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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Happy Holidays!



Vancouver Opera would like to wish everyone a safe and happy holiday season!

The office will be closed from Friday, December 24 and will re-open Monday, January 3.

Thank you so much for supporting Vancouver Opera this past year! We look forward to seeing everyone in 2011!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Make A Donation By December 31, 2010 And Increase Your Tax Receipt!

Vancouver Opera is celebrating its 51st season and there has never been a more exciting time for you to be part of the Company! Any gift you make will increase your tax receipt for 2010, and as 41% of our revenue is gained through ticket sales, your contribution will directly impact VO’s ongoing commitment to offer exceptional productions and community programming.

Every donor and every dollar counts in helping us continue to deliver both the traditional repertoire and the new works our audiences expect, while allowing us further opportunities to advocate the relevance of Opera and the Arts in our communities.

Click on this link to make an online donation!

Give The Gift Of Music: La Traviata Tickets!


Ilustration credit Leonard Dente

11:59 pm on December 24th and you’re stuck for the perfect gift?

Give the perfect gift for someone you love: a unforgettable night at Vancouver Opera’s production of Verdi’s La Traviata – six performances only from April 30 – May 12, 2011.

Verdi’s most popular opera, this gorgeous new co-production directed by Sir Jonathan Miller will be an unforgettable evening of opera!

Love Mozart? Get your loved one tickets to his last magnificent opera La Clemenza di Tito – February 5 – 12, 2011. Mozart opera at its finest, this production features a stellar all-Canadian cast and contains some of his most glorious music for the female voice.

To buy tickets, click here.

Or call the VO Ticket Centre at 604-683-0222. We’re open 9-5. (Even on Christmas Eve!)

Friday, December 17, 2010

Coming To An Inbox Near You



On Monday, December 20, VO will be offering a wicked opera promo with group buying site, Groupon.

So whether you're an opera-lover, opera-curious or you've got some Christmas shopping left to do, make sure to keep an eye out for this daily deal.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Thursday, December 16, 2010

The Art Of Blogging



Interested in social media for your business? Or know someone who is curious about starting a company blog? Or wondering what to get for the executive in your life? Christmas is just around the corner!

Pick up Blogging To Drive Business, written by Eric Butow and one of VO's Blogger Night at the Opera bloggers, Rebecca Bollwitt aka Miss 604. Rebecca was responsible for planting the seed for our blogger night initiative when she attended Eugene Onegin in the fall of 2008. She was also a part of our original blogger line-up.

Another reason to purchase the book? We're in it! Vancouver Opera was profiled as a case study, along with organizations such as Intel, Adidas, Vancouver Canucks, Molson Coors Brewing Company and Urban Spoon. You can find us on page 125 under the chapter, "Getting Eyeballs To Your Blog".

An insightful and informative read, it may even inspire you to start your own blog (for business or for pleasure).

Pick up your copy today!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Bizet's Carmen In Concert



Say hello to Vancouver Concert Opera Cooperative! The newly formed company, "aimed at creating performance opportunities for Operatic Professionals and Emerging Operatic Professionals from Canada", will be making their debut by performing Bizet's Carmen in January.

You'll no doubt recognize many of the artists in VanCoCo from their close connection to Vancouver Opera:

Principle Repetiteur and Music Director of Vancouver Opera in Schools (VOIS), Kinza Tyrrell and Vancouver Opera choristers Natalie Burdeny, John Arsenault, Andrew Greenwood, Jeremy Griffin, Jeanine Fynn and Paul Just, as well as VO's Young Artist Coaching Intensive (YACIN) bursary winner Arianna Sovernigo.

Join VanCoCo for a fun-filled evening of opera!

January 8, 2011 @ 7:30pm
Canadian Memorial United Church
15th and Burrard, Vancouver, BC


Adults $22 and Students/Seniors $16 *

Ample FREE Parking available on 15th, Burrard and surrounding streets.

Click here to purchase advance tickets!

* General Seating on a first-come, first-serve basis. Reserved seating available for groups of 10 or more. For more information, click here.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Salute To Vienna - New Year's Concert



A cast of over 75 musicians, European singers and dancers in an uplifting, live performance of favourite Strauss Waltzes, Polkas and Operetta excerpts!

