When Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute) opened September 30, 1791, at Emanuel Schikaneder’s Theater a...
The Opera Blog
Everything from the history of opera, specific performances, fun facts, Operaphoria publications, and more.
After his La Bohème success, Puccini turned to another French source for his next offering—Tosca. Or...
The devastation of war on civilian populations has been receiving increased coverage because of adva...
Jacques Offenbach was a prolific composer of operettas, but Tales of Hoffmann is his only opera. It ...
Today’s performance of Madama Butterfly is a revival of the Anthony Minghella production with its sp...
The curtain comes up on a sparkling set, realistically reproducing a Paris salon in the 1920s. This ...
By mid-19th century, Charles Gounod was France’s most celebrated opera composer. His Faust (1859) wa...
After Un Ballo in Maschera’s successful Rome premiere, plus a quiet marriage to his long-time compan...
Carmen is one of the three most performed operas of all time – approximately 1,000 performances at t...
The details of Nabucco’s composition are legendary, and like all legends have elements of fable tuck...