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Romanian National Opera, Bucharest

(Redirected from Bucharest Opera)

The Romanian National Opera, Bucharest (Romanian: Opera Națională București) is one of the four national opera and ballet companies of Romania. The company is headquartered in Bucharest, near the Cotroceni neighbourhood.

Romanian National Opera in Bucharest
Opera Națională București
Front view of the Opera House
Map
General information
LocationBucharest
CountryRomania
Completed1953
Inaugurated9 January 1954
Design and construction
Architect(s)Octav Doicescu and Paraschiva Iubu
Other information
Seating capacity952

History

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In 1877, Romanian government regulation stipulated the formation of an opera company under the auspices of the Romanian National Theatre. On 8 May 1885, the Compania Opera Română (Romanian Opera Company) gave its first performance. The Romanian composer, conductor, singer and teacher George Stephănescu (1843-1925) was the founding director of this company. In 1921, the company was formally established as an independent institution, with subsequent funding that oscillated between direct government funding and funding from private individuals. The first production by the newly formalized company was of Wagner's Lohengrin, conducted by George Enescu.

In 1953, a new theatre for opera and ballet was constructed for two international festivals that occurred in July and August 1953, the Third World Youth Congress, and the fourth World Festival of Youth and Students. This building, with a capacity of 952 seats and designed by Octav Doicescu [ro] and Paraschiva Iubu, became the new performance venue for the Romanian Opera. The opera company gave its first performance in this theatre on 9 January 1954, Tchaikovsky's The Queen of Spades. On the next night, the first ballet performance of the company took place at the same theatre, of Coppélia.[1]

The building of the Romanian Opera in Bucharest is listed in the National Register of Historic Monuments.[2]

In July 2021, the company announced the appointment of Eitan Schmeisser as its next artistic director. [3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Claudiu Sorin (2014-01-09). "Opera Națională București, 60 de ani de la inaugurarea actualului sediu". Qmagazine. Retrieved 2021-08-02.
  2. ^ "The Romanian Register of Historical Monuments in Bucharest" (PDF). patrimoniu.ro. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  3. ^ Francisco Salazar (2021-07-25). "Romanian National Opera Announces Artistic Director". OperaWire. Retrieved 2021-08-02.
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44°26′9″N 26°4′46″E / 44.43583°N 26.07944°E / 44.43583; 26.07944