The Strauss Symphony of Canada featuring The Vancouver Opera Orchestra

Niels Muus, conductor (Vienna)
Akiko Nakajima, soprano (Vienna-Tokyo)
Alexander Kaimbacher, tenor (Vienna)

Dancers from Ballet St. Pölten

Sunday, January 2, 2011 at 2:30 PM
Tickets: (604) 280 4444 www.ticketmaster.ca

Presented by Attila Glatz Concert Productions

Goh Ballet's Nutcracker With Members Of The Vancouver Opera Orchestra



A dazzling production featuring stars from The National Ballet of Canada and Pacific Northwest Ballet, and filled with more than 200 glittering costumed characters, dramatic sets, all danced to Tchaikovsky's enchanting score, performed live by members of the Vancouver Opera Orchestra.

December 16-19 @ 7:30pm December 18 & 19 @ 2pm
The Centre in Vancouver for Performing Arts
Tickets from $28
Ticketmaster 604.280.3311 or ticketmaster.ca

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Farewell to Lucia di Lammermoor

And we're closing 2010 with a bang...

Can you believe that we're just a couple of weeks away from 2011?! It seemed like just yesterday that the singers flew in to start Lucia di Lammermoor rehearsals.

We knew from the get-go that Lucia was going to be special. It was our chance to introduce you to rising star (soon to be superstar!) Michael Fabiano, as well as welcoming back Eglise Gutierrez, who had blew us away with her portrayal of Gilda in Rigoletto (2009). We fell in love with this production and it seems, so did our opera-goers.

So here's a look back at a Lucia di Lammermoor that thrilled you, made you weep and brought you to your feet.





Thanks to everyone who came to Lucia di Lammermoor! See you back at the theatre in the new year!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Saturday, December 11, 2010

The World Is A Stage

Opera stages either come flat or raked. When an opera stage is raked, that means that the stage is angled towards the auditorium. This is so that theatre patrons, especially those sitting in the orchestra level, are able to see all the action happening on stage. (Well, that one advantage of sitting way up in the "god seats!")



To compare, VO's last opera, Lillian Alling, was performed on a flat stage while Lucia di Lammermoor is set on a raked stage. Actually, it takes the raked stage one step further into what VO's Director of Production, Terry Harper, calls a curved deck piece.

It's a simple set but it takes up a lot of space; most of which is the downstage part. To construct the set, it takes about 9 hours and a crew of 16. Surprisingly, the easiest part to put together is the curve, whereas the most difficult would be the top of the castle.


Lucia di Lammermoor blueprint details the sharp curve of the stage

Of course with a curve this extreme, I couldn't help but ask my friend who is a professional skateboarder if he would want to skate the Lucia set. And indeed he would! But of course, we didn't let that happen. (it was just a hypothetical question)



The set was designed by Gerard Howland for San Francisco Opera's 1999 production of Lucia di Lammermoor. Unfortunately, the set was heavily criticized when it premiered.

San Francisco Opera revived a 1994 production by Gerard Howland, a sad mistake of design then, no better now, and best trashed before used again. Its sole distinguishing element is a heavily skewed view of the castle seen from the perspective of someone lying on the ground in a courtyard and looking up, suggesting that the castle is an uncomfortably confined space, in which, of course, our heroine is trapped. Not a very profound point for such an aggressively vertiginous visual assault. - Culture Vulture

Gerard Howland’s production, in which Swenson appeared when it was new a few years ago, is a one-gimmick concept, that of a "worm’s eye view" of the courtyard with stone walls in sharp perspective ringing a rectangle of sky. - Concerto Net

The set provides one initial visual jolt, as the audience realizes that it's looking straight up the walls of a medieval Scottish fortress. After that, though, it's three hours of characters walking perpendicular to the backdrop, as if in an unintentional parody of M.C. Escher. - SF Gate

In all likelihood, Howland's productions are destined for the scrap heap, when new General Director Pamela Rosenberg arrives in mid-2001. The "Lucia" is the one with the unit set which represents a worm's eye view of a castle courtyard; the Ashtons apparently live in a Scottish bunker. - SF Gate

It could very well have not been appreciated in its time. The consensus amongst the opera patrons and reviewers who attended Lucia this past week was that they loved the set.

