- Amato Opera
The Amato Opera is an
opera company located in New York's East Village. It is believed to be the only self-sustaining opera house in theUnited States . It was founded in 1948 by husband and wife team Anthony (b. 1920) and Sally Amato (27 September 1917–16 August 2000), with two goals in mind: to perform entertaining opera at a reasonable price; and to give promising singers experience with full-length productions.Anthony Amato, then the Director of the Opera Workshop at The America Theatre Wing, invested his own money to get the company started, using students from his opera classes. These early performances were free because union regulations would not allow them to charge admission. Instead, during the intermission the Amatos would "pass the hat around" for contributions.
While Anthony Amato acted as artistic director, selecting the productions, auditioning and casting, rehearsing and training the cast, and conducting most of the performances, Sally, his wife, functioned as seamstress, light board operator, cook, box office manager, publicist, business manager, and, as Serafina Bellantoni, singer for the company until her death in 2000.
Their first production, Rossini's "
The Barber of Seville ", was mounted in the auditorium of Our Lady of Pompeii Church at Bleecker and Carmine Streets, followed the next week by Mascagni's "Cavalleria Rusticana" and Leoncavallo'sPagliacci .The company used many other venues in its early days including the Kaufman Auditorium of the
92nd Street Y , theFashion Institute of Technology , and Washington Irving High School auditorium.In 1951, the company found its first permanent home at 159 Bleecker Street. They mounted one production each weekend, for fifty weeks a year, in the 299-seat theatre. Over 1,296 performances of 21 different operas were presented. Productions were also presented in New London, New Haven and other nearby cities. In 1959 the Bleecker Street Theatre was closed, but performances continued at other locations including 126 West 23rd Street and
The Town Hall .In 1964 Amato Opera found a new permanent home in a four-story building, next to a gas station and near the famous rock club
CBGB , at 319 Bowery at Second Street, a former Mission House and restaurant supply store, which was converted into a 107-seat theatre with a 20-foot stage, orchestra pit, rehearsal space, and storage for 55 sets.Each season includes six different operas, typically a mix of comedies and tragedies. Performances of each opera run over five weekends with six to ten different casts. They also mount the very popular Saturday morning Opera-In-Brief performances. Aimed at children, the Opera-In-Brief performances are full-length short operas or abridged versions of longer operas interspersed with narration. Throughout its life the Amato company has maintained a policy of keeping prices low, charging only $1.80 a seat when it moved into its current building in 1964. By 1975 ticket prices were only $3-4. Today, at only $35 for an orchestra seat ($30 for students, children, and seniors), ticket prices are still a fraction of the prices for comparable seats at larger opera houses.
Over the years the Amato Opera has gained a reputation for mounting first-class productions, receiving commendations and awards from Mayors Abe Beame,
Ed Koch andRudy Giuliani , and the Amatos have been inducted into City Lore's Peoples' Hall of Fame, honored by the American Cultural Roundtable, and the Italian Heritage and Cultural Committee, in recognition for their contribution to the artistic life of New York City.External links
* [http://www.amato.org// Homepage of the Amato Opera]
* [http://www.pbs.org/wnet/amato/index.html PBS Feature about the Amato Opera]
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