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City Opera Announces Antony and Cleopatra Details; Symposium to Feature Caldwell, Futral and More
By PlaybillArts Staff
New York City Opera has released full casting and further details on its upcoming concert staging of Antony and Cleopatra. The rarely-seen 1966 work will be performed Jan. 15-16 at Carnegie Hall.
Flanigan - who made her City Opera debut as Musetta in the 1991 La bohème - has performed with such companies as La Scala, Teatro San Carlo, Metropolitan Opera, Glyndebourne, San Francisco Opera and Bayerische Staatsoper. Rhodes, the "the strapping 6-foot-5 baritone from New Zealand" makes his company debut with this production. Career highlights include Ned Keene in the Met's Peter Grimes, Billy Budd in Santa Fe, and a much-talked-about 2007 turn as Stanley in a Vienna Streetcar Named Desire . The cast also features rising tenor Simon O'Neill as Caesar and City Opera favorites David Pittsinger as Enobarbus, Sandra Piques Eddy as Charmian and Laura Vlasak Nolen as Iras. City Opera Music Director George Manahan will conduct. Rounding out the company are Matthew Burns (Agrippa), Andrew Drost (Messenger), Alexander Tall (Dolabella), Scott Guinn (Thidias), Brian Kontes (Alexas), Kirk Eichelberger (Soothsayer), Theodore Chletsos (Soldier of Caesar), Eric Jordan (Rustic), Robert Mack (Guard 1), Ryan Kinsella (Guard 2), David Salsbery Fry (Guard 3) and Young-Bok Kim (Guard 4). * The opera, based on Shakespeare's historical romance of the same name, was first commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera in 1966 to serve as the opening production staged at its new (and current) Lincoln Center home. The libretto was originally compiled by director Franco Zeffirelli, solely making use of the Bard's source text. Following a bumpy premiere, Barber and his longtime companion Gian Carlo Menotti extensively revised the score and revamped the text. This more intimate, shorter version premiered at the Juilliard School in 1975, staged by Menotti. "Though this new version of Antony and Cleopatra was more enthusiastically received, the opera continued to suffer neglect for its perceived conservatism during an era of musical radicalism," says City Opera dramaturg Cori Ellison. "With these performances, New York City Opera becomes only the third American opera company to present the work since its world premiere over four decades ago." Music Director George Manahan has said, "By presenting this masterpiece, New York City Opera is continuing its tradition of championing important 20th-century American repertoire. We hope to spark new and lasting interest in Antony and Cleopatra, as we have done for other rarely performed American works including Barber's Pulitzer Prize-Winning opera Vanessa, which we presented last season." ** In addition to the actual peformance, City Opera will offer two events tied into the work: an expansive Antony and Cleopatra Symposium on Jan. 10 and the company's Winter Gala, which precedes the Jan. 15 performance. Antony and Cleopatra Symposium
Schedule: 12:00-1:00 PM
1:10-2:10 PM
2:40-3:50 PM
4:00-5:00 PM
* Winter Gala at Carnegie Hall
Ticket Information CONCERT: Thursday, January 15 and Friday, January 16, 2009 at 8 PM
Miller Theatre at Columbia University, 2960 Broadway at 116th Street Tickets: $20 ($15 for Students/Seniors); (212)854-7799 or www.millertheatre.com WINTER GALA: Thursday, January 15, 2009 at 6:00 PM
For further information, visit www.nycopera.com
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