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Utah Opera
History and Mission
Since 1978, Utah Opera has cultivated and entertained a growing
audience of over 150,000 annually around the intermountain area.
We produce opera with artistic standards of distinction and with
a fresh vibrancy - new works for our area as well as the classics.
Mission
To produce opera of the highest artistic quality.
To promote broad public knowledge and appreciation of opera.
To provide career boosting opportunities for promising young artists.
To operate on a fiscally-sound foundation.
Innovation
Commitment to the contemporary vitality of opera has focused the
Opera's energy into projects which animate the art form for non-traditional
audiences, and broaden its conventional horizon for dedicated opera-goers.
Our achievements on the modern operatic scene include the 1996 world
premiere of Dreamkeepers, a major new operatic work hailed as "an
incontrovertible success story" by Rodney Milnes in The Times
of London (January 24, 1996), and shadow-interpreted mainstage and
school productions for both hearing and hearing-impaired audiences.
Accessibility
Utah Opera strives to live up to its name in serving all the people
of Utah, regardless of age and geographic location. Each year, the
Opera performs for over 80,000 students in Salt Lake City's Capitol
Theatre, and in schools throughout Utah. This amounts to approximately
10% of all school opera audiences nationwide, according to annual
surveys by OPERA America. Not only are these young people developing
a greater appreciation of opera, but they will also ensure Utah
Opera's audience base in the years to come.
Young people and adults alike enjoy opera more when they understand
the lyrics. In 1985, Utah Opera became the youngest company in the
nation to implement the innovative technique of Supertitles - the
English translation of the sung language projected above the stage.
Leadership
In 1978, the Opera presented its first production of Puccini's La
Boheme. Founding General Director, the late Glade Peterson, refined
the vocal and dramatic skills of Utah Opera artists during the initial
twelve seasons. Under his leadership, the number of performances
for each opera was set at five - an outstanding achievement among
the majority of regional companies, which only present one to three
performances of each production. New dimensions, such as symposia,
lectures, concerts and educational programs, were added to enhance
the public's experience of opera.
Fresh energy and artistic direction came to Utah Opera in 1991
with the appointment of General Director Anne Ewers. Ms. Ewers continued
to visualize the future of opera in rising young stars including
singers, composers, directors, lighting and costume designers. It
is the dynamic collaboration of all these talents which produces
great opera and sells tickets. The growing popularity of Utah Opera's
performances prompted the company to expand in 1996-97 from a three-production
to a four-production season. Then in 2002, the fiscal success of
Utah Opera prompted the merging of the company with Utah Symphony,
creating a new paradigm in arts administration with Ms. Ewers as
President & CEO.
Opportunity
To contribute toward the excellence of the next performing generation,
the Opera has created the two-tiered Ensemble Program, a training
program for aspiring professional singers. The Ensemble Apprentice
artists spend ten intensive months at Utah Opera in coaching, workshop
and master class sessions, and also perform in our educational and
community outreach programs. The Ensemble Studio singers, who are
in residency with the Opera for five months, perform comprimario
roles in the Opera's mainstage productions and star in a fully-staged
touring production which travels to theaters throughout the Intermountain
West each winter and spring. These Apprentice and Studio artists
are selected by national audition at selected locations throughout
the U.S.
Artistic Nexus
The continuing artistic distinction of Utah Opera's mainstage and
educational presentations was secured in the 1995 purchase of a
Production Studio. For the first time in Utah Opera's history, music,
education and all facets of production, including the design and
construction of sets, costumes and properties, are housed under
one roof. And with the expansion of this facility in 2002, production
capabilities, communications, and efficiency among staff involved
in these vital activities have increased exponentially, and spurred
a further expansion of Utah Opera's already lucrative set and costume
rental enterprises.
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