Enniscorthy Guardian

Booking now open for the 68th Opera Festival

- COMPILED BY MARIA PEPPER

THE CAST for this year’s Wexford Festival Opera was announced by Artistic Director David Agler last week, just ahead of the opening of general booking.

Over the years the Festival has establishe­d an internatio­nal reputation both for attracting and introducin­g new talent, many of whom have gone on to great internatio­nal careers and this year is no exception. Artists from eleven countries will gather in Wexford in the autumn to perform repertoire which they rarely have the opportunit­y to sing before.

Wexford Festival Opera is welcoming home mezzo-soprano Rachel Kelly, soprano Máire Flavin and tenor, Gavan Ring, all who will feature in the main evening operas.

Gavan Ring, along with Sinead Campbell-Wallace, Mairead Buicke and John Molloy, will also take to the stage of the O’Reilly Theatre in the National Opera House for a one-night only concert performanc­e of The Veiled Prophet by Irish composer Charles Villiers Stanford.

Presented in associatio­n with Heritage Music Production­s, headed by internatio­nal pianist and broadcaste­r, Una Hunt, this long neglected opera will be conducted by David Brophy.

The Festival opens with Don Quichotte by Jules Massenet, the tenth production by this composer to be staged in Wexford.

The cast features Russian soprano Aigul Akhmetshin­a, fresh from the Jette Parker programme at the ROH, Georgian bass Goderdzi Janelidze in the title role of Don Quichotte and Icelandic baritone Olafur Sigurdarso­n, all of whom will make their Wexford Festival Opera debut.

The production will be under the creative direction of Wexford alumni, director Rodula Gaitanou ( Vanessa 2016; L’Oracolo, Mala Vita 2018) and conductor Timothy Myers ( Vanessa 2016; Margherita 2017).

Dorilla in Tempe by Antonio Vivaldi is

the first Baroque opera to be performed at the Festival in over 30 years. Performing Baroque repertoire is a speciality and some of Italy’s finest singers have been assembled for this production including soprano Manuela Custer, tenor Carlo Allemano and mezzo-soprano José Maria Lo Monaco.

Director Fabio Ceresa (‘Best Director’ Internatio­nal Opera Awards 2016) and costume designer Giuseppe Palella, the key creative team behind the critically acclaimed operas Guglielmo Ratcliff (2015) and Maria de Rudenz (2016), return to Wexford for this production, while newcomer Andrea Marchiol will conduct.

The production is presented in associatio­n with Teatro La Fenice ( Venice).

Another Irish composer takes to the main stage in the 2019 programme.

The world premiere of a newly-commission­ed opera by Andrew Synnott, La cucina, will be performed as a companion piece to Gioachino Rossini’s opera Adina, marking the first time in the Festival’s history that an Irish composer has been featured in the main evening opera programme.

La cucina features Italian actor Luca Nucera as the main protagonis­t in this story about the inner workings of a profession­al kitchen as the chef prepares the wedding feast for the upcoming wedding of Adina. From a libretto written by director and artistic director designate Rosetta Cucchi.

The cast of Adina includes Irish mezzo-soprano Rachel Kelly in the title role and South African tenor, Lévy Sekgapane.

Both of these young singers are currently making quite an impact on the internatio­nal stage and have both performed in the National Opera House, but it will be their first time to perform in a Wexford Festival Opera production.

Also making his Wexford debut is tenor Manuel Amati, who at a mere 22 years of age, has a number of opera roles to his credit. All three main evening operas will also feature the Wexford Festival Chorus under the direction of Chorus Master Errol Girdleston­e.

The Wexford Festival Orchestra, led by Concertmas­ter Fionnuala Hunt, will perform all four main evening operas as well as the concert performanc­e of The Veiled Prophet.

The 68th Wexford Festival Opera will have a rare Tuesday opening on October 22, and run for 13 consecutiv­e days, closing Sunday, November 3.

 ??  ?? Irish mezzo-soprano Rachel Kelly sings in the Merrion Hotel, Dublin, as Paul Kelly, pastry chef at the hotel, arrives with his cake, a replica of the stage set of the upcoming Wexford Festival Opera production of Adina by Rossini. Rachel Kelly will perform the title role this autumn.
Irish mezzo-soprano Rachel Kelly sings in the Merrion Hotel, Dublin, as Paul Kelly, pastry chef at the hotel, arrives with his cake, a replica of the stage set of the upcoming Wexford Festival Opera production of Adina by Rossini. Rachel Kelly will perform the title role this autumn.
 ?? Photo courtesy of Amati-Bacciardi & Rossini Opera Festival ?? An image of the set of Adina by Gioachino Rossini (1792–1868). A co-production with Rossini Opera Festivalwi­ll run as part of Wexford Festival Opera 2019.
Photo courtesy of Amati-Bacciardi & Rossini Opera Festival An image of the set of Adina by Gioachino Rossini (1792–1868). A co-production with Rossini Opera Festivalwi­ll run as part of Wexford Festival Opera 2019.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland