Wagner's Ring is the ultimate test for an opera company: an epic, 16-hour cycle of four mythological operas that is both expensive to stage and to watch. A stalls seat for the Royal Opera's cycle later this year costs £1,000; while the most recent attempt of a British regional company to mount the work – by Scottish Opera in 2003 – almost resulted in the company going out of business.
So how is a medium-sized touring company expected to produce the Ring and remain solvent? Last year Opera North undertook the biggest project in the company's 34-year history, to mount one instalment of the cycle a year between 2011-14.
Given the financially straitened times, it might seem to be grand
folly. Yet the project has been determined by the controversial, yet
cost-effective decision to present the operas as semi-staged versions in
concert halls rather than theatres.
"Producing the Ring is a rite of passage which every opera company
aspires to undertake," said Opera North's general director, Richard
Mantle. "But I was adamant that we would not bankrupt ourselves doing
it."
Continue Reading: Opera North tackles Wagner's Ring Cycle
Zoraida di Granata
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Zoraida di Granata is an early serious opera by Donizetti. It’s set in
Muslim controlled Granada in 1480. The city is under siege by the Spanish
and the ...
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