partners of what promises to be an extraordinary panel discussion on the life, the work and the legacy of exiled twentieth-century composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold. Details follow. Read more →

    DEATH AND THE POWERS at The Dallas Opera

    Looking for the lowdown on the Dallas Opera’s upcoming presentation of “Death and the Powers”?  The Global Interactive Simulcast?  Wild lobby displays and cool apps?  
    Read more →

    Mark Adamo Commissioned to Write 2015 World Premiere

    A little something extra in your holiday stocking – come December 2015 (and courtesy of composer-librettist Mark Adamo and the Dallas Opera)…read on!

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
    Thursday, November 14, 2013
    Contact: Suzanne Calvin 214.443.1014
    suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org

    THE DALLAS OPERA IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE

    A NEW COMMISSION FOR A HOLIDAY OPERA BY

    AMERICAN COMPOSER MARK ADAMO

    ~~~~
    The Renowned American Composer/Librettist of the operas
    Little Women, Lysistrata and The Gospel of Mary Magdalene
    As well as other acclaimed works
    ~~~~
    This Dallas Opera World Premiere Scheduled for
    December, 2015
    ~~~~
    Publically Announced at This Evening’s “Composing Conversation” at the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas

    DALLAS, NOVEMBER 14, 2013 – The Dallas Opera thrilled audience members at this evening’s “Composing Conversation” at the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, when Dallas Opera General Director and CEO Keith Cerny made the surprise announcement that Mark Adamo, one of America’s most successful and accomplished composer-librettists has agreed to create a new holiday opera for the 2015-2016 Season.
    Mr. Adamo is the artist behind a host of orchestral, chamber and choral works, in addition to several compelling operas including Little Women, one of the most frequently performed American operas of our time. His most recent composition, The Gospel of Mary Magdalene, successfully premiered earlier this season at San Francisco Opera and was described by The Huffington Post as a “feast for the ears, eyes and mind.” His 2005 opera Lysistrata, based on the comedy by Aristophenes, prompted Alex Ross of The New Yorker to write, “I relaxed a minute after the music began, knowing that I was in the hands of a brilliant theatre composer.”

    Mr. Adamo expressed his pleasure with the new commission, stating, “I couldn’t be happier to be making my debut with the Dallas Opera: this has long been one of the most distinguished companies in this country, and I am honored to join its roster of artists.”

    Adamo’s commission is the latest in a series of recently commissioned world premieres, beginning with Jake Heggie and Gene Scheer’s Moby-Dick (2010) and their song cycle “A Question of Light” (the latter presented in partnership with the Dallas Museum of Art).
    Under the guidance of Keith Cerny, the list has grown to include Great Scott, reuniting Heggie with librettist Terrence McNally (Dead Man Walking) to create a star vehicle for mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato (premiere date: October 2015); and Everest, scheduled to be unveiled in February 2015, marking the first opera by British composer Joby Talbot (A Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy) working with librettist Gene Scheer.

    “I’ve been keenly interested in Mark Adamo’s work for some time,” explains Mr. Cerny. “As a composer-librettist, Mark has shown profound insights into the workings of the human heart and psyche coupled with an ability to create operas and orchestral works that are carefully thought out, meticulously crafted and complex.
    “I find Mark’s music as intellectually and emotionally satisfying as it is beautiful.”

    The new opera will be conducted by Dallas Opera Music Director Emmanuel Villaume.
    Mr. Adamo is a Philadelphia native who served as Composer-in-Residence at New York City Opera from 2001 through 2006. Adamo began his education in the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University, where, as a freshman in the Dramatic Writing Program, he received the Paulette Goddard Remarque Scholarship for outstanding undergraduate achievement in playwriting. He went on to earn a Bachelor of Music Degree cum laude in composition in 1990 from the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C.
    A brief-yet-highly successful career as a music journalist and scholar was eventually overtaken by Adamo’s desire to compose his own works. He was catapulted to the top ranks of American composers by the critically acclaimed 1998 world premiere of Little Women (based on the novel by Louisa May Alcott) at Houston Grand Opera and he continues to compose outstanding orchestral, choral and ballet music—in addition to full-scale operas—for leading arts organizations in the U.S. and throughout the world.

    ~~~~

    COMPOSER-LIBRETTIST MARK ADAMO:

    American composer-librettist Mark Adamo recently premiered his third full-length opera, the “densely rhapsodic” (Joshua Kosman, San Francisco Chronicle) The Gospel of Mary Magdalene, at San Francisco Opera—following a busy season of opera and chamber premières. In May 2012, Fort Worth Opera opened its first production of his second opera, Lysistrata; that September, the Constella Festival in Cincinnati opened their season with August Music, for flute duo and string quartet, commissioned by Sir James and Lady Jeanne Galway: in December, Sasha Cooke and the New York Festival of Song introduced The Racer’s Widow, a cycle of five American poems for mezzo-soprano, cello, and piano; and, in April 2013, baritone Thomas Hampson and the Jupiter String Quartet introduced Aristotle, after the poem by Billy Collins, in concerts at the Mondavi Center in Davis, California before continuing to Boston and New York under the auspices of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center.

