When the New Orleans Opera opens its 2024-25 season this weekend, its lead-off production of Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca” will evoke fond memories for two of its principal singers. Soprano Melody Moore ...
A violent and crass triple stab of brass killed the gaiety. A man in black marched through the pews. As light licked his jowls, the police chief Scarpia, played by Bryn Terfel, revealed himself to the ...
A roller coaster story of love, lust, jealousy, murder and political intrigue, the opera "Tosca" comes to Whitefish Nov. 23 as part of the Metropolitan Opera Live in HD program. Sung in Italian with ...
There’s plenty of mentions in the programme of Joseph Kerman’s dismissal of Tosca as a ‘shabby little shocker’, a phrase that has stuck around for 68 years despite the opera being neither shabby, not ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Notebook “Grounded,” the new work that opened the season, has been joined by revivals of three Puccini, Verdi and Offenbach classics. By ...
SOUTH BEND — The South Bend Symphony Orchestra joins with the South Bend Lyric Opera and South Bend Chamber Singers to present Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca” at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 8 and 2:30 p.m.
Unctuous and bullying by turns, Morgan Pearse’s Scarpia is a sharp-suited populist schemer whose election posters – stuck across the walls of Yannis Thavoris’s finely detailed set – proclaim him (in ...