Friday, July 1st, 2016 - Saturday, August 27th, 2016 All day
The evening vista is spectacular from Santa Fe Opera’s amphitheater in the high desert.
Santa Fe Opera’s summer festival seasons attract opera lovers from all parts of the planet, as much for the diverse repertoire and top-level performances as the magnificent setting: an alluring aerie of an amphitheater perched atop a mesa in the mountains of northern New Mexico. A stage house open at the back affords breathtaking views of high-desert sunsets that more than one stage director has worked into his or her show.
Almost every Santa Fe Opera season comes with a world premiere, but not this time around. Even so, the 60
th-anniversary
schedule offers a canny combination of standard repertory and less-often-performed operas, and the roster is full of performers worth hearing.
Barber’s
Vanessa and Gounod’s
Roméo et Juliette will receive Santa Fe Opera premieres.
Vanessa’s libretto (by
Gian Carlo Menotti) may be slushy hokum, but the score is prime lyrical Barber, and soprano
Erin Wall should be entrancing in the title role;
Leonard Slatkin conducts, and James Robinson directs (opens
July 30). Soprano
Ailyn Pérez and tenor
Stephen Costello portray the star-crossed lovers in Gounod’s Gallic
tragédie lyrique, with the company’s chief conductor,
Harry Bicket, presiding (July 16).
Puccini’s spaghetti western,
La Fanciulla del West (The Girl of the Golden West)
, will open the season
July 1, in a co-production with
English National Opera that stars soprano
Patricia Racette as the pistol-packing Minnie;
Emmanuel Villaume is the conductor. Rounding out the season will be a new production of Mozart’s
Don Giovanni, conducted by
John Nelson and directed by Ron Daniels (
July 2), and Richard Strauss’ “conversation piece with music,”
Capriccio, conducted by
Leo Hussain and directed by
Tim Albery (
July 23).
A footnote to the Strauss:
Capriccio had its American premiere at Santa Fe Opera one year after the company’s maiden season in 1957. Founding director
John Crosbyremained a tireless champion of Strauss’ music throughout his tenure, conducting every one of the composer’s operas save
Die Frau ohne Schatten.