Seattle Opera's 2018/19 season offers something new for everyone. Every production is new to Seattle, and the offerings span the entire repertoire- from the standard European classics Il trovatore and Carmen to the twentieth- century masterpieces The Gershwins'® Porgy And BessSM and The Turn of the Screw. The season also reaches into the twenty-first century with The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs, which comes to Seattle after its world premiere and rave reviews in Santa Fe-where it was hailed as the best-selling new production in the company's history.
Steve Jobs offers a "way in" for everyone with a smartphone, meaning there is room for lovers of electronic music, opera aficionados, and everyone in between.
Written by Pulitzer Prize-winning librettist Mark Campbell and composed by DJ/composer Mason Bates, the work explores the contradictions behind the man whose vision to streamline digital communication could never solve the innate messiness of the human condition. Bates brings his laptop and electronic sound into the orchestra pit-and not for the first time. This may be his first opera, but he is as comfortable working with classical musicians as he is DJ-ing post-show at a Moby concert, and he has brought his blend of classical music and electronica to packed crowds in collaborations with clubs and orchestras around the country. In awarding Bates the Heinz Medal, Teresa Heinz remarked that "his music has moved the orchestra into the digital age and dissolved the boundaries of classical music."
"I was one of the many wowed audience members at the world premiere of The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs last year," says Seattle Opera General Director Aidan Lang, "and was thrilled that Seattle Opera was a co-commissioner of this vital new American work. So much of opera's standard repertoire has been around for so long that we forget about the anticipation of the audience hearing a new Puccini opera for the first time. That anticipation, that buzz, was in the air in Santa Fe-and for good reason. The show is fantastic."
The mainstage season at McCaw Hall kicks off with a beloved American classic: The Gershwins'® Porgy And BessSM, Aug. 11-25, 2018, depicting life, death, love, and hope in an African American community in 1920s South Carolina. Coming to Seattle from The Glimmerglass Festival, director Francesca Zambello's production has been hailed as "an overall theatrical and musical success," proving "that Gershwin's opus remains America's most important 20th-century opera" (Bachtrack.com). Maestro John DeMain, whose Porgy and Bess recording won a Grammy, conducts the opera for the fourth time at Seattle Opera.
Just in time for Halloween, the mainstage season continues with a classic ghost story, The Turn of the Screw (Benjamin Britten), Oct. 13-27, 2018. Stage Director Peter Kazaras returns following his thoughtful direction of An American Dream in 2015 and 2017, bringing this intense English-language thriller to life with
Maestro Constantin Trinks at the podium. The company will also cast a boy soprano for the role of Miles.
In the New Year, Il trovatore (Verdi) returns Jan. 12-26, 2019, with a new production, co-produced with Aalto Musiktheater Essen, and originally directed by Moshe Leiser and Patrice Caurier, the creative team behind the Best New Production at the 2014 International Opera Awards. Also interpreting this tale of dark secrets, love, and revenge will be tenor Issachah Savage (winner of Seattle Opera's 2014 International Wagner Competition).
Next up is the much-anticipated west-coast premiere of The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs, Feb. 23-March 9, 2019, before heading to San Francisco Opera. The remarkable creative team includes Mark Campbell, the librettist who wrote As One, which Seattle Opera produced in 2016, and composer Mason Bates. Recently named the most-performed composer of his generation and the 2018 Composer of the Year by Musical America, Mason Bates serves as the first composer-in-residence of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. At the podium is Maestro Nicole Paiement, Artistic Director of Opera Parelle?le, who has gained an international reputation for conducting new work.
The mainstage season concludes with opera's favorite femme fatale and some of the most beloved, seductive, and recognizable tunes of all time. The production of Bizet's Carmen comes to Seattle from co-producer Opera Philadelphia, running May 4-18, 2019.
In addition to the mainstage offerings, Seattle Opera's 2018 school programs will build upon the impressive expansion of the program in 2017. The program went from 65 schools in 2015/16 to 81 schools in 2016/17, a 25 percent increase. Two- thirds of the schools were Title I or low-income schools, and Seattle Opera went to schools from King County to Olympia and Wenatchee.
"Our intention is that through these operas for youth, we will do much more than simply introduce an art form. We hope that children and teens will experience opera as a medium that can speak directly to their lives," says Barbara Lynne Jamison, Seattle Opera's Director of Education and Community Engagement.
This January Seattle Opera will be touring a new opera, The Three Feathers, a Grimms' fairy tale adaptation, written by librettist and poet Dana Gioia and composer Lori Laitman. In The Three Feathers a princess quests to find meaning and love in a chaotic world (one ruled by a Frog King). To Stage Director Kelly Kitchens, "The Three Feathers is about how, with perseverance, you can find the treasure that's been in front of you all along." The English-language opera will tour from January-June 2018. Fully staged and costumed, The Three Feathers has a cast of five singers and live piano accompaniment. Each performance includes a post-show audience discussion to deepen the students' engagement with the opera's message about gaining confidence and the power of inner strength.
Also this winter (February 2-3, 2018 at Cornish Playhouse), the company's Youth Opera Project has 82 performers (82!) producing a new version of Robin Hood, by librettist Kelley Rourke and composer Ben Moore. The piece reimagines the beloved Robin Hood tale for chamber orchestra, and the company has cast two Robin Hoods-one female and one male-to tell the tale of the spunky forest dweller, the consummate underdog whose sympathies lie with the dispossessed. The Youth Opera Project is a program that runs through the school year and is run in partnership with Seattle Public Theatre. Robin Hood is intended for audiences of all ages. Tickets are $5, but no one will be turned away for inability to pay.
Seattle Opera Ticket Information: Subscriptions on sale now. Five-opera renewal and new subscription ticket prices: $199 to 4,135.* Seattle Opera Ticket Office: 206.389.7676 or 800.426.1619. Online orders: seattleopera.org/subscribe2018. Mainstage performances take place at Marion Oliver McCaw Hall, 321 Mercer Street. Evening performances begin at 7:30 p.m., with Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m. *Prices include a $3-per-ticket facility fee and (in some locations) a preferred seating donation. Young professionals ages 21-39 who join BRAVO! and students under 18 save 50 percent on tickets.
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