- Anchorage Opera
Anchorage Opera (AO) is a professional
opera company located inAnchorage ,Alaska and is a member ofOPERA America [ [http://www.operaamerica.org/about/membership/states/ak.asp OPERA America — The National Service Organization for Opera ] ]History
Anchorage Opera was one of the first major performing arts institutions established by Americans in the
Circumpolar North . The company has it roots in the vision ofopera singerMarita Farrell and philanthropistEvangeline Atwood . Farrell and Atwood worked together to produce grand opera inAnchorage . They secured financing, assembled performers and coordinated with theAnchorage Symphony for an orchestra. After Farrell left Alaska, other opera enthusiasts and performers helped to keep the venture alive. The company was officially incorporated as Anchorage Civic Opera in 1962.In the early 1960s, the company put on a series of cameo presentations including "
Rigoletto " and "Faust ", which were all performed on the stage of the old Sydney Lawrence auditorium (the current site of theAlaska Center for the Performing Arts ). Later within this time frame, the company, under the auspices of the Community College (now theUniversity of Alaska , Anchorage), recruited Willard Straight to direct and help lead operations. Under Straight’s guidance, several full-length operas (including "Cosi Fan Tutti ", "The Elixir of Love ", and "Carmen ") were presented in Anchorage.During the mid 1960s, the directors of AO recruited
Elvira Voth (then director of theAnchorage Community Chorus ) to take the helm. Voth inherited a company with a large coterie of singers, dancers, musicians and production personnel along with a very energetic Board of Directors.Voth was a tireless advocate not only for AO, but for all the performing arts organizations in Anchorage. During Voth’s time with the company, several prominent Alaskans such as
Jan Ingram (the company’s first full-time professional manager) andGloria Allen (acclaimed opera singer, producer and administrator who moved to Anchorage fromNew York City in the mid 70s) helped make the company successful.In 1979, the company, still under Voth’s leadership, recruited Michael More, a 3rd generation Alaskan and trained operatic
tenor with a burgeoning national career, to help guide the company through its next phase of growth. By 1985, AO had become recognized as one of the nation’s leading regional opera companies and was selected by theNational Endowment for the Arts as one of the six most promising Opera Companies in the United States.Since 1985, AO has had a succession of committed leaders including
Jim Wright (now serving as General Director ofVancouver Opera , BC.),Don Hoak ,Bill Russell ,Peter Brown andEd Bourgeois . During the Summer of 2007, after a nationwide search, AO’s Board of Directors electedTorrie Allen as the new General Manager.References
External links
* [http://www.anchorageopera.org/index.html Official Site of Anchorage Opera]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.