The set by Gerard Howling and lighting by David Fraser were exceptional. Reading like an MC Escher painting, a style called impossible reality, the set at first glance seemed gorgeous and functional but on closer examination, it changes the audience’s perspective, leaving the performers treading across a stage that in reality is the floor but should really be a wall. The audience’s perspective would be that of lying down on a floor looking up at a ceiling. This is crazy stuff but serves the purpose brilliantly in a story whose main character goes mad. - Vancouver Observer

The eye-catching set by Gerard Harland was a view of the castle from the perspective of someone looking straight up from the ground. Omnipresent and demanding it enveloped the Lammermoor family. A lowering forest from the same perspective continued the dark and brooding theme. - Review Vancouver

The opera unfolded gently, ominously, on a set that resembled something from an M.?C. Escher print—the view is of a castle’s four walls as seen directly from the ground, as if from a grave, with the action taking place, surreally, on one of the walls. A few minimal furnishings and some evocative projections were all that was needed to create a moody, darkly brooding atmosphere. - The Georgia Straight

Like what happens when making movies, sometimes the city that it's being shot in becomes another character. In my opinion, Howland's set is just as important as all the other characters it houses. I loved the forced perspective of this set, whereby your eyes are drawn to the "tops of the castle" and in the opening, videos such as ominous dark skies and silverly moonlight are projected.


Photo credit: Ken Friedman

This is where Lucia, bloodied and with knife in hand, lingers prior to coming down to be amongst all the reception guests. In those few moments, one wonders if she would really jump from the castle roofs, having gone completely mad.


Photo credit: Tim Matheson

And lastly while watching it in the dark of the theatre, I was reminded of the 2004 movie, Alien vs. Predator. Although hardly set in the lowlands of Scotland, AVP takes place 2000 ft below ground on Bouvetøya Island in the Antarctic ocean. Like Howland's set, the movie features stone pyramid structures and chambers, the lighting is dark and ominous and there's only one opening where the nightsky could be seen. In this case a long tunnel that takes the remaining survivors back up to the surface. An inspiration perhaps?

It may just have been me that saw that, although when I told a fellow opera-goer afterwards of my thoughts, he was then able to see it too.

Yes I know. The cheese stands alone.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Friday, December 10, 2010

The Sextet from Lucy



Oh, those 3 stoogies and their madcap antics. In their short film, Micro-Phonies (1945), Moe, Curly and Larry encounter a pretty aspiring opera singer while working at a radio station. Curly later gets mistaken for the soprano by a talent scout as the trio were messing about in a recording studio.

To keep up with the charade, a cross-dressing Curly aka Señorita Cucaracha has to sing or should I say, lip synch at a posh dinner party. And the record The 3 Stooges choose to lip synch to? None other than the Lucia di Lammermoor sextet, "Chi mi frena in tal momento" or as they call it "Sextet from Lucy."



Fast forward to 2:10 for the hilarity.

To hear the non-Stooges version, press play:



Or even better, hear it sung live by Eglise Gutiérrez, Michael Fabiano, Gregory Dahl, Thomas Macleay, Burak Bilgili and Dionne Sellinger at the final performance of Lucia di Lammermoor tomorrow night.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Bramwell Tovey: A Composer Chat



Join VSO Music Director Bramwell Tovey on a guided tour through his new opera, The Inventor, with a special introduction from Bill Richardson CBC’s Saturday Afternoon at the Opera host.

Written in collaboration with Lillian Alling librettist John Murrell, The Inventor will be premiered by Calgary Opera on January 29, 2011. This new opera is the true tale of a 19th century deceiver and international con man whose get rich quick schemes destroy the lives of his family, friends, strangers and eventually his own self.

Tuesday December 14th, 2010
7:30PM
Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre
SFU Woodward’s
Goldcorp Centre for the Arts
149 West Hastings Street, Vancouver

Come early as admission is FREE, with general seating.


Presented by the Canadian Music Centre, BC Region and Simon Fraser University Woodward’s Cultural Programs. For more information, click here.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

A Glorious Lucia di Lammermoor Soars At The Vancouver Opera


Photo credit: Tim Matheson

It is on Lucia, though, that Lucia di Lammermoor really rises or falls and in this production, Gutierrez, a Cuban-American beauty with long curling hair and a curvy figure, transports the role to a level that shifts a tragedy premiered in 1835 to the personal in 2010. It’s a rare coloratura soprano that has the vocal chops and the acting chops to succeed at such a role.

To read more from the Vancouver Observer, click here.

