Our very first rehearsal! Grab your hats, it's gonna be good.
We are incredibly honored to be recognized by WQXR's Operavore, Fred Plotkin, for best small company performance! It's been a very exciting year for us, and we are grateful to work with a such dedicated passionate artists. Small Company Performance: Loft Opera Company--Don Giovanni in May and Le Nozze di Figaro in November. This is the most exciting little company I have encountered in a while. Performances are done with limited means but great intelligence and seriousness in a loft in the Gowanus Canal area of Brooklyn. Audiences, mostly quite young, sit on benches, drink Brooklyn Beer and are surrounded by the performers. The secret to Loft Opera’s success is that they take the music, words and dramaturgy as composer and librettist intended. In so doing, these operas become more relevant and pleasurable than any gimmicky concept could offer. They will perform La Bohème in the last two weeks of February. See the entire list of awardees on WQXR.org.
Originally Posted on Brokelyn.com by Samantha Corbin Continue reading at Brokelyn.com
Spotted on the platform of the Brooklyn-bound F train: Jordan Schildcrout proudly sporting his LoftOpera T-shirt, styled with a complementary red jacket. Nice touch Jordan! (Photo: David Zellnik)
Today we were scrubbing the dark recesses of the internet for press about LO and happened upon this glorious blog from our new friend at pairofpastepants.wordpress.com. Enjoy. #461: LoftOpera 26 MAY Our Conductor, Dean Buck, and Musical Director, Laetitia Ruccolo, hold rehearsal for Marriage of Figaro.
One of our favorite opera writers and aficionados, Fred Plotkin, included LO's Marriage of Figaro in his fall preview lineup for WQXR's Operavore Blog. Loft Opera is a new company whose Don Giovanni last spring was one of the more engaging productions of this complex work I have attended in years. The youthful cast was superb and the stage direction remarkably effective. I loved how boundless ingenuity, rather than complicated scenery and production values, resulted in an incisive performance that also had immense charm. The troupe returns with Le Nozze di Figaro (Nov 7-9), an opera that poses even more staging challenges. They will again appear in a loft near Brooklyn’s Gowanus Canal. The audience will sit among the performers. What window will Cherubino jump out of? By Fred Plotkin May 25: Don Giovanni in a Brooklyn loft near the Gowanus Canal, presented by a wonderful new group called LoftOpera. Outside it looks like the setting of Il Tabarro, which takes place on a barge in the Seine River. Every few minutes the lights of a passing F train on elevated tracks formed a necklace moving against the dark of night. The loft was largely sound-proofed. One external noise penetrated the walls five minutes after the Commendatore was killed. It was the siren of an emergency vehicle and was the one time I can think of where that sound entering a theater space made perfect sense. Read the entire article at WQXR.org
LoftOpera has managed to create a very unique opera recipe. It has blended intimacy and subtlety with world-class voices, and what has resulted is one of the best performances I have seen in recent years. Loft's Don Giovanni, by Mozart, is located in a loft apartment/warehouse in Brooklyn, the performance hall a large room beset by wooden pillars and following an ergonomic use of space. Needless to say, I kept thinking throughout the night how this could only happen in New York City. I'm sure I'm mistaken. -- Sean Christensen
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