    Adamo first attracted national attention with his uniquely celebrated début opera, Little Women, after the Alcott novel. Introduced by Houston Grand Opera in 1998 and revived there in 2000, Little Women is one of the most frequently performed American operas of the last fifteen years, with more than 80 national and international engagements in cities ranging from New York to Minneapolis, Toronto, Chicago, San Francisco, Adelaide, Perth, Mexico City, Bruges, Banff, Calgary, and Tokyo, where it served as the official U.S. cultural entrant to the 2005 World Expo. The Houston Grand Opera revival (2000) was telecast by PBS/WNET on Great Performances in 2001 and released on CD by Ondine that same year; in fall 2010, Naxos released this performance on DVD and on Blu-ray. (Little Women was the first American opera recorded in high-definition television.) Comparable enthusiasm greeted the début of the larger-scaled Lysistrata, Adamo’s second opera, adapted from Aristophanes’ comedy but also including elements from Sophocles’ Antigone. Lysistrata was commissioned by Houston Grand Opera for its 50th anniversary and introduced in March 2005: its New York City Opera debut in March 2006 led to concert performances by Washington National Opera (May 2006) and Music at the Modern by the Van Cliburn Foundation (May 2007) before the new staging of the work at Fort Worth Opera in spring 2012, which was included on the best-of-2012 lists of both D Magazine and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

    While Adamo’s principal work continues to be for the opera house, over the past 5 years he has ventured not only into chamber music but also into symphonic and choral composition. Adamo’s first concerto, Four Angels, for harp and orchestra, was commissioned by the National Symphony Orchestra and debuted in June 2007: the Utah Symphony, led by their Music Director Emeritus, Keith Lockhart, presented Four Angels in January 2011. In May 2007, Washington’s Eclipse Chamber Orchestra, for which Adamo served as its first composer-in-residence, performed the revised version of Adamo’s Late Victorians, a cantata for singing voice, speaking voice, and orchestra: Naxos released Late Victorians in 2009 on Eclipse’s all-Adamo CD, which also included Alcott Music, from Little Women, for strings, harp, celesta, and percussion; “Regina Coeli,” an arrangement of the slow movement of Four Angels for harp and strings alone; and the Overture to Lysistrata for medium orchestra. In April of 2010, Harold Rosenbaum’s New York Virtuoso Singers paired six of Adamo’s newly-published choral scores with the complete chamber-choral work of John Corigliano. This concert featured the New York premières of Cantate Domino (after Psalm 91,) Pied Beauty and God’s Grandeur (Gerard Manley Hopkins; commissioned by the Gregg Smith Singers,) Matewan Music(Appalachian folk-tune variations,) Supreme Virtue (Stephen Mitchell’s translation of the Tao te Ching,) and The Poet Speaks of Praising (Rilke: commissioned and introduced by Chanticleer.)
    Composer-in-residence at New York City Opera from 2001 through 2006, where he led the VOX: Showcasing American Composers program, Adamo also served as Master Artist at Atlantic Center for the Arts in May 2003. Since 2007 he has served as the principal teacher of American Lyric Theatre’s Composer-Librettist Development Program in New York, in which he coaches teams of composers and librettists in developing their work for the stage.

    Adamo began his education in the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University, where, as a freshman in the Dramatic Writing Program, he received the Paulette Goddard Remarque Scholarship for outstanding undergraduate achievement in playwriting. He went on to earn a Bachelor of Music Degree cum laude in composition in 1990 from the Catholic University of America. His music is published exclusively by G. Schirmer, Inc.

    ~~~~

    EVENTS, GUESTS AND ARTISTS SUBJECT TO CHANGE

    ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT “NOVEMBER AT THE DALLAS OPERA”
    IS CONVENIENTLY AVAILABLE ONLINE, 24/7
    VISIT WWW.DALLASOPERA.ORG AND CHECK THE CALENDAR LISTINGS

    For high-resolution, digital photographs suitable for print
    To arrange an interview
    Or for additional information
    Please contact Suzanne Calvin, Manager/Director Media & PR
    214.443.1014 or suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org

    The Dallas Opera’s 2013-2014 “By Love Transformed” Season
    Is Sponsored by Texas Instruments Foundation

    THE DALLAS OPERA WISHES TO EXPRESS ITS GRATITUDE TO OUR EXCLUSIVE PARTNERS:

    AMERICAN AIRLINES – OFFICIAL AIRLINE OF THE DALLAS OPERA
    LEXUS – OFFICIAL VEHICLE OF THE DALLAS OPERA

    Ticket Information for the 2013-2014 Dallas Opera Season

    All performances are in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center. Single Tickets start at $19 and Flex Subscriptions are also on sale from $50 to $720. Family performances tickets are $5 apiece or $12 for three family productions or concerts. For more information or to make your purchases, contact The Dallas Opera Ticket Services Office at 214.443.1000 or visit us online, 24/7, at www.dallasopera.org.

    THE DALLAS OPERA 2013-2014 SEASON INFORMATION
    The Dallas Opera celebrates its Fifty-Seventh 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 will 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.

