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Manitoba Opera’s 2025-26 season wears both — with Puccini’s in November and Mozart’s in April — and as usual, it features a star-studded, mostly Canadian principal cast. The operas were composed more than a century apart and showcase classical opera’s emotional yin and yang. ROBERT TINKER PHOTO Gregory Dahl performs as Scarpia, the corrupt chief of police, in Manitoba Opera’s forthcoming production of Tosca.
, with its political intrigues, deaths and chest-beating arias is so 1900. Though it’s far too tuneful to be called “modernist,” its gritty realist “verismo” style (an update on seria) and everyday characters reflect the era’s modern rebellion against traditional authority. In the opera, set in Napoleonic-era Rome, Tosca — played by the celebrated American soprano Marina Costa-Jackson, who recently made her Royal Opera House debut — becomes entangled in a deadly plot when her lover (Canadian tenor David Pomeroy) is arrested for helping a political prisoner.
Desperate to save him, she agrees to the advances of the corrupt chief of police, Scarpia (baritone Gregory Dahl, originally from Winnipeg, but no relation to local soprano Tracy Dahl). Of course, she’s after revenge on Scarpia, and Puccini fans will know better than to expect a happy ending. “It’s my favorite Puccini opera.
It’s just such a taut political thriller,” says Manitoba Opera managing director Larry Desrochers. There’s no postmodern or contemporary update on either or ’s set or costumes: they’re both set in their original periods. “It’s a beautiful, old-school painted drop production.
It’s really terrific,” says Desrochers of ’s set, which comes from Seattle. While goes for the gut, goes for the funny bone. In Mozart’s work, opera’s favourite rascal, the servant Figaro — played by the season’s other American principal, baritone Robert Mellon — wants to marry his fiancée, Susanna.
(Yes, this is the same Figaro of Looney Tunes fame.) DAN DONOVAN PHOTO Baritone Robert Mellon is set to play Figaro. Alas, there’s another lecherous bigwig to deal with: this time, it’s a philandering employer, Count Almaviva (Canadian baritone Phillip Addis), who wants to seduce Susanna.
That role is played by rising star Jamie Groote, who had her first appearance with a major opera company with the Canadian Opera Company during its 2019-20 season. “A terrific artist and such a stage animal,” says Desrochers. This may be comedy, but the role calls for a wide emotional range.
Witty, intelligent, resourceful, Susanna resists the count’s attempt to revive his feudal droit de seigneur (the “right” to bed his servants’ brides on their wedding night), which is explicitly framed as an abuse of power. Through disguises and tricks, the servants triumph and the count is forced to publicly apologize to his wife (Canadian soprano Kate Wood, who originally studied at the University of Manitoba). Mozart’s opera ends on a less radical note than Puccini’s; like the composer’s harmonies, things inevitably resolve — in this case, with the social order’s restoration.
The count is not offed, though viewers may wish he were, but Mozart’s wit and mischief, as usual, disguise profundity. Premièred in Vienna in 1786 on the brink of the French Revolution, the satire was rightfully perceived as a sharp critique of the aristocracy and it narrowly avoided censorship. Desrochers says some of the cast in both operas are back to do work taken away from them by the pandemic, which forced the company to cancel its 2021 production of and other works.
DON IPOCK PHOTO Soprano Marina Costa-Jackson plays the title character in Tosca. “We’re thinking about what the artists went through, and thinking about inviting the audiences back, and just trying to be really careful and strategic about rebuilding the performing arts. And obviously we’re trying to provide value for the community,” says Desrochers.
During Elections Get campaign news, insight, analysis and commentary delivered to your inbox during Canada's 2025 election. This can mean exploring new directions — as Manitoba Opera did when last season it commissioned and premièred about Louis Riel — or leaning into established favourites, such as megahits and . Desrochers also says the operas, for all their first-rate talent and professionalism, are expressions of the local community.
The productions are supported by a team of volunteers not just behind the curtains but onstage — from supers (actors without singing roles) to choristers. “The chorus and supers, they all come because they love to be involved (and) you can see this full commitment to put on the best show they possibly can for the community,” Desrochers says. conrad.
[email protected] Conrad Sweatman is an arts reporter and feature writer.
Before joining the full-time in 2024, he worked in the U.K. and Canadian cultural sectors, freelanced for outlets including , and .
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Thank you for your support. Conrad Sweatman is an arts reporter and feature writer. Before joining the full-time in 2024, he worked in the U.
K. and Canadian cultural sectors, freelanced for outlets including , and . Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism.
If you are not a paid reader, please consider . Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.
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