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Manitoba Opera

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Manitoba Opera is an opera company in Winnipeg , Manitoba that was founded in 1969. Its first production was a concert version of Giuseppe Verdi 's Il Trovatore in 1972. Manitoba Opera is one of several western Canadian opera companies that flourished under the so-called "father of opera in Western Canada," Irving Guttman . He has been instrumental in the development of many young Canadian singers, including Winnipeg native Tracy Dahl (soprano) and Winkler 's Phillip Ens (bass). Both have gone on to international careers.

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8-707: Live music for Manitoba Opera productions is provided by the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra . In November 2007, the company staged its first original production, Transit of Venus , composed by Victor Davies , with a libretto by Maureen Hunter , based on her stage play of the same name. Manitoba Opera is based at the Centennial Concert Hall . Larry Desrochers has been the General Director since November 2000. This article about an opera company or opera festival

16-464: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Manitoba -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra The Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra ( WSO ) is a Canadian orchestra based in Winnipeg , Manitoba . Founded in 1947, the orchestra plays most of its concerts at the Centennial Concert Hall . Including travelling performances,

24-531: The 2003–2004 season. The orchestra retired its accumulated debt in September 2005. In his final season as music director, Boreyko led six weeks of concerts, in contrast to 12 the season before. Overall, Boreyko received praise for his musicianship, but also criticism for a lack of community outreach, and not fulfilling an intention to establish residency in Winnipeg. In February 2006, Alexander Mickelthwate

32-547: The Civic Auditorium until April 1968, when the WSO moved to its present home in the 2,300-seat Centennial Concert Hall . During the 1970s, the orchestra was conducted by former child protegy and Decca Records -recording artist Piero Gamba , who invited Mstislav Rostropovich , Vladimir Ashkenazy , Itzhak Perlman , and others to perform with the orchestra. Gamba's tenure was followed by Kazuhiro Koizumi , who conducted

40-665: The WSO presents an average of 80 concerts per year, and also provides orchestral accompaniment to the Royal Winnipeg Ballet and the Manitoba Opera . The WSO was established in 1947 and played its first concert on December 16, 1948 at the Civic Auditorium . Walter Kaufmann was the WSO's first music director from 1948 to 1958. Victor Feldbrill, the WSO's only Canadian music director to date, succeeded Kaufmann in 1958. The WSO initially performed out of

48-452: The orchestra through much of the 1980, including a number of recording sessions with CBC records. In 1992, then-music director Bramwell Tovey and the WSO's composer-in-residence Glenn Buhr, along with others, created the WSO's New Music Festival . In the 2011–2012 season, the WSO began the 'Sistema Winnipeg' programme, modelled after Venezuela's El Sistema , to provide music education to disadvantaged children in Winnipeg. Andrey Boreyko

56-408: Was named the WSO's eighth music director. He took up the post in September 2006, with an initial contract of 3 years. In December 2008, Mickelthwate extended his contract with the orchestra through the 2012 season. His Winnipeg contract was further extended through the 2015–2016 season. In May 2017, the orchestra announced that Mickelthwate would conclude his music directorship of the orchestra after

64-458: Was the WSO's music director from 2001 to 2006. During his tenure, the musicians experienced a labour lockout in December 2001, and the mass resignation of the orchestra's board in the winter of 2003. The musicians took a 20% pay cut and Boreyko donated a portion of his salary to the orchestra during the financially troubled 2002–2003 season. The orchestra musicians took an additional pay cut for

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