    CARMEN by Georges Bizet
    October 25 (special time, 8:00 p.m.), October 27(m), 30, November 2, 8 & 10(m), 2013
    The most irresistible bad girl in opera—How can you possibly say “non”?
    An opera in four acts first performed in Paris on March 3, 1875
    Text by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy based on the novella by Prosper Mérimée
    Time: 19th century
    Place: Seville, Spain
    Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume
    Stage Director: Chris Alexander
    Scenic Design: Jean-Pierre Ponnelle
    Costume Design: Werner Iverke
    Lighting Design: Thomas Hase
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Children’s Chorus Master: Melinda Cotten
    Starring: Clémentine Margaine**(Carmen), Brandon Jovanovich (Don José Oct. 25, 27, 30), Bruno Ribeiro* (Don José Nov. 2, 8, 10), Mary Dunleavy (Micaëla), Dwayne Croft (Escamillo), Danielle Pastin*(Frasquita), Audrey Babcock*(Mercédès), Kyle Albertson*(Zuniga), Steven LaBrie (Le Dancaïre), William Ferguson* (Remendado), John David Boehr*(Moralès).

    DEATH AND THE POWERS by Tod Machover
    February 12, 14, 15 & 16(m), 2014
    Science fiction and poignant family drama combine in a major regional premiere!
    An opera in one act first performed in Monte Carlo, Monaco at the Salle Garnier on September 24, 2010.
    Text by Robert Pinsky, based on a story by Pinsky and Randy Weiner
    Time: Unknown time in the future
    Place: Earth, the home of billionaire Simon Powers
    Conductor: Nicole Paiement
    Stage Director: Diane Paulus*
    Associate Director: Andrew Eggert*
    Scenic Design: Alex McDowell*
    Costume Design: David Woolard*
    Lighting Design: Don Holder
    Choreography: Karole Armitage*
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Starring: Robert Orth (Simon Powers/Robot One), Joélle Harvey (Miranda/Robot Four), Patricia Risley(Evvy/Robot Three), Hal Cazalet*(Nicholas/Robot Two), Frank Kelley*(The United Way), David Kravitz*(The United Nations), Tom McNichols*(The Administration).

    DIE TOTE STADT (“THE DEAD CITY”) by Erich Wolfgang Korngold
    March 21, 23(m), 26, 29 and April 6(m), 2014
    The Hitchcock-like tale of one man’s dark obsession with the woman he loved and lost.
    An opera in three acts first performed in Hamburg & Cologne, Germany on December 4, 1920
    Text by Erich Wolfgang Korngold and Paul Schott based on a novel by Georges Rodenbach, Bruges la morte
    Time: End of the 19th century
    Place: The city of Bruges in northwestern Belgium
    Conductor: Sebastian Lang-Lessing*
    Stage Director: Mikael Melbye
    Scenic Design: Mikael Melbye*
    Costume Design: Dierdre Clancy*
    Video Design: Wendall Harrington*
    Lighting Design: Mark McCullough
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Choreography: Matthew Ferraro*
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Starring: Anne Petersen**(Marietta) , Jay Hunter Morris (Paul), Morgan Smith (Fritz), Weston Hurt (Frank), Katherine Tier*(Brigitta), Andrew Bidlack (Albert), Jan Lund**(Victorin), Jennifer Chung (Juliette), Angela Turner Wilson (Lucienne).

    THE BARBER OF SEVILLE by Gioachino Rossini
    March 28, 30(m), April 2, 5, 11 & 13(m), 2014
    Figaro, a scheming barber and jack-of-all-trades plots to release a headstrong girl from her gilded cage!
    An opera in two acts first performed in Rome on February 20, 1816
    Text by Pierre-Augustin de Beaumarchais, from his comedy Le Barbier de Séville
    Time: 18th century
    Place: Seville, Spain
    Conductor: Giuliano Carella*
    Stage Director: Herb Kellner
    Original Production: John Copley
    Scenic Design: John Conklin
    Costume Design: Michael Stennet
    Lighting Design: TBD
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Starring: Nathan Gunn (Figaro), Isabel Leonard*(Rosina), Alek Shrader*(Count Almaviva), Donato DiStefano (Dr. Bartolo), Burak Bilgili*(Don Basilio), Nathan De’Shon Myers (Fiorello), Christian Teague*(Ambrogio).

    DALLAS OPERA FAMILY PERFORMANCES
    Jack and the Beanstalk: October 26, 2013 and April 5, 2014
    Family Concerts: November 3, 2013 and February 1, 2014
    The Elixir of Love: November 9, 2013 and April 12, 2014

    * Dallas Opera Debut
    ** American Debut
    ______________________________________________________________________________________
    The Dallas Opera is supported, in part, by funds from: Texas Instruments Foundation, TACA, 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. A special thanks to the Elsa von Seggern Foundation for its continuing support.

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    The Dallas Opera

    • Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House
    • 2403 Flora Street, Suite 500
    • Dallas, TX 75201
    • 214.443.1000
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