Review Vancouver On Lucia di Lammermoor


Photo credit: Tim Matheson

Breathtaking is the only word to describe Vancouver Opera’s current production of Lucia di Lammermoor, so rich is it in the synthesis of emotion and technique, in performance, in perspective, in artistry.

Eglise Gutiérrez surpassed her glowing reputation, stopping the show with her first aria. She has a clear and glorious voice, agile and graceful and completely capable of meeting Donizetti’s vocal demands. And as well she is a first-rate singing actress.


To read more from Review Vancouver, click here.

Love For Lucia di Lammermoor

Beautiful. Tremendous. Outstanding. Spectacular. Imaginative.

It may be a tragic opera, wrought with grief, heartbreak and bloodshed, but that didn't stop our opera patrons from loving Lucia di Lammermoor to pieces.

Tremendous. The vocalists were outstanding and the music was just top-notch. I really enjoyed it. A very professional production.

I enjoyed it tremendously. It was one of the best we have seen. Absolutely fabulous.

Wonderful. Outstanding. The music was spectacular. It just gave you shivers. It was a treat, a real treat. And the chorus was just so rich.

I loved it. It was my favourite one. The best ever, I think.

I feel like I'm on another planet. It was so beautiful.

I thought the set was quite imaginative. This is a first class performance.

I'm always impressed with the productions at this theatre. It's really great.

Wonderful ending to it. It ended off with a bang.


Press play to hear what everyone had to say. Or double-click the video to see it directly on VO's Youtube channel.


Video by Mike McKinley and Bombshelter Productions

Get your tickets now! Only 2 performances left! Call 604.683.0222 to speak to our box office or order online!

See you down at the theatre!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

A Night Backstage At The Opera


Photo credit: David Tracey

It sounded like a fun idea to look behind the scenes of a big opera to see how one of these overwrought mixes of music and drama and poetry and visual arts and dance gets put together. So on Tuesday, during a costumed rehearsal of Vancouver Opera's production of Lucia di Lammermoor, I got permission to lurk backstage in the makeup room. What better place to find out what these stars of the vocal world are really like? It was a chance to meet them as they go through the transition from real people to costumed and bewigged stars of the vocal universe.

To read more from The Tyee, click here.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

question: if i bought tix and it says they are "held at box office" can i pick them up earlier than the date of the tickets?

Hello,

Thanks for your question.

Tickets held at will call may also be picked up earlier at our Ticket Centre located at 835 Cambie on the 2nd floor. In person hours are Monday to Friday 9am to 5pm.

Hope that helps!

Chris Walters, Manager of Ticket Centre Operations

Ask me anything

Lucia di Lammermoor: Bloggers Final Thoughts


From left: Miranda Lievers, Frances Sprout, Stacey Robinsmith, Nik Belanio

A big thank you to our bloggers who joined us for Blogger Night at the Opera. As suspected, all of our bloggers were really enjoyed Lucia di Lammermoor.

Here are their thoughts on Lucia, Eglise Gutierrez, Michael Fabiano and the excitement of opening night:

The Vancouver audience roared their approval when the final curtain fell. When the lead performers returned to the stage, the Vancouver audience leapt to their feet in the most spontaneous standing ovation I have ever see. The Vancouver audience needed this performance and unequivocally showed their love for the performance. Well done. Very well done.

The bottom line; if you are going to see one Vancouver Opera performance this season, make sure it is Lucia di Lammermoor. This is the opera of the season.
- Stacey Robinsmith

To read more from Stacey, click here.


This opera is astonishingly beautiful, stunning music, really. and Lucia's first aria -- the end of a duet with Alisa (mezzo-soprano Dionne Sellinger) had the crowd applauding and even, from a gentleman in the row ahead of us, several heartfelt hoots. Gutiérrez's soprano is breathtaking -- how can something so powerful appear to float so effortlessly, note piling on note in a sumptuous wreath of sound... - Frances Sprout

To read more from Frances, click here and here.


Wow! Eglise Gutierrez is like none other! A stunning performance. Her range is extraordinary. I'm speechless. - Nik Belanio

To read more from Nik, click here and here.


I was told ahead of time I was in for a treat with Eglise Gutiérrez playing the part of Lucia, but I was not prepared to be so completely blown away by her performance. I don’t want to lessen the work of the rest of the cast as it really is beautiful – particularly that of Gregory Dahl who plays Lucia’s brother Enrico and of course Michael Fabiano’s performance as Edgardo, especially in the final scene where the power of his voice really shines.

