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Merola Opera Program's Schwabacher Summer Concert

Herbst Theatre at the San Francisco War Memorial Building (401 Van Ness Ave San Francisco, CA 94102)
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Full Price:
$40.00
Our Price:
$20.00*
4.3 by 3 members
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San Francisco Opera's Merola Opera Program presents a special summer concert at Herbst Theatre. Director Ray Rallo and Conductor Mark Morash will lead members of the San Francisco Opera Orchestra in a mixed production featuring works by Wagner, Gluck, Menotti, Rossini and Puccini, including scenes from Der fliegende Holländer, Orfeo ed Euridice, The Medium, L'Italiana in Algeri and La Bohème.

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All offers for Schwabacher Summer Concert have expired.

The last date listed for Schwabacher Summer Concert was Friday July 10, 2009 / 7:30pm.

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401 Van Ness Ave
San Francisco, CA 94102
415-392-4400
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Goldstar Member Reviews

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The seats were terriffic and the performers were above average to excellent. It was a very good bargain indeed!
Written on Jul 13 2009

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Wow, what an opener! Dutchman!! And the voices of Senta nd Erik, both remarkable, big voices. The Opera Orchestra was amazing, with a very tuned-in conductor, and was able to convincingly play anything from Wagner and Gluck. Wasn't sure that "The Medium" was totally appropriate as a first-half closer, but the Baba was superb, an incredible contralto! Overall, 90% (I left before the "Boheme" closer, possibly there was a ringing Rossini ensemble encore.
Written on Jul 13 2009

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Tremendous voices and terrific SF Opera orchestra resulted in an outstanding program at Herbst Hall. These "Merolini" hold great promise for the future of opera.
Written on Jul 13 2009

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More Information About Schwabacher Summer Concert

Description

The Merola Opera Program presents a special summer concert at Herbst Theatre. Director Ray Rallo and Conductor Mark Morash will lead members of the San Francisco Opera Orchestra in a mixed production featuring works by Wagner, Gluck, Menotti, Rossini and Puccini, including scenes from Der fliegende Holländer, Orfeo ed Euridice, The Medium, L’Italiana in Algeri and La Bohème.

About the Ticket Supplier: San Francisco Opera

San Francisco Opera is the second largest opera company in North America. Gaetano Merola and Kurt Herbert Adler were the Company's first two general directors. Merola led the Company from its founding in 1923 until his death in 1953; Adler was in charge from 1953 through 1981. Legendary for both their conducting and managerial skills, the two leaders established a formidable institution that is internationally recognized as one of the top opera companies in the world--heralded for its first-rate productions and roster of international opera stars. Following Adler's tenure, the Company was headed by three visionary leaders: Terence A. McEwen (1982-1988), Lotfi Mansouri (1988-2001), and Pamela Rosenberg (2001-2005). Originally presented over two weeks, the Company's season now contains approximately seventy-five performances of ten operas between September and July. San Francisco Opera recently celebrated the 75th anniversary of its performing home, the War Memorial Opera House. The venerable beaux arts building was inaugurated on October 15, 1932 and holds the distinction of being the first American opera house that was not built by and for a small group of wealthy patrons; the funding came thanks to a group of private citizens who encouraged thousands of San Franciscans to subscribe. The War Memorial currently welcomes some 500,000 patrons annually.

David Gockley became San Francisco Opera's sixth general director in January of 2006 after more than three decades at the helm of Houston Grand Opera. During his first months as general director, Gockley took opera to the center of the community with a free outdoor simulcast--the first in the Company's history--of Puccini's Madama Butterfly in May 2006. Subsequent simulcasts included Rigoletto in October 2006, reaching 15,000 people in San Francisco and Stanford University's Frost Amphitheater; Don Giovanni in June 2007, which was broadcast to 7,000 people in four theaters across Northern California; and Samson and Delilah for an audience of 15,000 at AT&T Park in September 2007. In 2007, Gockley led San Francisco Opera to take these innovations even further and created the Koret-Taube Media Suite. The first permanent high-definition broadcast-standard video production facility installed in any American opera house, the Koret-Taube Media Suite gives the Company the permanent capability to produce simulcasts and other projects including OperaVision, where retractable screens provide full stage, close-up, and mid-range ensemble shots in high-definition video for patrons in balcony seats. Gockley ushered in another first for San Francisco Opera in December 2007 when the Company announced an agreement for distribution of six operas per year to movie theaters across the globe. This agreement with The Bigger Picture, a subsidiary of Access Integrated Technologies, Inc., marks the first time that any opera company will utilize the feature film quality digital cinema format and underscores how the era of digital cinema is transforming how and where great entertainment reaches new audiences.

Gockley's partner in artistic programming and musical issues is Music Director and Principal Conductor Donald Runnicles, appointed in 1992. During his tenure, Runnicles has championed new repertory ranging from the world premieres of John Adams's Doctor Atomic (2005) to Conrad Susa's The Dangerous Liaisons (1994), in addition to the spectacular American stage premiere of Olivier Messiaen's Saint François d'Assise (2002) and the West Coast premiere of Stewart Wallace's Harvey Milk (1996). After seventeen years with the San Francisco Opera, Maestro Runnicles will step down as music director in the summer of 2009. He will continue his relationship with the Company, conducting a new production of Peter Grimes and the "American" Ring Cycle, which continues into the 2010-11 season. Nicola Luisotti, a rising star in the opera world, will succeed Donald Runnicles as music director in the fall of 2009.

San Francisco Opera offers a comprehensive array of acclaimed training programs and performance opportunities for young artists under the auspices of the San Francisco Opera Center and the Merola Opera Program (each a separate institution). Both are led by renowned soprano Sheri Greenawald.