Chicago Opera Company

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The Chicago Opera Company was a grand opera company in Chicago, organized from the remaining assets of the bankrupt Chicago City Opera Company that produced six seasons of opera at the Civic Opera House from 1940 to 1946 (excluding 1943). Fausto Cleva was artistic director and, until 1945, Fortune Gallo was general manager. After the war, when consumer goods became more abundant and people spent less money on entertainment, interest in opera collapsed and the company went bankrupt. Rather than try to re-organize, as had been done so many times in the past, the remaining assets were given to the largest creditor, the landlord of the Civic Opera House, Household finance, who then generously paid off the other remaining creditors. After the final collapse of an opera company that had essentially be re-organized five times, there was no resident Chicago opera company until the founding of the Lyric Opera in 1954.

[edit] Sources

  • Davis, Ronald L., Opera in Chicago, Appleton, New York City, 1966.
  • Marsh, Robert C. and Norman Pellegrini, 150 Years of Opera in Chicago, Northern Illinois University Press, Chicago 2006.