That said – Eglise has my heart. I think I could listen to her for hours, and just when I thought it couldn’t get any more incredible Act 3 started and…well… if you’ve been on the fence about heading out to the opera, this is absolutely the show to see. She will blow you away.
- Miranda Lievers

Thank you Bloggers for being a part of such an amazing night! We look forward to welcoming you back for La Clemenza di Tito!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Monday, December 6, 2010

On The Town With Lucia's Men

What do you get when you invite Lucia di Lammermoor's Michael Fabiano, Gregory Dahl and Thomas Macleay out for coffee and CD shopping?

Hours of merriment, loads of cheeky fun and some pretty lively discussions. (there were some doozies!)

When you get these guys together, it's no surprise they will draw people's attention. Gregory Dahl was even recognized and stopped by a passerby in the middle of the street!

Here's a peek of what it was like to hang out with affable and charming men of Lucia di Lammermoor.


CD shopping with Michael Fabiano & Gregory Dahl


Michael Fabiano buying a Verdi's Requiem CD


Thomas Macleay & Michael Fabiano talking music



Press play or go to our Youtube channel to listen to the men talk about opera, music and what it takes to be an opera singer.

Big thanks to Michael, Gregory, Thomas, Sikora's Classical Records, Subeez Cafe and Queen Elizabeth Theatre!

For Lucia di Lammermoor, call our ticketing centre at 604.683.0222 or purchase online here. Single tickets starting at $29 (plus handling fee).

BONUS: To get your free Lucia di Lammermoor poster with your tickets, give our box office PROMO CODE 2956 when you call in or enter PROMO CODE 2956 on the login page on our website.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Tweet A Conductor December 8



#Askaconductor Day is just around the corner!

This Wednesday, folks on Twitter will be able to ask maestros from around the world their burning questions. Vancouver Opera's Music Director, Jonathan Darlington, will be participating with 40 other conductors in this exciting initiative. You can ask a general question to any conductor or you can pick a specific conductor you'd like to ask.


Photo credit: Christoph Müller-Girod

Maestro Jonathan Darlington at @j_darlington will be available for your questions between 10am-12pm and 2pm-4pm (Pacific Standard Time).

To participate:

Step 1: Think of a question

Step 2: Log in to Twitter (free to join if you are not already a member)

Step 3: Pose your question on December 8. Just remember to stick to 140 characters or less and be sure to include the hash tag #askaconductor

Step 4: Wait for the conductor to answer!

Whether you're a longtime classical music/opera fan or a newbie, everyone is welcome to join in on the conversation on December 8.

See you online!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Lucia di Lammermoor Is As Dark A Tale As They Come


Photo credit: Tim Matheson

The buzz over this production will be replete with adulation for the young Cuban-born Guttiérez, and deservedly so. Here is a singer blessed with a sumptuous, velvet soprano, matched by effortless control and flexibility. Guttiérez delivered more than fluid, pitch-perfect vocal acrobatics: her Lucia was a portrait of a tremulous, sensitive creature pushed to her breaking point by grief, the increasingly florid lines of her coloratura marking her loosening grasp on reality in the famed mad scene. This she filled with such raw human emotion that it left the audience gasping.

To read more from The Georgia Straight, click here.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Mad About Lucia


Photo credit: Tim Matheson

Gutiérrez stopped the show with her first number, and thereafter went from strength to strength. Her take on the fabled third act “mad scene” was clean and consistent, a musical and dramatic tour de force abetted by wonderful work from the orchestra’s principal flute—playing so tangible and supple that it might just as well have been coming from a character up on stage.

To read more from Vancouver Sun's David Gordon Duke, click here.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Lucia di Lammermoor: The Trailer

Here's your first look at the thrilling and tragic bel canto masterpiece Lucia di Lammermoor starring Eglise Gutiérrez, Michael Fabiano and Gregory Dahl.

Press play or double-click the video to see it directly on VO's Youtube channel.


Video by Bombshelter Productions & Mike McKinley

Get your tickets now!

Single tickets starting at $29 (plus handling fee). Call our ticketing centre at 604.683.0222 or purchase online here.

BONUS: To get your free Lucia di Lammermoor poster with your tickets, give our box office PROMO CODE 2956 when you call in or enter PROMO CODE 2956 on the login page on our website.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Vancouver Opera's Presentation Of Lucia di Lammermoor


Photo credit: Tim Matheson

A look inside the dress rehearsal for Lucia di Lammermoor at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre. The climactic 'mad scene' is one of the most famous in opera.

