Monthly Archives: July 2018

2018-2019 Season Announced by trueTHEATER

TRUE_logoAt last night’s season eight closer trueBLUE, David Levy announced the titles and a change for trueTHEATRE’s upcoming ninth season.

Performances stay at Memorial Hall, but move to Thursday evenings.

The season includes:

Oct. 25
trueHEROIN

Jan. 24
trueCAR

April 25
trueSTORM

July 25
trueCAMP 

For more information on season subscriptions or if you have a story that fits one of the above themes, visit https://www.truetheatre.com.

And thank you very much for the shout out!TRUE_Thank you

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Auditions Announced for ORDINARY DAYS at INNOVAtheatre

INNOV_logoORDINARY DAYS
Music and Lyrics by Adam Gwon

Directed by Jacqlyn Schott
Music Direction by Ron Attreau

Wed, July 25 from 7-9:30pm

From one of musical theatre’s most exciting new composers comes ORDINARY DAYS, a refreshingly honest and funny musical about making real connections in the city that never sleeps (but probably should at some point.) ORDINARY DAYS tells the story of four young New Yorkers whose lives intersect as they search for fulfillment, happiness, love and cabs. Through a score of vibrant and memorable songs, their experiences ring startlingly true to life. ORDINARY DAYS is an original musical for anyone who’s ever struggled to appreciate the simple things in a complex place. With equal doses of humor and poignancy, it celebrates how 8.3 million individual stories combine in unexpected ways to make New York City such a unique and extraordinary home.

Performances will be held at The Arts Center at Dunham August 30th- September 2nd
8pm August 30th, 31st & September 1st and 3pm September 1st and 2nd 2018

**Video Submissions will be accepted… please email them to INNOVAauditions@gmail.com.

Character Descriptions:

  • Claire is in her 30’s and is embarking on a new stage of her life with boyfriend Jason. The decision to share an apartment is the catalyst for Claire to face her past. Her cathartic “I’ll Be Here” provides the audience the final clue to her arc.
    Required vocal range: Soprano
  • Jason is in his 30’s and is the boyfriend of Claire. A romantic at heart, he spends the bulk of the musical attempting to further his relationship, at first by moving in (“The Spaces Between”) and then by proposing. Claire consistently resists his attempts leading to the central conflict of their story arc (“Fine”).
    equired vocal range: Tenor
  • In her mid twenties, Deb is a cynical and defensive grad student who is struggling to find focus in her life. She meets struggling artist Warren when he finds her thesis notes in the street.
    Required vocal range: Mezzo
  • The cheerful and sometimes annoyingly optimistic Warren sees beauty in the simple things in life, delivering the musical’s message and final number (“Beautiful”).
    Required vocal range: Tenor

Auditions and all performances will be held at The Arts Center at Dunham
1945 Dunham Way, Cincinnati, OH 45238

To select an audition time please follow the link: https://www.signupgenius.com/go/5080e4badad29a2fa7-ordinary

Hello, lovely people! This is your director speaking. Here are the requirements/requests for auditions as well as some general audition and important info:

  • 16-32 bars of a Broadway-style song that showcases your vocal range.
  • Sheet music in the proper key with cuts marked. An accompanist will be provided (no CDs, tapes, or a cappella numbers, please. The show is done with only piano and so it would best serve you and us to hear you that way in auditions).
  • Resume and/or headshot, if you have it.

WALK-INS ARE WELCOME!!!! And will be seen at the next available opportunity.

There will NOT be a dance audition or cold-readings. The show is completely sung through without dialogue and has no dance numbers.

Auditions will be individual auditions in front of the director and some production staff. It will include singing your selection and vocalization for your range.

Just because we are accepting video auditions, that does not mean we would prefer them to actually being able to see you in person. If you can make it to auditions, that would be preferred. However, if you can’t, that is what the video audition is for  🙂

This show will be done with a three week music rehearsal period–this includes tech week. Those cast in the show will receive their copy of the score immediately after the cast list posting in order to get as much of a head start on the material as they so choose to be the most ready for performance time. There WILL be dedicated rehearsals to learning the music, but as this show is largely solos, it is expected for the performers to work on the music outside of rehearsals. This is also why the first two weeks the performers will be able to meet with the director to go over character, general blocking ideas, etc before everyone hits the ground running.

On a lighter note…There are water fountains in the building, so if you’re someone who is a fish or forgets their water bottle, no worries  ❤

If anyone has any questions, please feel free to PM me (Jacqlyn Schott).

Love you all already and can’t wait to see you! Looking forward to a very difficult decision  ❤

Cheers,
Jacqlyn

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Auditions Announced for MY SON PINOCCHIO: GEPETTO’S MUSICAL TALE at Greater Hamilton Civic Theatre

GHCT_logoMY SON PINOCCHIO: GEPETTO’S MUSICAL TALE
Directed by Rodney Neal
Produced by Mandy Gambrell

  • 2 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 26
  • 7 p.m. Monday, Aug. 27
    Callbacks: 7  p.m.  Tuesday, Aug. 28

Location: Creative Center at the Palace, 215 S. Third St., Hamilton

Audition sign ups: Click here

Please prepare 1-2 minutes of a musical theatre style song. Bring sheet music for the accompanist or sing with a CD. A CD player will be provided. You are also welcome to use your own Bluetooth speaker but please be connected and ready to sing when your time slot begins. After singing, you may be asked to stay for the dance portion of the audition. Please bring appropriate footwear.

Please bring a complete list of conflict dates from September 25 through November 14. You may not have any conflicts from November 14 through the performance weekend without prior approval.

Performances: 7:30 p.m. Dec. 6-8 and 2 p.m. Dec. 9, 2018 at Parrish Auditorium on the Miami Hamilton campus

Contact: rodneyn2@hotmail.com.

Rehearsals begin in late September 2018. Rehearsals will typically be 2-6 p.m. Sundays and 6:30-9 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Rehearsals may be conducted on other days of the week as we get closer to show week.

No absences will be accepted the final three weeks of the show, which includes tech week and the show run. Please note that not all performers will be asked to attend all rehearsals.

CASTING THE FOLLOWING ROLES:

  • Geppetto: (stage sge: 35-60) Geppetto is a lonely toymaker who longs to be a father. Looking for a strong actor and singer, as the show is about Geppetto’s journey to becoming a father. Male. Vocal range Bb3- F5.
  • Pinocchio: (stage age 9-12) Pinocchio is a wooden puppet who doesn’t know where he belongs. Looking for a performer who can handle the lively personality of a little boy while also capturing tender moments. Although Pinocchio is a boy, the role can be played by a boy or girl. Male/Female. Vocal range: G3-E5.
  • Blue Fairy: (stage age 25-40) The Blue Fairy is convinced of her own perfection and does not like having it called into question. Must have good comedic instincts and a solid singing voice. This role does not require excessive dancing. Female. Vocal range: G3-E5.
  • Fairies: (stage age 18-25) Rosa, Viola & Arancia, fairies in training, are sweet and kind. The performers in these roles should be expressive observers since they often oversee the action occurring onstage during flashbacks. They sing as a group, often alongside the Blue Fairy. They each have their own individual distinctions. Female. Vocal range: G3-E5.
  • Sue: (Stage Age 18-25) Sue is a fairy in training who marches to the beat of her own drum. She isn’t your typical fairy, as sweetness isn’t in her nature. The performer in this role can be brooding or brash, certainly a contrast to Rosa, Viola and Arancia, although vocally she should blend in. Female.
  • Stromboli: (stage age 20-60) Stromboli is a bumbling, loud, incompetent puppeteer who has at least a few screws loose. Must be a versatile performer who can create silly voices to take this character and his marionettes over-the-top. Stromboli’s songs are challenging, so this performer must be comfortable with solos. Male. Vocal range: Bb3-F5
  • Professore Buonragazzo: (stage age 20-60) Professore Buonragazzo is a passionate, mad-scientist type obsessed with building perfect children. Must be able to sing, but strong character work is most important for this role. Male. Vocal range: Bb3-C#4.
  • Junior: (stage age 9-12) Junior is Professore Buonragazzo’s mirror image assistant, created using the child-making machine. The performer in this role will need to work closely with the performer playing the Professor to mimic his movements. A short solo is required, but it can be spoken if necessary. Male/Female. Vocal range: Bb3-C#5.
  • Ringleader: (stage age 20-60) The Ringleader runs Pleasure Island. The performer playing this role should have a real sense of showmanship and also a creepy quality. The Ringleader can be played by a male or female, but either way must be able to commit to the character’s mischievous and deceptive ways. Male/Female. Vocal range: A3- E5.
  • Signora Giovanni: (stage age 20-60) Signora Giovanni is Pinocchio’s teacher Supporting role. Female/Male.
  • Bernardo: (stage age 20-45) Bernardo & Maria are married residents of Idyllia who are looking to purchase a “perfect” daughter from Professore Buonragazzo. Male.
  • Maria: (stage age 20-45) Bernardo & Maria are married residents of Idyllia who are looking to purchase a “perfect” daughter from Professore Buonragazzo. Female.
  • Talia: (stage age 7-10) Talia is the “perfect child” created for Maria and Bernardo by Professore Buonragazzo’s machine. Talia sings and dances to impress her parents, singing and dancing abilities. Female. Vocal range: C3- C4.
  • Boy #1: (stage age 9-12) Boy 1 is the first replacement for Pinocchio, created by Professore Buonragazzo’s machine. This performer must be able to mimic a comedic version of the famous puppet. Male.
    Vocal range: C3-C4.
  • Boy 2: (stage age 9-12) Boy 2 is the second replacement for Pinocchio. Male. Vocal range: C3-C4.
  • Marionettes: (stage age 15-25 or 8-13 if using kids) Marionettes are the stringed puppets in Stromboli’s show. Strong dance skills required. Female. Vocal range: Bb3-E5.
  • Town children: (stage age 7-13) The Town Children (Dante, Agata, Fiorello, Francesca, Adriana, Luigi, Gina, Lia, Rico) love the toys in Geppetto’s shop. The performers cast in these roles should be able to create individual personalities for their characters. There are opportunities for solos from this group. Male/Female
  • Town parents: (stage age 30-60) Signora Lisi, Signore Fucito, Signora Mancini, Signor Alcamo, Signora Sommelia, Signora Contrastana, Signora Rosati, Signore Proto and Signore Marino are the beleaguered mothers and judgmental fathers of the town children. The performers cast in these roles should be able to create individual personalities for their characters. There are also opportunities for solos from this group. Male/Female.
  • Children of Idyllia: (stage age 7-13) Children of Idyllia (Amelia, Salvatore, Carla, Lucia, Giuseppe, Boy 1, Boy 2) are the perfect children created by Professore Buonragazzo. Performers cast in these roles should be able to sing in groups, with featured speaking lines, as well as have dance strong abilities. Male/Female.
  • Animals: (stage age 7-13) Animals (Pig, Foxes, and Horse) serve as voices of reason for Geppetto’s journey. Performers cast in these roles do not have to sing; however, comic timing and deadpan delivery are essential. These performers should be comfortable inhabiting the mismatched animals they portray. Male/Female.
  • Roustabouts: (stage age 7-18) Roustabouts are the sidekicks to Pleasure Island’s Ringleader. When performing these roles, personality is key. Group singing is required. Male/Female.
  • Delinquents: (stage age 7-18) Delinquents (Malvolio, Brutto, Sporco, others) Strong actors needed. Must be comfortable turning into donkeys. Male/Female.

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A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS Live on Stage | Sat., Nov. 17 | Aronoff Center

CAA_ A Charlie Brown Christmas Live logoSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2018 | 2 P.M. & 7:30 P.M.
ARONOFF CENTER – PROCTER & GAMBLE HALL

Tickets on sale Friday, July 27, 10 a.m.
Tickets: $29, $38, $49 and $60. Applicable fees may apply.

Purchase online at CincinnatiArts.org, charge via phone at (513) 621-ARTS [2787] or in person at the Aronoff Center Ticket Office.

’Tis the season to celebrate as A Charlie Brown Christmas Live on Stage brings holiday cheer to Cincinnati! This brand new touring production of A Charlie Brown Christmas Live on Stage by Charles M. Schulz features everyone’s favorite Peanuts gang – Linus, Lucy, Snoopy, Sally, and more, all led by the lovable Charlie Brown – as they discover the true meaning of Christmas. When Charlie Brown becomes discouraged by the materialism of the season, Lucy convinces him to direct the neighborhood Christmas play. In typical Charlie Brown fashion, things go awry when he selects a tiny fir tree for the production. It’s up to Linus to save the day and remind everyone of the real message of the holiday.

A Charlie Brown Christmas Live on Stage, Schulz’s timeless story of the spirit of Christmas, showcases the unforgettable music of Vince Guaraldi, performed by a three-piece ensemble on stage, as well as a concert of beloved holiday carols led by the Peanuts characters.

Based on the popular Peanuts comic strip, the Emmy® and Peabody Award-winning television special by Bill Melendez and Lee Mendelson became a holiday viewing tradition after it first aired in 1965. It was adapted for the stage by Eric Schaeffer, by special arrangement with Arthur Whitelaw and Ruby Persson.

A Charlie Brown Christmas Live on Stage is produced by Gershwin Entertainment. General management for Gershwin Entertainment is provided by Dhyana Colony/Colony Creative Group.

For more information, visit the website for A Charlie Brown Christmas Live on Stage at www.ACharlieBrownChristmasLive.com.

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Cincinnati Opera Announces 2019 Summer Festival

co_logo

Morris Robinson stars in The Gershwins’ PORGY AND BESS 

Mozart’s THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO opens the season in an enchanting production 

A visually stunning take on the romantic ROMEO AND JULIET

Brand-new production of Richard Strauss’s comedy ARIADNE AUF NAXOS 

World premiere of BLIND INJUSTICE, based on true stories from the
Ohio Innocence Project

CINCINNATI, OHEvans Mirageas, The Harry T. Wilks Artistic Director of Cincinnati Opera, today announced the repertoire and casting for Cincinnati Opera’s 2019 Summer Festival, which will run from June 13 to July 28. The company’s 99th season begins with a charming production of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro in Music Hall’s Springer Auditorium. It’s followed by the world premiere of Blind Injustice, a new opera commissioned by Cincinnati Opera with music by Scott Davenport Richards and a libretto by David Cote, based on the true stories of wrongfully convicted persons freed by the Ohio Innocence Project. The season continues with the timeless romance Romeo and Juliet by Charles Gounod at Music Hall and Richard Strauss’s comic Ariadne auf Naxos at the School for Creative and Performing Arts. The season closes with an American masterpiece, The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess, filled with unforgettable music and a moving story of love and perseverance on Charleston’s hardscrabble Catfish Row.

CINCINNATI OPERA 2019 SUMMER FESTIVAL

THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO
Music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte
Sung in Italian with projected English supertitles

Thursday, June 13, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, June 15, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Springer Auditorium, Music Hall

Cincinnati Opera opens the season with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s masterful cat-and-mouse comedy The Marriage of Figaro in a “lavish … dream-like” (The Independent) period production from Lyric Opera of Kansas City by Stephen Lawless. On the day of his wedding, the crafty servant Figaro discovers that his master, the Count, is pursuing his fiancée, Susanna. Dismayed, the clever couple enlists the help of the Countess to foil the Count’s unwelcome advances, and a head-spinning series of disguises, dupes, misunderstandings, and mistaken identities ensues. 

Soprano Susanna Phillips, a regular at the Metropolitan Opera and Lyric Opera of Chicago, will have her company debut in the role of the Countess, which she has previously sung at Santa Fe Opera and The Dallas Opera. As The New York Times enthused, “She has the purity and bloom of a Mozart lyric soprano. Yet her voice can lift phrases with penetrating sound and deep richness.” One of Opera News’s top 25 “brilliant young artists,” soprano Janai Brugger will make her company debut as Susanna after frequent appearances with the Metropolitan Opera, LA Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, and the Royal Opera Covent Garden. Baritone Joseph Lattanzi, whose “luxuriant and robust” baritone was praised by The New York Times, sings the role of Count Almaviva, following his star turn as Hawkins Fuller in Cincinnati Opera’s 2016 world premiere of Fellow Travelers. Bass-baritone Christian Pursell will sing the role of Figaro, after Cincinnati Opera appearances in Fellow Travelers and Tosca in 2016 and The Coronation of Poppea in 2018. An Adler Fellow at San Francisco Opera, Pursell recently made debuts at Houston Grand Opera and Vienna State Opera. Canadian-Tunisian mezzo-soprano Rihab Chaieb, praised for her “sheer dramatic charm and vocal clarity” (San Francisco Chronicle), makes her company debut in the pants role of the lovelorn Cherubino.

French conductor Marc Piollet returns to lead the production, after conducting Cincinnati Opera’s 2014 production of Carmen. Scenic and costume design is by Leslie Travers, with lighting design by Thomas C. Hase.

