Philippine Daily Inquirer

ON LONDON ROOFTOP, ROYAL OPERA CHORUS REUNITES FOR PERFORMANC­E

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up in coats and with London’s famed landmarks behind them, members of the Royal Opera Chorus sang the Anvil Chorus from Giuseppe Verdi’s 1853 opera “Il Trovatore” in their first reunion in a year.

Standing apart due to social distancing measures brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, the 25 singers gathered on the rooftop of the Royal Opera House in London’s Covent Garden.

Their performanc­e, which also included the final chorus from Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s “The Magic Flute,” was streamed on the Royal Opera House’s Facebook page on Good Friday as the venue prepared to welcome back audiences in May.

“It’s about greeting Easter time and greeting the world after lockdown,” American conductor William Spaulding, who is the chorus director of the Royal Opera House, told Reuters.

“We all need a bit of hope right now ... it’s been such a rough year and in particular for opera,” added director of opera Oliver Mears.

First full season

Like other cultural venues across Britain, the Royal Opera House, also home to the Royal Ballet, shut its doors in March 2020, when Prime Minister Boris Johnson ordered Britons to stay home to stop the spread of the virus.

Now, as the country slowly emerges from lockdown, the venue last week announced early plans for its 2021/’22 Season, its first full season since 2019.

It will first welcome back audiences from May 17, with performanc­es including a new Royal Opera production of Mozart’s “La Clemenza di Tito.”

While some members of the chorus, which was originally founded in 1946, performed in a Christmas concert in December, most have not sung together for a while.

Soprano Elizabeth Weisberg, who like fellow chorus members was furloughed during lockdown, said she felt she had lost a “big family feeling” by being away from her colleagues.

“I’m looking forward to the day when we can hug each other again,” she told Reuters.

“We do look after each other and [I’m] just looking forward to seeing ... the standing ovations when the audiences are back. I know they need it just as much as we do—and it’s just going to mean so much more to everybody once we are back and able to make music.”

 ??  ?? Members of London’s Royal Opera House on the rooftop of the Royal Opera House
Members of London’s Royal Opera House on the rooftop of the Royal Opera House

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