For more pictures in the Vancouver Sun, click here.

Friday, December 3, 2010

Vancouver Christmas Market



Bratwurst before Burak! Beer barrel bel canto!

Vancouver Christmas Market has invited Vancouver Opera patrons who will be attending Lucia di Lammermoor to experience an authentic German Christmas market in the QET Plaza.

Opera patrons arriving a little earlier on December 4, 7, 9 or 11th performance nights can experience traditional food and beverage, music and entertainment, gift vendors and a kids market at the outdoor Christmas market.

Admission for Vancouver Opera patrons will be $2 (regular price $5)

For more information, click here.

Christmas With Les Dala



When Leslie Dala, VO's Associate Conductor and Chorus Director, was appointed the new Music Director of Vancouver Bach Choir last year, we were thrilled. The opportunity couldn't have happened to a nicer and talented-beyond-belief guy. Les was recently named one of the 'Top 10 Artistic Leads Whose Stars Are On The Rise' by the Vancouver Sun.

To open Vancouver Bach Choir's 80th anniversary season, Les will take the podium to conduct a trio of Christmas concerts at the Orpheum Theatre.



Christmas with the Bach Choir
December 5


Leslie Dala's first season as Music Director of the Vancouver Bach Choir begins with this ever-popular annual concert. The concert brings together all the choirs of the Bach Choir organization.

Handel's Messiah
December 11


A grand performance of Handel's Messiah, surely the most popular work of all time, in the fabulous setting of the Orpheum Theatre. Music Director, Leslie Dala conducts the Bach Choir, the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra and noted Canadian soloists Allison Angelo, soprano; Lauren Segal, mezzo; Colin Ainsworth, tenor, and Alexander Dobson, bass.

The Sing-Along-Messiah
December 12


The Bach Choir's Sing Along Messiah will receive its 30th Annual performance on Sunday afternoon, December 12th. The Sing Along Messiah is an afternoon of music making and good fellowship which includes the audience, the Bach Choir, the Vancouver Symphony and fifteen auditioned soloists.

Three wonderful events to get you in the mood for Christmas. (It's approaching fast!)

For more information, click here for the Vancouver Bach Choir website.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Lucia di Lammermoor Ticket Giveaway!


Artwork by Leonard Dente

Up for grabs are 2 tickets to Tuesday, December 7 performance of Lucia di Lammermoor!

Here's what you need to do:

1. Track down a street or bus shelter poster of Lucia di Lammermoor

2. Scan the QR code on the poster

3. First person to scan and email their location gets the tickets!

And go!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Lucia di Lammermoor Set For Vancouver Stage


Photo credit: Tim Matheson

The opera, with a score by Gaetano Donizetti, is to be sung by Cuban-American soprano Eglise Gutierrez, one of the top Lucias in the world, and fast-rising American tenor Michael Fabiano.

The tragic opera, set in the hills of Scotland, is about a young woman and her lover caught in a family feud that leads to madness and murder.


To read more from CBC News, click here.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

A Food Drive For The Food Bank



Vancouver Opera will once again be collecting non-perishable food items on behalf of the Greater Vancouver Food Bank.

We will have Food Bank boxes placed throughout the Queen Elizabeth Theatre during our run of Lucia di Lammermoor, so we invite you to make a donation if you can.

We welcome all food donations from EVERYONE during our performance hours down at the QET:

Saturday, December 4
Tuesday, December 7
Thursday, December 9
Saturday, December 11

The Food Bank receives 75% of its yearly donations during the holiday season. It is through the support of individuals that they are able to continue to provide food to those who are struggling to make ends meet. The Food Bank continue to serve up to 25,000 recipients each week, 40% (10,000) of whom are children. The Food Bank receive no government funding.

If you are unable to attend Lucia di Lammermoor but would like to make a contribution, please feel free to drop by the theatre too! Vancouver Opera staff will be one hand to receive your donation from 630pm to 10pm each night.

All efforts are much appreciated during this holiday season!

For questions, please email: lchan@vancouveropera.ca

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Blogging Lucia di Lammermoor

The drama! The heartache! The madness!

Bloggers Stacey Robinsmith, Nik Belonio, Miranda Lievers and Frances Sprout will take on the dramma tragico, Lucia di Lammermoor, this Saturday.

