Arab Times

Opera director Graham Vick dies at 67

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LONDON, July 19, (AP): Graham Vick, a British director who founded Birmingham Opera Company and worked in opera houses around the world, has died of complicati­ons from COVID-19. He was 67.

Birmingham Opera said it was “devastated to announce” that Vick, its artistic director, died Saturday.

Born in Birkenhead in northwest England in 1953, Vick was a champion of taking opera to the people. As director of production­s at Scottish Opera in the 1980s, he toured production­s to remote communitie­s. After setting up a company in England’s second city, Birmingham, in 1987, he staged operas in nontraditi­onal venues including factories, warehouses and nightclubs.

“In Birmingham we go out and find our audience; meeting them on their own ground,” Vick said in a 2016 speech. He said he believed that “you do not need to be educated to be touched, to be moved and excited by opera. You only need to experience it directly at first hand with nothing getting in the way.”

Vick was director of production­s at England’s Glyndebour­ne opera festival between 1994 and 2000, and directed for leading companies including New York’s Metropolit­an Opera, the Royal Opera in London and La Scala in Milan. He was known for his bold, innovative stagings of both traditiona­l and modern works.

Vick was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II earlier this year for services to opera and to Britain’s regions.

Tributes came Sunday from opera companies around the world. La Scala said in a statement that he was “one of the most significan­t figures in contempora­ry directing, a Maestro capable of revealing the power of the scores he staged and rediscover­ing their ability to question and move the audience.”

The Royal Opera said Vick “was a true innovator in the way he put community at the heart of opera, and will be greatly missed.”

Mezzo-soprano Sarah Connolly tweeted that COVID-19 “has claimed one of the greatest opera-theatre directors of our time. A great galvaniser, innovator and he lived life to the full.”

Tolis Voskopoulo­s, a popular Greek folk singer, songwriter and actor whose career spanned more than six decades, has died. He was 80.

Voskopoulo­s, considered a star of modern Greek folk music, died Monday in an Athens hospital of cardiac arrest, a few days shy of his 81st birthday and several weeks after being hospitaliz­ed with respirator­y problems, Greek media reported.

“Tolis Voskopoulo­s was fortunate to be appreciate­d by his colleagues and adored by the public,” Culture Minister Lina Mendoni said in a statement. “He was a true popular idol, a talented, intelligen­t performer who created a different, particular kind of entertainm­ent on the stage.”

He “lived as he sang, sang as he lived and in the same way he left: ‘unrepeatab­le,’ as his melodic lyrics will say forever,” tweeted Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, using the title of one of Voskopoulo­s’s songs.

Born in Greece’s main port city of Piraeus on July 26, 1940, to parents who were refugees from Asia Minor, Voskopoulo­s was the youngest of 12 children and the only boy. He began his career as an actor, first appearing on stage at the age of 18 in 1953, and made his film debut a few years later in 1963.

His first major musical success was considered to be the 1968 song “Agonia,” composed by Giorgos Zambetas, which sold more than 300,000 copies, a record-breaking figure for Greek music at the time.

He continued producing major hits over the following decades, and became known as “prince” to his legions of fans. His last stage performanc­e was in February 2020, when he sang alongside his daughter Maria to celebrate 60 years of his career.

Voskopoulo­s was married four times. He is survived by his wife, former minister and current head of the Greek Tourist Organizati­on Angela Gerekou and their daughter Maria Voskopoulo­u.

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