Don't miss: Rocking Horse Winner

Don't miss: Rocking Horse Winner

This month, Tapestry Opera presents the world premiere of Rocking Horse Winner, a co-commission with Scottish Opera by composer Gareth Williams and librettist Anna Chatterton. The new opera is an adaptation of D.H. Lawrence's short story of the same name, a tale of skewed ideas of love and luck, about a family's constant struggles with money, and their son Paul, who has a curious knack for predicting winning horses at the betting tracks.

Jenna Simeonov - May 5, 2016
Great ideas: Devoted & Disgruntled

Great ideas: Devoted & Disgruntled

As opera fans, we can't help but dream about attending similar forums hosted specifically by opera companies, large and small. There's an inevitable default to trial-and-error with programming seasons, casting singers, and developing relationships with audiences; with an equalizing environment similar to Devoted and Disgruntled, perhaps what audiences want out of opera can become less nebulous.

Jenna Simeonov - May 5, 2016
In review: Maometto II

In review: Maometto II

David Alden's production of Maometto, a work that until the revival in Santa Fe in 2012 hadn't been performed in it's entirety since Naples in 1820, was exactly what I think the COC needed in its season at this point. A simple, easy to digest set and staging, with a thrilling orchestra and incomparable vocals. I can't... I just can't get over the voices I heard last night.

Greg Finney - May 4, 2016
Don't miss: Shoestring Opera's Hansel & Gretel

Don't miss: Shoestring Opera's Hansel & Gretel

On Sunday, June 5 North York's Solar Stage Children's Theatre, Shoestring Opera presents two performances of their very own adaptation of Humperdinck's Hänsel and Gretel, with a libretto by Mark Brownell. In their tale, Hansel and Gretel have an odd neighbour, who "might be a witch, with an awful twitch, who rides the air with a broomstick switch!" At 11am and 2pm, audiences can enjoy gorgeous music, learn some new dance moves, and hear a new take on a classic story.

Jenna Simeonov - May 4, 2016
Performers: unwilling players of mind games

Performers: unwilling players of mind games

Performing in public is about imaginary stats: there are sayings that go something like how it's 10% preparation, 89% inspiration, and the final 1% a combination of panic and validation seeking. Whatever the proportions, the above factors are all in the artistic mix, balancing in a way that's at best symbiotic, and at worst a mental food chain.

Jenna Simeonov - May 4, 2016
Rarities: opera stage parents

Rarities: opera stage parents

So, because training for opera takes patience and nurturing, and rarely results in the kind of fame and fortune that makes terrible parents proud, have we escaped the curse of stage moms and dads? Is opera an ironic blind spot, ignored by the validation seekers in favour of TV commercials and youth beauty pageants?

Jenna Simeonov - May 3, 2016
In review: The Rape of Lucretia

In review: The Rape of Lucretia

It was incredibly close and intimate and I think it added to the stressful undercurrent of the entire score. The male and female chorus guide us through the horrific unfolding of events, there is a clear point of view from a feminine perspective, but one that was nobly sympathetic to the weakness of the men who are the catalyst to all this indignity.

Greg Finney - May 1, 2016
Meet the contestants of A Little Too Cozy!

Meet the contestants of A Little Too Cozy!

"Can you fall in love with someone you’ve never met?" That's the big question on the minds of the four hopeful, love-seeking contestants on A Little Too Cozy. Felicity and Dora have been getting to know Elmo and Fernando in that classically romantic way, texting. Soon, they'll join host Donald Alfonso and talent relations guru Despina for the finale episode of A Little Too Cozy, where they'll finally be able to go on a face-to-face date with the objects of their text-affections.

Jenna Simeonov - May 1, 2016
4 weird questions for opera singers

4 weird questions for opera singers

We always wonder, since it's right there and wide open, do singers ever find themselves staring into the mouth of their duet partner? Do they become mesmerized by a waving uvula or trembling tongue? Are they conscious of having someone stare directly into their cavernous oral orifice as they holler away? Is it a bonding experience for both parties?

Jenna Simeonov - Apr 29, 2016
Liederwölfe stuns in #OperaPeepShow

Liederwölfe stuns in #OperaPeepShow

To say that it was unique would be a broad understatement. Upon arrival, you are greeted at the door and presented a key which gets you into the event, and then you are ushered downstairs where you get to choose, à la carte, which combination of the companies presenting you wished to check out.

Greg Finney - Apr 29, 2016

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