Glimmerglass Festival
Glimmerglass Festival (formerly known as Glimmerglass Opera) is an opera company which was founded in 1975 by Peter Macris and presents an annual season of operas at the Alice Busch Opera Theater on Otsego Lake eight miles (13 km) north of Cooperstown, New York, United States.
The summer-only season usually consists of four operas performed in rotating repertory. Glimmerglass is well known for producing new, lesser-known, and rare works, many of which in years past have been co-produced with the New York City Opera.[1] It is the second-largest summer opera festival in the United States, led by Artistic and General Director Francesca Zambello.
History
Until 2011, the company operated under the name Glimmerglass Opera. The company presented its first season in the summer of 1975, when four performances of La bohème were staged in the auditorium of the Cooperstown High School. In the years since, it has grown considerably and now offers more than 40 performances of four operas, nearly always in new productions, each summer.
Operas have been performed in repertory since 1990. For the first seventeen seasons, all operas were sung in English; since 1992 they have, with some exceptions, been performed in their original language with projected titles in English.
Several works have had their American or world premieres at Glimmerglass; the 1999 season featured the world premiere of Central Park, three one-act operas performed as a single work. The triptych was jointly commissioned by Glimmerglass Opera, New York City Opera, and Thirteen/WNET's Great Performances, which telecast it on PBS in January 2000. The telecast was nominated for an Emmy award.
Paul Kellogg was the General Director of Glimmerglass Opera from 1979 to 1996 and the Artistic Director from 1996 to 2006.[2][3] Stewart Robertson was music director of Glimmerglass Opera from 1988 to 2006.[4] In October 2008, Glimmerglass Opera announced the appointment of David Angus as the company's next music director, starting in the summer of 2010.[5] Francesca Zambello became artistic and general director of the newly renamed Glimmerglass Festival in 2011.[6]
Alice Busch Opera Theater
Glimmerglass Opera's Alice Busch Opera Theater, which opened in June 1987, was built on 43 acres (17 ha) of farmland donated by the late Tom Goodyear, the first chairman. The 900-seat theater is notable for its pastoral setting, for being the first American opera house built since 1966, and for its sliding walls, closed only while singers are on-stage and in foul weather.
Recent festival seasons
The 2010 festival featured four new productions including Copland's The Tender Land, and Handel's Tolomeo. During the 2011 season Cherubini's Médée was presented. Also, a double bill featuring the world premiere of A Blizzard on Marblehead Neck, with music by Jeanine Tesori set to Tony Kushner's libretto (a story inspired by the life of Eugene O'Neill) along with Later the Same Evening, a one-act opera based on characters in five of Edward Hopper's paintings with a score by John Musto from a libretto by Mark Campbell.
The 2012 festival featured Verdi's Aida, Lully's Armide, Kurt Weill's Lost in the Stars and the musical The Music Man.[7] Armide was presented in collaboration with Opera Atelier of Toronto, Canada, and Lost in the Stars presented in collaboration with Cape Town Opera of South Africa.
See also
References
- ↑ Tommasini, Anthony (2007-05-06). "At City Opera, an Innovator Bows Out". The New York Times.
- ↑ Kozinn, Allan (1996-01-12). "City Opera Appoints a Director". The New York Times.
- ↑ "Paul Kellogg to Retire From New York City Opera and Glimmerglass Posts". Playbill Arts. 2005-09-15.
- ↑ "Glimmerglass Opera Music Director to Step Down". Associated Press. 2005-12-02. Retrieved 2008-10-22.
- ↑ "Glimmerglass Opera Appoints Music Director" (Press release). Glimmerglass Opera. 20 October 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-22.
- ↑ David Belcher (May 2011). "The Company She Keeps". Opera News 75 (11).
- ↑ "The Glimmerglass Festival Announces 2012 Season" (Press release). Glimmerglass Opera. 14 June 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-14.