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| The Opera Australia Dancers strut their stuff in a Can-Can line at the 2013 Season Launch. |
Taking a stroll around Opera Australia’s Sydney
headquarters in Surry Hills while waiting for artistic director Lyndon
Terracini to arrive, it’s impossible not to notice that the place is abuzz. Musicians
bearing instruments hurry along corridors; behind coaching room doors voices
are learning roles; the smell of sets being painted wafts in from somewhere;
and downstairs in the administrative section a small army of support staff are working
phones and computers to help bring massive new projects to fruition.
A staff member laughs when asked if things have been a
little frantic of late. ‘We’ve pretty much accepted that they’re not going to
get any less frantic,’ he says. ‘Why would Lyndon stop with HOSH or the Ring cycle?’
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| Lyndon Terracini speaks at the 2013 Season Launch |
2012 was OA’s year of living dangerously. If families
flocked to Julie Taymor’s enchanting production of Mozart’s The Magic
Flute, not all aficionados were happy with cuts to Mozart’s score. The
inaugural season of Handa Opera on Sydney Harbour (HOSH), an $11 million outdoor
production of Verdi’s La Traviata set
against the backdrop of Sydney Harbour, delighted absolutely everyone, but could
have been ruined by the weather. And this winter, an acclaimed Lincoln Center
Theater production of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific opened with a standing ovation at the Sydney Opera
House, then performed strongly at the box office. Even if strictly speaking it
wasn’t opera.
It’s fair to say that Opera Australia has taken risks,
and that they’ve paid off. Judging by the 2013 season, unveiled at the Sydney
Opera House this month, even bolder initiatives are waiting to be realised next
year. In his office at the Opera Centre, Lyndon Terracini – casual in a funky haircut
and his signature winter scarf – pulls a frightened face when asked about all
this risky business. ‘Sometimes I get nervous about making big announcements!’
he grins. But long and solid experience in arts management has given him the
confidence to believe in his decisions. ‘Everything we do at OA, we do for a
reason,’ he says.
In designing the 2013 program, Terracini and his team were
guided by the Company’s oft stated aim of using innovative programming to appeal
to as broad as possible an audience. As he puts it: ‘Opera Australia has
several different audiences and if we are to survive, we have to play to all of
them.’
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| Teddy Tahu Rhodes returns as Emile de Becque in South Pacific in 2013 |
In 2013 the Company continues to broaden its audience through
its community choirs project, an ongoing commitment to telling Indigenous
Australians’ stories, and
a revival of South Pacific. At the
same time, buffs are being treated to one of the biggest years in Australian
operatic history. The 2013 season opens on New Year’s Eve, with a revival of
Gale Edwards’ acclaimed 2011 production of Puccini’s La bohème. Terracini says: ‘What better way to open the season than
with the buzz and excitement of New Year’s Eve? People who fly in from overseas
to enjoy the fireworks will now be able to choose between the La bohème Gala or the Opera Gala, and top
that with a midnight party and fireworks.’
In January a Verdi Festival opens in Sydney, featuring
revivals of Elke Neidhardt’s Il trovatore
and Simon Phillips’ Falstaff productions, and the world première of maverick Catalan
company La Fura dels Baus’ new production of A Masked Ball. Directed by Alex Ollé, the production, co-produced
by four international opera companies, marks the first time that OA is staging the
world première of an international collaboration. Co-productions with
three/four major international houses will be a cornerstone of future programs,
says Terracini.
Bookending the other end of 2013 is the Melbourne Ring cycle, directed by Neil Armfield.
More than a year before opening night, tickets have all but sold out. Terracini
cites several reasons for this: ‘We chose our time wisely – next year is the
Wagner bicentenary and there is a lot of international interest in Ring cycles. It is also Opera
Australia’s first cycle, which has generated a lot of local interest. And we offer
a cast of singers whom our audience trusts and admires.’
Between the Verdi and Wagner fests, 2013 highlights
include a revival of John Cox’s 1976 production of Britten’s Albert Herring, a new production of The Force of Destiny directed by Tama
Matheson, and a new production of Puccini’s Tosca
directed by John Bell.
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| José Carbó, Warwick Fyfe, Milijana Nikolic and Shane Lowrencev at the 2013 Season Launch. |
Terracini, who carefully matches directors and operas, says:
‘Tosca is the drama of Tosca, Scarpia
and Cavaradossi, and you need three excellent singing actors to bring that
drama to life. John Bell, with his long history as a theatre director, is ideal
for such a production.’ Likewise, Neil Armfield’s talent for presenting a clear
narrative selected him as Ring director.