World Premiere
BLIND INJUSTICE
Music by Scott Davenport Richards
Libretto by David Cote
Sung in English

Friday, June 14, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Monday, June 17, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, June 18, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, June 19, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Location to be announced

Blind Injustice is the third installment and the first commission from Cincinnati Opera’s latest initiative, CO Next: Diverse Voices, designed to shine a spotlight on diverse stories and artists. A collaboration with theOhio Innocence Project (OIP) and the Young Professionals Choral Collective (YPCC), the work is composed by Scott Davenport Richards with a libretto by David Cote. Stage direction and dramaturgy is by Robin Guarino.

This original performance piece is based on casework by the OIP and the book Blind Injustice by University of Cincinnati law professor and OIP Director Mark Godsey. The libretto also draws directly from interviews with six people exonerated through the efforts of the OIP: Ricky Jackson, Nancy Smith, Clarence Elkins, and the East Cleveland 3 (Derrick Wheatt, Laurese Glover, and Eugene Johnson). The opera will bring to life the grace, perseverance, and forgiveness of these men and women using a small cast, a chorus composed of YPCC members, and a 12-piece orchestra. As part of the work’s presentation, the collaborators will offer education and engagement events to further tell the story of this important work.

As an artistic examination of contemporary American society, CO Next: Diverse Voices projects intentionally deal with complex current topics of societal consequence and are intended to become a forum for informed, civil public discourse that leads to increased awareness and empathy. That discourse is prompted by real-life experiences which are at the center of each story, told truthfully and with respect for its protagonists.

ROMEO AND JULIET
Music by Charles Gounod
Libretto by Jules Barbier and Michel Carré
Sung in French with projected English supertitles

Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, June 29, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Springer Auditorium, Music Hall

Cincinnati Opera’s third production of the summer is Gounod’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s archetypal romantic tragedy Romeo and Juliet. The opera tells the story of star-crossed lovers who, despite their families’ enmity, risk everything to be together—with a devastating conclusion. The production from Minnesota Opera, set in Shakespeare’s time, is “first-rate” with “opulent costumes” (Minnesota Star Tribune). Cincinnati Opera favorite Nicole Cabell will return to sing the role of Juliet, following recent performances as Mimì in La Bohème (2017) and Rosalinde in Die Fledermaus (2016). As the Financial Times said of Cabell, “A faultlessly gleaming soprano… whatever this soprano chooses to sing, her voice makes wonderful music with it.” “Warm, beaming” (New York Classical Review) Canadian tenor Frédéric Antoun stars as Romeo in his company debut after performances at Opéra de Paris, Royal Opera House Covent Garden, and the Salzburg Festival. New Zealand baritone Hadleigh Adams returns to Cincinnati Opera as Mercutio after singing Dr. Falke in the company’s Die Fledermaus (2016); Adams has garnered praise for his “compelling” acting (Opera News) and “thundering” voice (Opera).

Spanish conductor Ramón Tebar, whose work for Cincinnati Opera’s Madame Butterfly (2014) was called “glorious” by Opera News, leads the orchestra. Matthew Ozawa will make his company debut as stage director.

New Production
ARIADNE AUF NAXOS
Music by Richard Strauss
Libretto by Hugo von Hofmannsthal
Sung in German with projected English supertitles

Friday, July 5, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, July 7, 2019 at 3:00 p.m.
Thursday, July 11, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, July 13, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Corbett Theater, School for Creative and Performing Arts

In Richard Strauss’s lush and comic Ariadne auf Naxos, a rich gentleman has commissioned a dramatic opera as an after-dinner treat for his guests. His staff, concerned that the opera will put the guests to sleep, brings in a commedia dell’arte troupe to enliven the entertainment. When creative tempers flare, the performance becomes a stylistic mash-up as the comedians join the action of the opera. Will the plebian instincts of the troupe be the opera’s undoing—or its saving grace? Presented for the first time in almost 60 years, Cincinnati Opera will feature a new production at the School for Creative and Performing Arts.

Soprano Twyla Robinson is the eponymous heroine, singing the dual role of Ariadne/Prima Donna. Robinson returns after previously starring as the matriarch Becky Felderman in the company’s 2015 world premiere of Morning Star, as well as portraying the Marschallin in Der Rosenkavalier (2013) and Eva in Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (2010). Kyle van Schoonhaven will bring his “steady, burnished” (The New York Times) tenor to his company debut as Bacchus/Tenor. Mezzo-soprano Olivia Vote’s “big, rich voice” (Washington Post) will suit the role of the Composer in her company debut. Following his debut with 2016’sFidelioJun Märkl returns to conduct.

THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS
Music by George Gershwin
Libretto by DuBose and Dorothy Heyward and Ira Gershwin
Sung in English with projected supertitles

Saturday, July 20, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, July 24, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, July 26, 2019 at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, July 28, 2019 at 3:00 p.m.
Springer Auditorium, Music Hall

For only the second time ever, Cincinnati Opera will present the great American opera The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess on the Music Hall stage. Filled with recognizable tunes and a touching story of love and perseverance in adversity, it will be presented in the “vibrant” (Chicago Tribune) Glimmerglass Festival and Washington National Opera production by Francesca Zambello.

Grammy-nominated soprano Talise Trevigne will make her company debut as Bess. In The Washington Post, Anne Midgette hailed her voice as “high and rich and round, like a vein of silver running through the night.” Trevigne has previously performed at the Glimmerglass Festival, Houston Grand Opera, Seattle Opera, Washington National Opera, and San Francisco Opera. Bass Morris Robinson, who has been praised for his “gorgeously rich” voice (Washington Post), leads the cast as Porgy, a role he debuted at La Scala in 2016. A regular performer at the Metropolitan Opera, San Francisco Opera, and Lyric Opera of Chicago, Robinson has appeared with Cincinnati Opera as Ferrando in Il Trovatore (2015), Ramfis in Aida (2013), the Night Watchman in Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (2010), and the Grand Inquisitor in Don Carlo (2009). In December 2017, Cincinnati Opera announced Robinson’s appointment as Artistic Advisor.

Soprano Janai Brugger, who opens the season as Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro, will sing the heartbreaking role of Clara. The menacing Crown will be portrayed by baritone Nmon Ford, who recently sang Don Pizarro in Fidelio (2016). Sporting Life will be played by the “compelling” (DC Metro Theater Arts) tenor Frederick Ballentine, Jr., who sang the Steersman in Cincinnati Opera’s The Flying Dutchman (2018). Soprano Indra Thomas, known for her “lustrous and rich voice” (The New York Times) sings the role of Serena in her company debut.

Maestro David Charles Abell returns to conduct after previously leading the orchestra for Die Fledermaus (2016), Silent Night (2014), and Porgy and Bess (2012). Set design is by Peter J. Davison, with costumes designed by Paul TazewellThomas C. Hase is the lighting designer. The scenery was originally created for Glimmerglass Festival and Seattle Opera.

SPECIAL PERFORMANCES AND EVENTS

Opera in the Park
Sunday, June 9, 2019
Washington Park

On Sunday, June 9, Cincinnati Opera will kick off the season with Opera in the Park, a free concert in Washington Park featuring opera and musical theater favorites performed by stars from the 2019 season, the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, and the Cincinnati Opera Chorus.

Community Programs
The 2018-2019 season will also include Cincinnati Opera’s signature programs, including Back to the Zoo, performances by The Opera ExpressOpera Goes to Church, and Opera Goes to Temple. Details will be announced at a future date.


Evening performances take place at 7:30 p.m., with matinee performances at 3:00 p.m. All performances feature the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. A free Opera Insights lecture is presented one hour prior to each performance.

Cincinnati Opera subscriptions will go on sale in fall 2018, with single tickets on sale in spring 2019. For additional information, please visit cincinnatiopera.org or contact the Cincinnati Opera Box Office at (513) 241-2742.


Founded in 1920, Cincinnati Opera presents a thrilling season of opera every June and July in multiple venues, including the recently renovated historic Music Hall. The company’s repertoire includes beloved classics and contemporary works brought to life by some of the world’s most dynamic performers and creative teams.

 Cincinnati Opera’s 2018 Summer Festival continues through July 31 and features the United States premiere of Another Brick in the Wall, based on the Pink Floyd album The Wall, and Laura Kaminsky’s As One. Cincinnati Opera’s 2018 Season Presenting Sponsor is PNC. The 2018 season is also made possible with support from ArtsWave, Ohio Arts Council, The Louise Dieterle Nippert Musical Arts Fund, and many generous individuals, corporations, and foundations.

 Cincinnati Opera’s mission is to enrich and connect our community through diverse opera experiences. 

cincinnatiopera.org

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