The quartet will also be sharing their thoughts on the entire experience: from hobnobbing with other opera patrons, reporting from the backstage tour and listening to the exquisite bel canto singing.

Follow along the sidebar to the right for their weblinks as they blog pre-show and during the intermission.


Clockwise from top left: Stacey Robinsmith, Nik Belonio, Miranda Lievers and Frances Sprout

Don't be shy! Stop by and say hello to our friendly bloggers on opening night in the main lobby of the QET. They can't wait to meet you!

Sponsored by:


~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Vancouver Playwright And Director Amiel Gladstone Takes On Lavish Lucia di Lammermoor


Photo credit: Fabrice Glover

The setting amid the brooding Scottish moors may be grand, but Gladstone has been digging to get at the emotional crux of the story of a young Scottish woman, Lucia, who loves her clan’s enemy but is forced to marry another man for financial reasons—and is pushed into madness. Gladstone says he’s approached the piece very much as the playwright he is, seeking to stage a Lucia that Donizetti himself might have liked.

To read more from the Georgia Straight, click here.

Donizetti Opera Is Not For The Faint Of Heart


Photo credit: Dario Acosta

As for the singing they are doing, Fabiano says that Donizetti's opera is not for the timid. Particularly for Gutierrez, who is expected to add all sorts of colour to the performance, but nobody gets off easy in the score. The work is a perfect example of the huge innovations taking place in opera from the early to late 1800s and distinct in its overall heaviness.

"It's a unique period of opera composition where you can really hear the new approaches to using the orchestra in previously unheard ways compared to Mozart and Salieri's operas. Lucia is the most paramount example of this, too, as Donizetti takes a lot of chances and interesting twists in it that he doesn't do in his other somewhat more formulaic work."


To read more from The Province, click here.

Vancouver Opera Presents Mayhem, Bel Canto Style


Photo credit: Opéra de Montréal

Though she has a sizable repertoire and sings many different roles in different styles, bel canto remains a much-loved highwire act for Gutiérrez. “Each and every performance is different. Bel canto requires a big approach and a special technique. You have to do so many difficult things with your voice—high notes, pianissimo, fortissimo, staccatos, trills, scales—all while conveying the special feeling of bel canto opera.”

To read more from Vancouver Sun's David Gordon Duke, click here.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Record Of The Week



Congratulations!

Maestro Jonathan Darlington's landmark CD with the Duisburg Philharmonic, Debussy: La Mer / Stravinsky: Le Sacre du Printemps, is Linn Record's record of the week.

Linn Records, located in Scotland, is one of the world's leading audiophile labels specializing in classical and jazz recordings.

There are few compositions which have been met with such an extreme reaction as Le Sacre du Printemps. The scandal surrounding its premiere has not been matched since. The balletic sensibilities of The Rite may have led the audience to expect a work full of soaring melodies (as per Swan Lake) but instead they were met with unsettlingly powerful music full of driving rhythms and never-before-heard instrumental sounds which caused near riots and booing loud enough to drown out the offending orchestra! Despite its shaky start Le Sacre du Printemps has become a modern classic whose challenging character has not been lost and which contains numerous examples of tonal and rhythmic innovations of the music of the twentieth century.

La Mer showcases Debussy at his orchestral best evoking clear images of the power and varying moods of the sea. Although it was not met with the same immediate dislike as The Rite, it was not without its difficulties, namely the orchestra found it very, very hard to play!

Luckily the Jonathan Darlington and the Duisburg Philharmonic Orchestra are more than up to the task these demanding pieces require. This is another unmissable recording from this crack orchestral team.
- Linn Records

To have a listen, click here.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Jonathan Darlington At CBC's Open House


Photo credit: Christoph Müller-Girod

If you’re at CBC’s Open House this Friday, stop by the Radio-Canada studios, where you’ll see Maestro Jonathan Darlington being interviewed on the afternoon radio show, Correspondances, hosted by Denis Couture.

He’ll be on the air at 3:30pm.

~ Selina Rajani, Communications Manager

Michael Fabiano On Studio 4


Photo credit: Dario Acosta

Tune in Wednesday December 1 at 9am, 1pm, 4pm or 9pm on SHAW TV to see Fanny Kiefer interview tenor Michael Fabiano, Edgardo in our Lucia di Lammermoor production.