‘I was looking for a great storyteller because some Ring directors lose the thread of the story,’ Terracini says.
A hands-on manager, he does not shy away from asking a director
to compromise if he feels that a particular vision will not resonate with the
OA audience. And recently he asked a designer to redesign a production three
times.
Populating the 2013 season is the largest number of international
artists that OA has contracted to date. To name but a few, Gianluca Terranova,
Alfredo in the 2012 HOSH Traviata, returns
as Rodolfo in La bohème, Takesha
Meshé Kizart, who has wowed Australian audiences as Tosca and Mimì, returns to
star in John Bell’s new Tosca
production, and Ji-Min Park, who moved audiences as Rodolfo in La bohème, returns as Ernesto in Roger
Hodgman’s new production of Donizetti’s Don
Pasquale.
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| Warwick Fyfe sings the title role of Falstaff in 2013 |
At the same time, several Australian singers are making career-defining
role debuts. Warwick Fyfe, who made a
huge impact as Germont in the HOSH La Traviata
earlier this year, tackles Falstaff; José Carbó sings his first Verdi roles as Count
Anckarstroem in A Masked Ball and
Germont in La Traviata; Nicole Car makes
her Sydney debut as Mimi in Bohème, and
Natalie Aroyan makes her OA debut in the same role.
In terms of creative teams, collaborations and casting,
the 2013 season has a strong international flavour. Says Terracini: ‘By
commissioning co-productions with international companies, then playing them in
Brussels, Oslo and Buenos Aires, Australian singers get to be part of a company
that is highly regarded around the world, and hopefully an opportunity to travel
overseas with some of the productions that we are developing. And when our
European partners are here and see our artists performing, they may well want
to engage some of our singers.’
As for engaging increasing numbers of overseas singers: ‘To
play to international standards, OA has to operate in the way that international
houses do. That means getting top performers for roles, irrespective of nationality.
Our audiences pay a high price for a ticket; it’s our responsibility to make
sure that they see the best possible performance.’
Terracini believes that a good season is balanced:
serious as well as light, local and international, Sydney and Melbourne
according to each city’s character. ‘We don’t just put on Trovatore because we feel like doing it. We schedule it because
it’s part of the Verdi festival which also features A Masked Ball and Falstaff.
We bring back South Pacific because
it’s been phenomenally popular, but also because it resonates with our
community programs and provides a counterpoint to the heavyweight productions
of Verdi and Wagner.’
2013 offers opera lovers a bold and exciting program, and
with HOSH (a spectacular new Carmen production
directed by Gale Edwards is going on the Harbour next year) having proven
itself a success story and the Melbourne Ring
all but sold out, the risk of failure seems more remote than it did a year ago.
Does this mean that Opera Australia has survived the global financial crisis? Terracini
is cautiously optimistic. ‘We’ve had to fundamentally rethink our programming to
draw new audiences. We’ve taken some risks, had some luck, and the end result
is that we are now selling many more tickets than before the GFC. Our budget
has gone up by $30 million to around $100 million in the past year, and the
percentage of that coming from public funding has shrunk – we’ve managed with
the help of donors, sponsors and the box office.’
‘We’ve worked very, very hard and we’ve had some luck. There’s
light at the end of the tunnel.’











Why is OA determined to sell less tickets to operas as evidenced by the severe truncation of subscriptions series? My Saturday afternoon subscription has gone from 8 to 5 operas, a 37.5 percent reduction, presumably to accommodate the musical, South Pacific. If we hypothesise say 200 Saturday afternoon subscriptions, OA will have to find buyers for over 600 tickets to South Pacific. South Pacific has 54 performances, a hell of a lot of tickets to sell. Should governments support commercial theatre? Besides less subscription ticket revenue, it risks losing govt support as it becomes more commercial.
ReplyDelete2012 season innovative and about balance!!!!! You have to be kidding. A more mundane and "safe" selection of productions has never been offered to Sydney audiences. I wont be seeing any of it.
ReplyDeleteIt will be interesting to see how opera australia will go ahead into the 2013 season with a plan of action like this. I find this to be a risky gamble, but if the mates manage to pull this off convincingly, it will be a major boost for the troupe.
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