Eucalyptus - The Opera | Brisbane Festival, QPAC and Queensland Symphony Orchestra
Eucalyptus – The Opera might be about the everyday of a small town, full of small people but their grandiose experience of that mundanity is portrayed to dazzling effect here. Evocative, haunting, and distinctly Australian, this work is one I hope to see do very well and thus usher in a new wave of Australiana at the opera.
Straight from the Strait | Opera Queensland, Yumpla Nerkep Foundation and QPAC
Straight from the Strait is a joyful unfolding of a History lesson taking off on the pulsating wings of soulful songs and reverberating through stamping feet carrying ancestral rhythms and wisdoms. It held me captive from the get-go and set my spirit free by the end of the night.
Dido & Aeneas | Opera Queensland & Circa
I found that the inclusion of movement added so much to the experience of this work. The acrobats were able to bring the more abstract, mystical, violent, grotesque, glimmering elements of Dido and Aeneas’ world to life. Each and every member of the company (both acrobat and singer) brings a level of virtuosity to their work that reminds one why these forms have lasted the test of time.
Pacific Harmonies | Opera Queensland
One hour with Pinkasova could have easily been many; her voice, her stories, her presence were all so enchanting. The way she connects her personal history and the history of the pacific and to song is masterful; just like her vocals.
Macbeth in Concert | Opera Queensland & Queensland Symphony Orchestra
Macbeth in Concert is an object lesson in what is possible when a group of people who have trained to do something exceptionally their entire lives gather in a room together and do that something exceptionally. The orchestra, led by conductor Umberto Clerici, is truly a wonder to behold. Their work in combination with Opera Queensland’s company meant the sheer sonic power of a number of sequences left with me chills, in particular the full-company scene that takes place after King Duncan is murdered.
The Call & The Human Voice | Opera Queensland
The Call and The Human Voice presents two deeply emotional, well connected stories about women who lose themselves and meet very different ends through the power of a single phone call. The latter a classic that is given a new life and a new weight in the age of social media and the other an ambitious new Australian work that while a lovely experience could have used a dramaturg on its creative team to make it a lovelier work of art as well.
La Traviata | Opera Queensland
What does it mean to choose love when it always ends (either in death or heartbreak)?
What is it to truly connect with people in a world obsessed with the immediacy of pleasure?
Why do men still feel entitled to scorn and humiliate women when they live in authentic ways?
Why must women only be one thing? Why can’t they decide to change? Why does society still berate them for their multitudes?
La Traviata | Opera Queensland
As curtains rose on the lavish opening party scene, I couldn’t help but feel it was simply an extension of the pre-show mingling that I’d borne witness to just outside the doors. I’d also heard that opera, in its penchant for the re-staging of classic works and the capacity to afford to do so, often offers a vivid window into an era, a place, or a moment in time. And for Opera Queensland’s La Traviata, this was true of both the stage and the foyer.
La Serenata | Opera Queensland
Wang himself is charming in the humblest of ways. He captures us with his talent and endears himself to us immediately after with his sweet demeanour. This charm is enhanced immensely by his technical prowess. Wang sings with every fibre of his being.
Songs of Love & War | Opera Queensland & Chrysalis Projects
Opera is not the snooze-fest many think it to be. It possesses the same drama, romance, and impassioned violence of the modern soap or young-adult drama. Imagine a Riverdale musical episode but if the singing was superb and the show was well-written. If held regularly, intimate and more financially accessible events like this might help improve my generations’ perception of this delicious artform.